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1.
The dimeric bifunctional enzyme aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II (Mr = 2 X 88,000) of Escherichia coli K12 can be cleaved into two nonoverlapping fragments by limited proteolysis with subtilisin. These two fragments can be separated under nondenaturing conditions as dimeric species, which indicates that each fragment has retained some of the association areas involved in the conformation of the native protein. The smaller fragment (Mr = 2 X 24,000) is devoid of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The larger fragment (Mr = 2 X 37,000) is endowed with full homoserine dehydrogenase activity. These results show that the polypeptide chains of the native enzyme are organized in two different domains, that both domains participate in building up the native dimeric structure, and that one of these domains only is responsible for homoserine dehydrogenase activity. A model of aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II is proposed, which accounts for the present results.  相似文献   

2.
In the presence of l-threonine, the allosteric effector, most of the antigenic determinants situated in the aspartokinase region of the wild-type enzyme become unavailable to the antibodies raised against a fragment of the enzyme containing this region and devoid of homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The cross-reactivities of the antibodies raised against this fragment (extracted from a nonsense mutant) and a fragment endowed with homoserine dehydrogenase activity but devoid of aspartokinase activity (obtained by limited proteolysis) with the corresponding antigens were studied. The conclusion is drawn that the two fragments, which share an overlapping sequence of molecular weight about 17,000, share at least two antigenic determinants.  相似文献   

3.
We have purified homoserine dehydrogenase to homogeneity and subjected polypeptide fragments derived from digests of the protein to amino acid sequencing. The amino acid sequence of homoserine dehydrogenase from carrot (Daucus carota) indicates that in carrot both aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activities reside on the same protein. Additional evidence that aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase reside on a bifunctional protein is provided by coelution of activities during purification steps and by enzyme-specific gel staining techniques. Highly purified fractions containing aspartokinase activity were stained for aspartokinase activity, homoserine dehydrogenase activity, and protein. These gels confirmed that aspartokinase activity and homoserine dehydrogenase activity were present on the same protein. This arrangement of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activities residing on the same protein is also found in Escherichia coli, which has two bifunctional enzymes, aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I and aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II. The amino acid sequence of the major form of homoserine dehydrogenase from carrot cell suspension cultures most closely resembles that of the E. coli ThrA gene product aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

4.
James CL  Viola RE 《Biochemistry》2002,41(11):3720-3725
The bifunctional enzyme aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli catalyzes non-consecutive reactions in the aspartate pathway of amino acid biosynthesis. Both catalytic activities are subject to allosteric regulation by the end product amino acid L-threonine. To examine the kinetics and regulation of the enzymes in this pathway, each of these catalytic domains were separately expressed and purified. The separated catalytic domains remain active, with each of their catalytic activities enhanced in comparison to the native enzyme. The allosteric regulation of the kinase activity is lost, and regulation of the dehydrogenase activity is dramatically decreased in these separate domains. To create a new bifunctional enzyme that can catalyze consecutive metabolic reactions, the aspartokinase I domain was fused to the enzyme that catalyzes the intervening reaction in the pathway, aspartate semialdehyde dehydrogenase. A hybrid bifunctional enzyme was also created between the native monofunctional aspartokinase III, an allosteric enzyme regulated by lysine, and the catalytic domain of homoserine dehydrogenase I with its regulatory interface domain still attached. In this hybrid the kinase activity remains sensitive to lysine, while the dehydrogenase activity is now regulated by both threonine and lysine. The dehydrogenase domain is less thermally stable than the kinase domain and becomes further destabilized upon removal of the regulatory domain. The more stable aspartokinase III is further stabilized against thermal denaturation in the hybrid bifunctional enzyme and was found to retain some catalytic activity even at temperatures approaching 100 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
Limited proteolysis of aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli by type VI protease from Streptomyces griseus yields five proteolytic fragments, three of which are dimeric, the other two being monomeric. One of the monomeric fragments (27 kilodaltons) exhibits residual aspartokinase activity, while the second one (33 kilodaltons) possesses residual homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The smallest of the dimeric species (2 X 25 kilodaltons) is inactive; the two other dimers exhibit either only homoserine dehydrogenase activity (2 X 59 kilodaltons) or both activities (hybrid fragment, 89 + 59 kilodaltons). This characterization of the proteolytic species in terms of molecular weight, subunit structure, and activity leads to the proposal of a triglobular model for the native enzyme. In addition, the time course of the formation of the various fragments was followed by measuring enzymatic activity and performing gel electrophoretic analysis of the protein mixture at defined time intervals during proteolysis. On the basis of the results of these studies, a reaction scheme describing the succession of events during proteolysis is given.  相似文献   

6.
In Escherichia coli K12 the biosynthetic pathway of lysine, methionine and threonine is characterized by three isofunctional aspartokinases and two homoserine dehydrogenases. A single polypeptide chain carries the threonine-sensitive aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase (AK I-HDH I), and a different polypeptide chain carries the methionine-repressible aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase (AK II-HDH II). Immuno-adsorbants prepared with rabbit antibodies against AK I-HDH I bind the lysine-sensitive aspartokinase (AK III), the AK II-HDH II, and the homoserine kinase (HSK), an enzyme of the threonine biosynthetic pathway. Saturation of the immunoadsorbant with AK I-HDH I results in a decreased binding capacity for the other enzymes. Displacement of bound AK III or HSK can be obtained with pure AK I-HDH I, showing that the affinity of the antibodies to homologous antigens is higher than to heterologous ones. Immunoadsorbants prepared with anti-HSK antibodies show the same type of recognition: binding of the three aspartkinases and a capacity to displace the heterologous antigens bound. Accordingly, the same antibodies, implicated in the binding of the homologous antigen, bind the other enzymes. None of the other enzymes of the pathway, or the other kinases tested are recognized by the two immunoadsorbants. It can be postulated that in E. coli K12, duplication of a common ancestor gene gave rise to the three aspartokinases and to the homoserine kinase; two of the genes coding for the aspartokinases fused with those coding for the homoserine dehydrogenases. Indicating that only few epitopes are shared by these enzymes, by conventional immuno-diffusion techniques no precipitation lines appeared with antibodies against AK I-HDH I and the other proteins.  相似文献   

7.
James CL  Viola RE 《Biochemistry》2002,41(11):3726-3731
The direct channeling of an intermediate between enzymes that catalyze consecutive reactions in a pathway offers the possibility of an efficient, exclusive, and protected means of metabolite delivery. Aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase I (AK-HDH I) from Escherichia coli is an unusual bifunctional enzyme in that it does not catalyze consecutive reactions. The potential channeling of the intermediate beta-aspartyl phosphate between the aspartokinase of this bifunctional enzyme and aspartate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (ASADH), the enzyme that catalyzes the intervening reaction, has been examined. The introduction of increasing levels of inactivated ASADH has been shown to compete against enzyme-enzyme interactions and direct intermediate channeling, leading to a decrease in the overall reaction flux through these consecutive enzymes. These same results are obtained whether these experiments are conducted with aspartokinase III, a naturally occurring monofunctional isozyme, with an artificially produced monofunctional aspartokinase I, or with a fusion construct of AK I-ASADH. These results provide definitive evidence for the channeling of beta-aspartyl phosphate between aspartokinase and aspartate semialdehyde dehydrogenase in E. coli and suggest that ASADH may provide a bridge to channel the intermediates between the non-consecutive reactions of AK-HDH I.  相似文献   

8.
Aspartokinase (EC 2.7.2.4) and homoserine dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.3) catalyze steps in the pathway for the synthesis of lysine, threonine, and methionine from aspartate. Homoserine dehydrogenase was purified from carrot (Daucus carota L.) cell cultures and portions of it were subjected to amino acid sequencing. Oligonucleotides deduced from the amino acid sequences were used as primers in a polymerase chain reaction to amplify a DNA fragment using DNA derived from carrot cell culture mRNA as template. The amplification product was radiolabelled and used as a probe to identify cDNA clones from libraries derived from carrot cell culture and root RNA. Two overlapping clones were isolated. Together the cDNA clones delineate a 3089 bp long sequence encompassing an open reading frame encoding 921 amino acids, including the mature protein and a long chloroplast transit peptide. The deduced amino acid sequence has high homology with the Escherichia coli proteins aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I and aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II. Like the E. coli genes the isolated carrot cDNA appears to encode a bifunctional aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase enzyme.Abbreviations AK aspartokinase - HSDH homoserine dehydrogenase - PCR polymerase chain reaction - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate The mention of vendor or product does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture over vendors of similar products not mentioned.  相似文献   

9.
The preparation of immunoadsorbents against aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from E.coli is described. In the presence of aspartate, considerably less enzyme is bound by the fixed antibodies. The fixed protein can be displaced by a protein extracted from a nonsense mutant.  相似文献   

10.
2-Amino-4-oxo-5-chloropentanoic acid inactivates specifically the homoserine dehydrogenase activity of the bifunctional enzyme, aspartokinase I--homoserine dehydrogenase I. The aspartokinase activity remains essentially untouched and retains its threonine sensitivity. The inactivation of the dehydrogenase requires the covalent binding of one equivalent of the analogue per subunit. Alkylation does not affect the tetrameric state of the protein. The alkylating agent, a substrate analogue, meets the qualitative and quantitative requirements of an affinity label.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The nature of the feedback inhibition of the bifunctional enzyme, aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I of Escherichia coli was studied using 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Since aspartokinase is activated by Mn(II), the interaction of the inhibitor L-threonine (specifically enriched to 90% 13C in the carboxyl carbon) with the metal-enzyme complex was studied. Spin-lattice (T1) and spin-spin (T2) relaxation times were determined by the partially relaxed Fourier transform method and line-width measurements respectively at 20 MHz. The pronounced broadening of the DL-threonine carboxyl peak in the presence of the Mn(II)-enzyme complex indicates that an L-threonine binding site is close to the metal binding site of the kinase active site. The non-identity of (T1)*M and (T2)*M indicates that conditions of fast exchange prevail. The (T1)*M/(T2)*M ratio was used to estimate a correlation time of 2.0 ns for the dipolar interaction at 25 degrees C. An estimate for the distance between Mn(II) and the threonine carboxyl carbon of 4.4 A (0.44 nm) was obtained. This 13C NMR study has thus located one of the two classes of threonine regulatory sites which exist per subunit; the threonine site identified here is at the aspartokinase active site, adjacent to the catalytic metal site.  相似文献   

13.
The native enzyme must be denatured either by sodium dodecyl sulfate or by urea before limited proteolysis can occur. Under these conditions only one or two peptide bonds are hydrolyzed by each of the following proteases: Staphylococcal V8 protease, trypsin and elastase. The amino-terminal amino acid sequences were determined to identify the cleavage sites. The new sequences comprise approximately 20% of the entire polypeptide chain, and show good agreement with the nucleotide sequence of the trpC gene. Both V8 protease2 and elastase yield large carboxy-terminal fragments, about two thirds of the size of the parent enzyme, and corresponding small amino-terminal fragments. Trypsin cleaves a single peptide bond in the last one third of the polypeptide chain. After separation of the fragments, removal of dodecyl sulfate and renaturation, only the large fragments fold to stable structures. The small fragments precipitate. The large amino-terminal fragment catalyzes only the synthesis of indoleglycerol phosphate and precipitates when solutions are frozen and thawed. The large carboxy-terminal fragment catalyzes only the isomerization of N-(5′-phosphoribosyl)anthranilate and is stable towards freezing and thawing. These studies prove that the intact bifunctional enzyme consists of two autonomously folding, functional domains. They also support the notion that the bifunctional enzyme may have arisen by the fusion of separate ancestral genes, and that stabilization of the intrinsically labile indoleglycerol phosphate synthase domain by interdomain interactions is functionally advantageous.  相似文献   

14.
The two isofunctional enzymes aspartokinases-homoserine dehydrogenases I and II from Escherichia coli K 12 are compared using immunochemical techniques. The antibodies raised against one of these two proteins when in its native state can only recognize the homologous antigen, whether it is native or denatured. Contrarily, the antibodies raised against one of these two proteins when in its denatured state can recognize both the homologous and heterologous denatured antigens. The existence of this cross-reaction only between the two denatured aspartokinases-homoserine dehydrogenases suggests that these two enzymes have some similarity since such a reaction is not detected with several other denatured proteins. The regions involved in this similarity are buried inside the native proteins, and become exposed only upon denaturation. The same results, the existence of a cross-reaction between denatured species and none between the native ones, is obtained with proteolytic fragments derived from these two proteins and endowed with homoserine dehydrogenase activity. This resemblance between the two aspartokinases-homoserine dehydrogenases suggests that these proteins derive from a common ancestor. It is also proposed that such a cross-reaction between two denatured proteins is evidence for an homology between their amino acid sequences, and that the use of denatured proteins as both immunogens and antigens could be useful in detecting sequence homologies.  相似文献   

15.
M Veron  Y Guillou  G N Cohen 《FEBS letters》1985,181(2):381-384
A proteolytic fragment (Mr approximately 25 000) carrying only the aspartokinase activity has been purified by chromatofocusing after limited proteolysis of aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from E.coli K12. The NH2-terminal sequence shows that it corresponds to the amino terminal peptide of the native enzyme. The results confirm a previous hypothesis about the organization of native aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

16.
Aspartokinase II from Bacillus subtilis was shown by immunochemical methods to be regulated by degradation in response to starvation of cells for various nutrients. Ammonium starvation induced the fastest aspartokinase II decline (t1/2 = 65 min), followed by amino acid starvation (t1/2 = 80 min) and glucose limitation (t1/2 = 120 min). Loss of enzyme activity was closely correlated with the disappearance of the alpha subunit; degradation of the beta subunit was somewhat delayed or slower under some conditions. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that aspartokinase II was stable during exponential growth; the synthesis of the enzyme rapidly declined in response to nutrient exhaustion. The degradation of aspartokinase II was interrupted by inhibitors of energy production and protein synthesis but was not changed in a mutant lacking a major intracellular protease. Mutants lacking a normal stringent response displayed only a slight decrease in the rate of aspartokinase II degradation, even though aspartate transcarbamylase was degraded more slowly in the same mutant cells. These results indicate that although energy-dependent degradation of biosynthetic enzymes is a general phenomenon in nutrient-starved B. subtilis cells, the degradation of specific enzymes probably involves different pathways.  相似文献   

17.
Metabolism of aspartate in Mycobacterium smegmatis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mycobacterium smegmatis grows best on L-asparagine as a sole nitrogen source; this was confirmed. [14C]Aspartate was taken up rapidly (46 nmol.mg dry cells-1.h-1 from 1 mM L-asparagine) and metabolised to CO2 as well as to amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway. Proportionately more radioactivity appeared in the amino acids in bacteria grown in medium containing low nitrogen. Activities of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase, the initial enzymes of the aspartate pathway, were carried by separate proteins. Aspartokinase was purified as three isoenzymes and represented up to 8% of the soluble protein of M. smegmatis. All three isoenzymes contained molecular mass subunits of 50 kDa and 11 kDa which showed no activity individually; full enzyme activity was recovered on pooling the subunits. Km values for aspartate were: aspartokinases I and III, 2.4 mM; aspartokinase II, 6.4 mM. Aspartokinase I was inhibited by threonine and homoserine and aspartokinase III by lysine, but aspartokinase II was not inhibited by any amino acids. Aspartokinase activity was repressed by methionine and lysine with a small residue of activity attributable to unrepressed aspartokinase I. Homoserine dehydrogenase activity was 96% inhibited by 2 mM threonine; isoleucine, cysteine and valine had lesser effects and in combination gave additive inhibition. Homoserine dehydrogenase was repressed by threonine and leucine. Only amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway were tested for inhibition and repression. Of these, only one, meso-diaminopimilate, had no discernable effect on either enzyme activity.  相似文献   

18.
A library of Bacillus subtilis DNA in lambda Charon 4A (Ferrari, E., Henner, D.J., and Hoch, J.A. (1981) J. Bacteriol. 146, 430-432) was screened by an immunological procedure for DNA sequences encoding aspartokinase II of B. subtilis, an enzyme composed of two nonidentical subunits arranged in an alpha 2 beta 2 structure (Moir, D., and Paulus, H. (1977a) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 4648-4654). A recombinant bacteriophage was identified that harbored an 18-kilobase B. subtilis DNA fragment containing the coding sequences for both aspartokinase subunits. The coding sequence for aspartokinase II was subcloned into bacterial plasmids. In response to transformation with the recombinant plasmids, Escherichia coli produced two polypeptides immunologically related to B. subtilis aspartokinase II with molecular weights (43,000 and 17,000) indistinguishable from those found in enzyme produced in B. subtilis. Peptide mapping by partial proteolysis confirmed the identity of the polypeptides produced by the transformed E. coli cells with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II subunits. The size of the cloned B. subtilis DNA fragment could be reduced to 2.9 kilobases by cleavage with PstI restriction endonuclease without affecting its ability to direct the synthesis of complete aspartokinase II subunits, irrespective of its orientation in the plasmid vector. Further subdivision by cleavage with BamHI restriction endonuclease resulted in the production of truncated aspartokinase subunits, each shortened by the same extent. This suggested that a single DNA sequence encoded both aspartokinase subunits and provided an explanation for the earlier observation that the smaller beta subunit of aspartokinase II was highly homologous or identical with the carboxyl-terminal portion of the alpha subunit (Moir, D., and Paulus, H. (1977b) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 4655-4661). A map of the gene for B. subtilis aspartokinase II is proposed in which the coding sequence for the smaller beta subunit overlaps in the same reading frame the promoter-distal portion of the coding sequence for the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

19.
The two threonine-sensitive activities aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase are inhibited by L-serine. The inhibition of the aspartokinase by L-serine displays homotropic cooperative effects and is competitive versus aspartate. The inhibition by L-serine of the homoserine dehydrogenase displays Michaelis-Menten kinetics which are of a competitive nature versus homoserine. Characteristic effects of L-serine on the protein include a perturbation of its absorption and fluorescence spectra, with an increase in the fluorescence of the protein-NADPH complex. L-serine shifts the allosteric equilibrium of the protein to a "T-like" conformation to which L-threonine binds noncooperatively. L-Serine, a threonine analog, is not capable, as the physiological effector, of inducing a complete R to T transition of the enzyme; the aspartokinase globules show a cooperative conformation change upon serine binding, but this conformation change is not found in the homoserine dehydrogenase globules.  相似文献   

20.
The enzymes aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase catalyze the reaction at key branching points in the aspartate pathway of amino acid biosynthesis. Enterococcus faecium has been found to contain two distinct aspartokinases and a single homoserine dehydrogenase. Aspartokinase isozymes eluted on gel filtration chromatography at molecular weights greater than 250,000 and about 125,000. The molecular weight of homoserine dehydrogenase was determined to be 220,000. One aspartokinase isozyme was slightly inhibited by meso-diaminopimelic acid. Another aspartokinase was repressed and inhibited by lysine. Although the level of diaminopimelate-sensitive (DAPs) enzyme was not much affected by growth conditions, the activity of lysine-sensitive (Lyss) aspartokinase disappeared rapidly during the stationary phase and was depressed in rich media. The synthesis of homoserine dehydrogenase was controlled by threonine and methionine. Threonine also inhibited the specific activity of this enzyme. The regulatory properties of aspartokinase isozymes and homoserine dehydrogenase from E. faecium are discussed and compared with those from Bacillus subtilis.  相似文献   

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