首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The nucleotide sequence of a 3,162-base-pair (bp) segment of DNA containing the FNR-regulated fumB gene, which encodes the anaerobic class I fumarase (FUMB) of Escherichia coli, was determined. The structural gene was found to comprise 1,641 bp, 547 codons (excluding the initiation and termination codons), and the gene product had a predicted Mr of 59,956. The amino acid sequence of FUMB contained the same number of residues as did that of the aerobic class I fumarase (FUMA), and there were identical amino acids at all but 56 positions (89.8% identity). There was no significant similarity between the class I fumarases and the class II enzyme (FUMC) except in one region containing the following consensus: Gly-Ser-Xxx-Ile-Met-Xxx-Xxx-Lys-Xxx-Asn. Some of the 56 amino acid substitutions must be responsible for the functional preferences of the enzymes for malate dehydration (FUMB) and fumarate hydration (FUMA). Significant similarities between the cysteine-containing sequence of the class I fumarases (FUMA and FUMB) and the mammalian aconitases were detected, and this finding further supports the view that these enzymes are all members of a family of iron-containing hydrolyases. The nucleotide sequence of a 1,142-bp distal sequence of an unidentified gene (genF) located upstream of fumB was also defined and found to encode a product that is homologous to the product of another unidentified gene (genA), located downstream of the neighboring aspartase gene (aspA).  相似文献   

2.
Two distinct types of fumarase were purified to homogeneity from aerobically grown Escherichia coli W cells. The amino acid sequences of their NH2-terminals suggest that the two enzymes are the products of the fumA gene (FUMA) and fumC gene (FUMC), respectively. FUMA was separated from FUMC by chromatography on a Q-Sepharose column, and was further purified to homogeneity on Alkyl-Superose, Mono Q, and Superose 12 columns. FUMA is a dimer composed of identical subunits (Mr = 60,000). Although the activity of FUMA rapidly decreased during storage, reactivation was attained by anaerobic incubation with Fe2+ and thiols. Studies on the inactivation and reactivation of FUMA suggested that oxidation and the concomitant release of iron inactivated the enzyme in a reversible manner. While the inactivated FUMA was EPR-detectable, through a signal with g perpendicular = 2.02 and g = 2.00, the active enzyme was EPR-silent. These results suggested FUMA is a member of the 4Fe-4S hydratases represented by aconitase. After the separation of FUMC from FUMA, purification of the former enzyme was accomplished by chromatography on Phenyl-Superose and Matrex Gel Red A columns. FUMC was stable, Fe-independent and quite similar to mammalian fumarases in enzymatic properties.  相似文献   

3.
4.
D H Flint  M H Emptage  J R Guest 《Biochemistry》1992,31(42):10331-10337
It has been shown previously that Escherichia coli contains three fumarase genes designated fumA, fumB, and fumC. The gene products fumarases A, B, and C have been divided into two classes. Class I contains fumarases A and B, which have amino acid sequences that are 90% identical to each other, but have almost no similarity to the sequence of porcine fumarase. Class II contains fumarase C and porcine fumarase, which have amino acid sequences 60% identical to each other [Woods, S.A., Schwartzbach, S.D., & Guest, J.R. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 954, 14-26]. In this work it is shown that purified fumarase A contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster. This conclusion is based on the following observations. Fumarase A contains 4 Fe and 4 S2- per mole of protein monomer. (The mobility of fumarase A in native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the elution volume on a gel permeation column indicate that it is a homodimer.) Its visible and circular dichroism spectra are characteristic of proteins containing an Fe-S cluster. Fumarase A can be reduced to an EPR active-state exhibiting a spectrum consisting of a rhombic spectrum at high fields (g-values = 2.03, 1.94, and 1.88) and a broad peak at g = 5.4. Upon addition of substrate, the high field signal shifts upfield (g-values = 2.035, 1.92, and 1.815) and increases in total spins by 8-fold, while the g = 5.4 signal disappears.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The procyclic stage of Trypanosoma brucei, a parasitic protist responsible for sleeping sickness in humans, converts most of the consumed glucose into excreted succinate, by succinic fermentation. Succinate is produced by the glycosomal and mitochondrial NADH-dependent fumarate reductases, which are not essential for parasite viability. To further explore the role of the succinic fermentation pathways, we studied the trypanosome fumarases, the enzymes providing fumarate to fumarate reductases. The T. brucei genome contains two class I fumarase genes encoding cytosolic (FHc) and mitochondrial (FHm) enzymes, which account for total cellular fumarase activity as shown by RNA interference. The growth arrest of a double RNA interference mutant cell line showing no fumarase activity indicates that fumarases are essential for the parasite. Interestingly, addition of fumarate to the medium rescues the growth phenotype, indicating that fumarate is an essential intermediary metabolite of the insect stage trypanosomes. We propose that trypanosomes use fumarate as an essential electron acceptor, as exemplified by the fumarate dependence previously reported for an enzyme of the essential de novo pyrimidine synthesis (Takashima, E., Inaoka, D. K., Osanai, A., Nara, T., Odaka, M., Aoki, T., Inaka, K., Harada, S., and Kita, K. (2002) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 122, 189-200).  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Aspartase, fumarase (Class II) and argininosuccinase are homotetrameric enzymes of native M r∼ 200 000, and they all catalyse analogous trans -elimination reactions involving fumarate. Amino acid sequence comparisons have revealed five mutually-conserved segments of primary structure, indicating that the enzymes belong to the same family. Several putative active-site residues, e.g., histidine, methionine, lysine, and aspartate or glutamate, have been detected, and one of the highly-conserved segments was also found in an otherwise unrelated homodimeric Class I fumarase.  相似文献   

7.
The cDNA encoding fumarase, an enzyme catalyzing reversible hydration of fumarate to L-malate, from the parasitic roundworm Ascaris suum, has been cloned, sequenced, over-expressed in Escherichia coli, and purified. The single open reading frame translates into a protein of 50,502Da containing 467 amino acids. It shows 82, 77, and 58% identity with Caenorhabditis elegans, human, and E. coli fumC fumarases, respectively. The A. suum fumarase shows the signature sequence motif (GSSIMPGKVNPTQCE), which defines not only the class II fumarase family but also a much broader superfamily of proteins containing GSSxMPxKxNPxxxE motif. The coding region was cloned into pET101D-directional TOPO expression vector and transformed into E. coli BL21 Star (DE3). The protein after induction was expressed at high levels, almost 10% of the soluble protein, purified to near homogeneity, and appears identical to the enzyme purified from Ascaris suum.  相似文献   

8.
Two different types of fumarase were found in sonic extracts of Escherichia coli; one required Fe-S for the enzyme activity, and the other did not. When the cells were grown without aeration, the Fe-S-independent enzyme occupied over 80% of the overall fumarase activity. Highly purified Fe-S-independent enzyme was suggested to be composed of four subunits (Mr = 48 kDa) by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration. Amino acid and N-terminal sequence analyses supported the possibility that the enzyme is a product of fumC gene (FUMC). In aerobically grown cells, however, the content of FUMC was low and the Fe-S-dependent fumarase occupied over 80% of the overall activity. The Fe-S-dependent enzyme appeared to be labile and the activity was rapidly lost during purification. Although the spontaneous inactivation was previously ascribed to thermal lability (S.A. Woods & J.R. Guest (1987) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 48, 219), the activity could be restored by anaerobic incubation with ferrous ions and SH-compounds.  相似文献   

9.
Mesaconase catalyzes the hydration of mesaconate (methylfumarate) to (S)-citramalate. The enzyme participates in the methylaspartate pathway of glutamate fermentation as well as in the metabolism of various C5-dicarboxylic acids such as mesaconate or L-threo-β-methylmalate. We have recently shown that Burkholderia xenovorans uses a promiscuous class I fumarase to catalyze this reaction in the course of mesaconate utilization. Here we show that classical Escherichia coli class I fumarases A and B (FumA and FumB) are capable of hydrating mesaconate with 4% (FumA) and 19% (FumB) of the catalytic efficiency k cat/K m, compared to the physiological substrate fumarate. Furthermore, the genomes of 14.8% of sequenced Enterobacteriaceae (26.5% of E. coli, 90.6% of E. coli O157:H7 strains) possess an additional class I fumarase homologue which we designated as fumarase D (FumD). All these organisms are (opportunistic) pathogens. fumD is clustered with the key genes for two enzymes of the methylaspartate pathway of glutamate fermentation, glutamate mutase and methylaspartate ammonia lyase, converting glutamate to mesaconate. Heterologously produced FumD was a promiscuous mesaconase/fumarase with a 2- to 3-fold preference for mesaconate over fumarate. Therefore, these bacteria have the genetic potential to convert glutamate to (S)-citramalate, but the further fate of citramalate is still unclear. Our bioinformatic analysis identified several other putative mesaconase genes and revealed that mesaconases probably evolved several times from various class I fumarases independently. Most, if not all iron-dependent fumarases, are capable to catalyze mesaconate hydration.  相似文献   

10.
Fumarase is one of the key enzymes in the TCA cycle and has been implicated in virulence and survival of some microorganisms under suboptimal environmental conditions. In this study, the fumC genes that encode fumarase C (FUMCs) from Neisseria meningitidis, N. gonorrhoeae and N. subflava were identified by homology-based analysis, cloned by polymerase chain reactions and fully sequenced. The inferred primary sequence of neisserial FUMCs showed a high degree of conservation with 97.8–98.7% amino acid identity. However, phylogenetic analysis revealed that these neisserial FUMCs are divergent from class II fumarases found in other microorganisms, rat and human. The putative fumC genes were subcloned into the expression vector, pGEX-6P-1 and efficiently expressed in Esherichia coli BL21. The purified recombinant fusion proteins obtained by affinity chromatography demonstrated high catalytic activities (120–180 U/mg), thus authenticating the identities and functionalities of the cloned genes. Whether FUMC has any physiological relevance to the pathogenesisity of Neisseriae must await future gene disruption or mutagenesis studies.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Escherichia coli contains three biochemically distinct fumarases which catalyze the interconversion of fumarate to L-malate in the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Batch culture studies indicated that fumarase activities varied according to carbon substrate and cell doubling time. Growth rate control of fumarase activities in the wild type and mutants was demonstrated in continuous culture; FumA and FumC activities were induced four- to fivefold when the cell growth rate (k) was lowered from 1.2/h to 0.24/h at 1 and 21% O(2), respectively. There was a twofold induction of FumA and FumC activities when acetate was utilized instead of glucose as the sole carbon source. However, these fumarase activities were still shown to be under growth rate control. Thus, the activity of the fumarases is regulated by the cell growth rate and carbon source utilization independently. Further examination of FumA and FumC activities in a cya mutant suggested that growth rate control of FumA and FumC activities is cyclic AMP dependent. Although the total fumarase activity increased under aerobic conditions, the individual fumarase activities varied under different oxygen levels. While FumB activity was maximal during anaerobic growth (k = 0.6/h), FumA was the major enzyme under anaerobic cell growth, and the maximum activity was achieved when oxygen was elevated to 1 to 2%. Further increase in the oxygen level caused inactivation of FumA and FumB activities by the high oxidized state, but FumC activity increased simultaneously when the oxygen level was higher than 4%. The same regulation of the activities of fumarases in response to different oxygen levels was also found in mutants. Therefore, synthesis of the three fumarase enzymes is controlled in a hierarchical fashion depending on the environmental oxygen that the cell encounters.  相似文献   

13.
The Bradyrhizobium japonicum fumarase gene (fumC-like) was cloned and sequenced, and a fumC deletion mutant was constructed. This mutant had a Nod+ Fix+ phenotype in symbiosis with the host plant, soybean, and growth in minimal medium with fumarate as sole carbon source was also not affected. The cloned B. japonicum fumC gene fully complemented an Escherichia coli Fum- mutant, strain JH400, for growth in minimal medium with fumarate. The predicted amino acid sequence of the FumC protein showed strong similarity to the E. coli FumC protein, Bacillus subtilis CitG protein, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fum1 protein, and the mammalian fumarases. The B. japonicum FumC protein accounted for about 40% of the total fumarase activity in aerobically grown cells. The remaining 60% was ascribed to a temperature-labile fumarase. These data suggest that B. japonicum possesses two different fumarase isoenzymes, one of which is encoded by fumC. Besides E. coli, which has three fumarases, B. japonicum is thus the second bacterium for which there is genetic evidence for the existence of more than one fumarase.  相似文献   

14.
C Reyns  J Léonis 《Biochimie》1975,57(2):131-138
The catalysis of the hydration of fumarate and deshydration of L - malate by chicken fumarase was measured spectrophotometrically over a range of substrate concentrations from 4 times 10(-3) M to 8 times 10(-5) M for fumarate and from 8 times 10(-2) M to 10(-3) M for L - malate. For the forward and reverse reactions, linear Lineweaver and Burk plots were obtained. The Michaelis constants and the maximum initial velocities for both substrates were determined and the Haldane relation was found to be obeyed. The effect of pH on activity was investigated over a pH range from 5.5 to 9.0 and the data indicate the presence, in the active site, of two ionizable groups, one in the acidic form and one in the basic form. The values of the ionization constants, determined for the enzyme - substrate complexes, agree closely with the ones obtained for the porcine enzyme. The mode of action of twenty-four structural analogs on the initial velocity of the dehydration of L-malate, by chicken fumarase was examined. From these studies, two regions positively charged appear necessary for the effective binding of the carboxylates of the substrates and competitive inhibitors to the active center. Moreover, the data suggest the presence of an additional group, in the catalytic site of chicken fumarase, that stabilizes the carbon-carbon double bond common to fumarate and its structural analogs. Finally, from the comparison of the kinetic properties of the chicken and pig fumarases, it may be concluded that the catalytic mechanism of the homologous enzymes are very similar, if not identical.  相似文献   

15.
Acetyl-coenzyme A synthases (ACS) are Ni-Fe-S containing enzymes found in archaea and bacteria. They are divisible into 4 classes. Class I ACS's catalyze the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from CO2 + 2e-, CoA, and a methyl group, and contain 5 types of subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon). Class II enzymes catalyze essentially the reverse reaction and have similar subunit composition. Class III ACS's catalyze the same reaction as Class I enzymes, but use pyruvate as a source of CO2 and 2e-, and are composed of 2 autonomous proteins, an alpha 2 beta 2 tetramer and a gamma delta heterodimer. Class IV enzymes catabolize CO to CO2 and are alpha-subunit monomers. Phylogenetic analyses were performed on all five subunits. ACS alpha sequences divided into 2 major groups, including Class I/II sequences and Class III/IV-like sequences. Conserved residues that may function as ligands to the B- and C-clusters were identified. Other residues exclusively conserved in Class I/II sequences may be ligands to additional metal centers in Class I and II enzymes. ACS beta sequences also separated into two groups, but they were less divergent than the alpha's, and the separation was not as distinct. Class III-like beta sequences contained approximately 300 residues at their N-termini absent in Class I/II sequences. Conserved residues identified in beta sequences may function as ligands to active site residues used for acetyl-CoA synthesis. ACS gamma-sequences separated into 3 groups (Classes I, II, and III), while delta-sequences separated into 2 groups (Class I/II and III). These groups are less divergent than those of alpha sequences. ACS epsilon-sequence topology showed greater divergence and less consistency vis-à-vis the other subunits, possibly reflecting reduced evolutionary constraints due to the absence of metal centers. The alpha subunit phylogeny may best reflect the functional diversity of ACS enzymes. Scenarios of how ACS and ACS-containing organisms may have evolved are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The nucleotide sequences of two segments of DNA (2250 and 2921 base-pairs) containing the functionally related fumarase (fumC) and aspartase (aspA) genes of Escherichia coli K12 were determined. The fumC structural gene comprises 1398 base-pairs (466 codons, excluding the initiation codon), and it encodes a polypeptide of Mr 50353 that resembles the fumarases of Bacillus subtilis 168 (citG-gene product), rat liver and pig heart. The fumC gene starts 140 base-pairs downstream of the structurally-unrelated fumA gene, but there is no evidence that both genes form part of the same operon. The aspA structural gene comprises 1431 base-pairs (477 codons excluding the initiation codon), and it encodes a polypeptide of Mr 52190, similar to that predicted from maxicell studies and for the enzyme from E. coli W. Remarkable homologies were found between the primary structures of the fumarase (fumC and citG) and aspartase (aspA) genes and their products, suggesting close structural and evolutionary relationships.  相似文献   

17.
The nucleotide sequence of a 2.14 kb fragment of Bacillus subtilis DNA containing the citG gene encoding fumarase was determined using the dideoxy chain termination method. The citG coding region of 1392 base pairs (464 codons) was identified, and the deduced Mr (50425) is in good agreement with that of the protein identified from expression in Escherichia coli maxicells. There is no sequence homology between the B. subtilis and E. coli fumarases. Overlapping potential promoter sequences have been identified for sigma 28, sigma 37 and sigma 55 RNA polymerase holoenzymes. The DNA fragment also contains the proximal part of the gerA locus, responsible for L-alanine-sensitive spore germination.  相似文献   

18.
Amino acid sequence of porcine heart fumarase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The complete amino acid sequence of porcine heart fumarase (EC 4.2.1.2) has been determined from peptides produced by cyanogen bromide, endoproteinase Arg-C, S. aureus V8 protease, and trypsin. The enzyme is a tetramer of identical subunits with Mr = 50,015 and composed of 466 amino acid residues. Porcine heart fumarase displays 96% identity to human liver fumarase. Prediction of the secondary structural elements of porcine fumarase indicate that the enzyme contains a large amount of alpha helix with very little beta structure.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously proposed that a single translation product of the FUM1 gene encoding fumarase is distributed between the cytosol and mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and that all fumarase translation products are targeted and processed in mitochondria before distribution. Thus, fumarase processed in mitochondria returns to the cytosol. In the current work, we (i) generated mutations throughout the coding sequence which resulted in fumarases with altered conformations that are targeted to mitochondria but have lost their ability to be distributed; (ii) showed by mass spectrometry that mature cytosolic and mitochondrial fumarase isoenzymes are identical; and (iii) showed that hsp70 chaperones in the cytosol (Ssa) and mitochondria (Ssc1) can affect fumarase distribution. The results are discussed in light of our model of targeting and distribution, which suggests that rapid folding of fumarase into an import-incompetent state provides the driving force for retrograde movement of the processed protein back to the cytosol through the translocation pore.  相似文献   

20.
Purified rat-liver dihydropteridine reductase is homogeneous by gel filtration (Mr approximately 51,000), sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Mr approximately 25,500), and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting that the enzyme is composed of two identical subunits. However, analysis by isoelectric focusing has revealed three enzyme forms with approximate isoelectric points of 6.5, 5.9, and 5.7 (designated forms, I, II, and III, respectively). The three forms, isolated in 65% yield by preparative chromatofocusing, are stable in 0.05 M phosphate buffer, pH 6.8, containing 1 mM beta-mercaptoethanol and exhibit similar kinetic constants when the catalytic activities of the isolated forms are compared with quinonoid dihydrobiopterin as substrate. All forms generate complexes with the enzymatic cofactor NADH which are also detectable by IEF. When examined further by IEF under denaturing conditions in 6 M urea the enzyme demonstrates a differing subunit composition for its three forms. Two distinct subunits, designated alpha and beta, can be identified, and additional evidence suggests that the native enzyme forms I, II, and III represent the three differing dimeric combinations alpha alpha (form I), alpha beta (form II), and beta beta (form III).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号