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1.
In Bacillus subtilis, addition of chemotactic attractant causes an immediate change in distribution of methyl groups on methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs), whereas in Escherichia coli, it causes changes that occur throughout the adaptation period. Thus, methylation changes in B. subtilis are probably related to excitation, not adaptation. If labeled cells are exposed to excess nonradioactive methionine, then attractant causes immediate 50% delabeling of the MCPs, suggesting that a flux of methyl groups through the MCPs occurs. Methanol is given off at a high rate during the adaptation period and probably reflects demethylation of some substance to bring about adaptation. The fact that many radioactive methyl groups are lost immediately from the MCPs but only slowly arise as methanol is consistent with the hypothesis that they are transferred from the MCPs to a carrier from which methanol arises. Demethylation of this carrier may cause adaptation.  相似文献   

2.
Bacillus subtilis responds to chemotactic attractants by demethylating certain membrane-bound proteins, termed methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) and by augmenting the evolution of methanol. We propose that the methanol comes from a methylated intermediate rather than directly from the MCPs themselves. First, repellent blocks attractant-induced smooth swimming and methanol formation, but not MCP demethylation. Second, prior treatment of cells with much attractant to reduce radiolabeling of MCPs and increase that of the putative intermediate caused increased, rather than decreased, production of methanol upon addition and then removal of the repellent. Third, such cells also produced much, rather than little, methanol upon addition of less attractant than during the pretreatment. We speculate that unmethylated intermediate causes tumbling; attractant causes its methylation and hence absence of tumbling (smooth swimming). Its demethylation during the period of smooth swimming affords adaptation.  相似文献   

3.
The methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) are integral membrane proteins that undergo reversible methylation during adaptation of bacterial cells to environmental attractants and repellents. The numerous methylated forms of each MCP are seen as a pattern of multiple bands on polyacrylamide gels. We have characterized the methylation sites in MCPI by analyzing methyl-accepting tryptic peptides. At least two different tryptic peptides accept methyl esters; one methyl-accepting peptide contains methionine and lysine and may be methylated a maximum of four times. The second methyl-accepting tryptic peptide contains arginine and may be methylated twice. Base-catalyzed demethylations of tryptic peptides and analysis of the charge differences between the different methylated forms of MCPI show that MCPI molecules may be methylated a total of six times. The two methyl esters on the methyl-accepting arginine peptide appear to be preferentially methylated in most of the forms of MCPI in attractant-stimulated cells. The ability to acquire six methylations on MCPI allows the bacterial cells to adapt to a broad range of attractant and repellent concentrations.  相似文献   

4.
The addition of attractant to Bacillus subtilis briefly exposed to radioactive methionine causes an increase of labeling of the methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins. The addition of attractant to cells radiolabeled for longer times shows no change in the extent of methylation. Therefore, the increase in labeling for the briefly labeled cells is due to an increased turnover of methyl groups caused by attractant. All amino acids gave enhanced turnover. This turnover lasted for a prolonged time, probably spanning the period of smooth swimming caused by the attractant addition. Repellent did not affect the turnover when added alone or simultaneously with attractant. Thus, for amino acid attractants, the turnover is probably the excitatory signal, which is seen to extend long into or throughout the adaptation period, not just at the start of it.  相似文献   

5.
Methanol production by Mycobacterium smegmatis.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Mycobacterium smegmatis cells produce [3H]methanol when incubated with [methyl-3H]methionine. The methanol is derived from S-adenosylmethionine rather than methyltetrahydrofolate. M. smegmatis cells carboxymethylate several proteins, and some of the methanol probably results from their demethylation, but most of the methanol may come from an unidentified component with a high gel mobility. Although methanol in the medium reached 19 microM, it was not incorporated into the methylated mannose polysaccharide, a lipid carrier in this organism.  相似文献   

6.
Mudd SH  Datko AH 《Plant physiology》1989,90(1):296-305
The results of experiments in which intact plants of Lemna paucicostata were labeled with either l-[(3)H(3)C]methionine, l-[(14)CH(3)]methionine, or [1,2-(14)C]ethanolamine support the conclusion that growth in concentrations of choline of 3.0 micromolar or above brings about marked decreases in the rate of biosynthesis of methylated forms of ethanolamine (normally present chiefly as phosphatidylcholine, with lesser amounts of choline and phosphocholine). The in vivo locus of the block is at the committing step in the biosynthetic sequence at which phosphoethanolamine is methylated by S-adenosylmethionine to form phosphomethylethanolamine. The block is highly specific: flow of methyl groups originating in methionine continues into S-adenosylmethionine, S-methylmethionine, the methyl moieties of pectin methyl ester, and other methylated metabolites. When choline uptake is less than the total that would be synthesized by control plants, phosphoethanolamine methylation is down-regulated to balance the uptake; total plant content of choline and its derivatives remains essentially constant. At maximum down-regulation, phosphoethanolamine methylation continues at 5 to 10% of normal. A specific decrease in the total available activity of AdoMet: phosphoethanolamine N-methyltransferase, as well as feedback inhibition of this enzyme by phosphocholine, and prevention of accumulation of phosphoethanolamine by down-regulation of ethanolamine synthesis may each contribute to effective control of phosphoethanolamine methylation. This down-regulation may necessitate major changes in S-adenosylmethionine metabolism. Such changes are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
In bacterial chemotaxis, adaptation is correlated with methylation or demethylation of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). Each protein migrates as a characteristic set of multiple bands in sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The changes in MCP methylation that accompany adaptation are not the same for all bands of a set. Adaptation to a type II repellent stimulus results in an overall decrease in MCP II methylation, but also in an increase in the amount of radioactive methyl groups in the upper band of the set. We demonstrate that this increase is not due to new methylation, but rather to reduced electrophoretic mobility of previously methylated molecules that have lost some but not all of their methyl groups. We suggest that the pattern of multiple bands is a direct reflection of multiple sites for methylation on MCP molecules, and that the distribution of radiolabel among the bands is determined by the total extent of methylation. The patterns of methylated peptides produced by limited proteolysis of different MCP bands imply that methylation of the multiple sites on a molecule may occur in a specific order.  相似文献   

8.
S-Adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) is the methyl donor of numerous methylation reactions. The current model is that an increased concentration of AdoMet stimulates DNA methyltransferase reactions, triggering hypermethylation and protecting the genome against global hypomethylation, a hallmark of cancer. Using an assay of active demethylation in HEK 293 cells, we show that AdoMet inhibits active demethylation and expression of an ectopically methylated CMV-GFP (green fluorescent protein) plasmid in a dose-dependent manner. The inhibition of GFP expression is specific to methylated GFP; AdoMet does not inhibit an identical but unmethylated CMV-GFP plasmid. S-Adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy), the product of methyltransferase reactions utilizing AdoMet does not inhibit demethylation or expression of CMV-GFP. In vitro, AdoMet but not AdoHcy inhibits methylated DNA-binding protein 2/DNA demethylase as well as endogenous demethylase activity extracted from HEK 293, suggesting that AdoMet directly inhibits demethylase activity, and that the methyl residue on AdoMet is required for its interaction with demethylase. Taken together, our data support an alternative mechanism of action for AdoMet as an inhibitor of intracellular demethylase activity, which results in hypermethylation of DNA.  相似文献   

9.
Mudd SH  Datko AH 《Plant physiology》1989,90(1):306-310
The results of experiments in which intact plants of Lemna paucicostata were labeled with either l-[3H3C]methionine, l-[14CH3]methionine, or [1,2-14C]ethanolamine support the conclusion that growth in concentrations of choline of 3.0 micromolar or above brings about marked decreases in the rate of biosynthesis of methylated forms of ethanolamine (normally present chiefly as phosphatidylcholine, with lesser amounts of choline and phosphocholine). The in vivo locus of the block is at the committing step in the biosynthetic sequence at which phosphoethanolamine is methylated by S-adenosylmethionine to form phosphomethylethanolamine. The block is highly specific: flow of methyl groups originating in methionine continues into S-adenosylmethionine, S-methylmethionine, the methyl moieties of pectin methyl ester, and other methylated metabolites. When choline uptake is less than the total that would be synthesized by control plants, phosphoethanolamine methylation is down-regulated to balance the uptake; total plant content of choline and its derivatives remains essentially constant. At maximum down-regulation, phosphoethanolamine methylation continues at 5 to 10% of normal. A specific decrease in the total available activity of AdoMet: phosphoethanolamine N-methyltransferase, as well as feedback inhibition of this enzyme by phosphocholine, and prevention of accumulation of phosphoethanolamine by down-regulation of ethanolamine synthesis may each contribute to effective control of phosphoethanolamine methylation. This down-regulation may necessitate major changes in S-adenosylmethionine metabolism. Such changes are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
S-Adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) has been found to bind specifically to the plasma membrane of promyelocytic leukemia cells, HL-60. The Kd for AdoMet is 4.2.10(-6) M and the Bmax is 4.0.10(-12) mol/10(7) HL-60 cells. The binding is not related to the adenosine receptor since neither adenosine, ADP, nor ATP affect the ligand-receptor reaction. When HL-60 cells were incubated with physiological concentrations of [methyl-3H]AdoMet (20 microM) at 36 degrees C, AdoMet did not equilibrate with the intracellular pool, nor were any [3H]methyl groups incorporated into nucleic acids or proteins. In contrast, significant amounts of [3H]methyl groups were incorporated into membrane phospholipids. When cells were incubated with 20 microM [methyl-3H]AdoMet, [3H]methyl groups were transferred to phosphatidylethanolamine, -monomethylethanolamine, and -dimethylethanolamine yielding phosphatidylcholine. However, the rate of methyl transfer with AdoMet was only 22% of that observed when cells were incubated with a comparable amount of [methyl-3H]methionine. Both the binding of AdoMet and the methylation of phospholipids were inhibited by exogenous S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine. Therefore, the binding may be linked to a phospholipid methyltransferase.  相似文献   

11.
Methionine methyl group metabolism in lemna   总被引:6,自引:6,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Mudd SH  Datko AH 《Plant physiology》1986,81(1):103-114
To provide information upon the ways in which Lemna paucicostata uses the methyl group of methionine, plants were grown for various periods (from 1 minute to 6.8 days) in the presence of a tracer dose of radioactive methyl-labeled methionine. Protein methionine accounted for approximately 19% of the accumulated methyl moieties; other methylated products, about 81%. The latter group included (percent of total methyl in parentheses): methylated ethanolamine derivatives (46%); methyl esters of the pellet (chiefly, or solely, pectin methyl esters) (15%); chlorophyll methyl esters (8%); unidentified neutral lipids (6%); nucleic acid derivatives (2-5%); methylated basic amino acids (2%). No other major methylated compounds were observed in any plant fraction. Available evidence suggests that little, if any, oxidation of the methyl group of methionine, directly or indirectly, occurs in Lemna. Our results indicate that S-methyl-methionine sulfonium is formed relatively rapidly, but does not accumulate at a commensurate rate, probably being reconverted to methionine. To our knowledge, this is the first time a reasonably complete accounting of the metabolic fate of methionine methyl has been obtained for any plant. The extent to which the results with Lemna may be representative of the situation for other higher plants is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The methylation of phospholipids by S-adenosyl-L-methionine was characterized in microsomes prepared from strips of rat aorta. In the presence of 0.5 microM S-adenosyl-L-methionine, endogenous phosphatidylethanolamine was methylated to form three products: phosphatidyl-N-monomethylethanolamine, phosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine. In the presence of 150 microM S-adenosyl-L-methionine the methylation activity increased more than 50-fold and the principal radioactive product was phosphatidylcholine. Optimal activity was at pH 9 and no magnesium requirement was detected. Exogenous phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidyl-N-monomethylethanolamine and phosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine served as substrates for the enzyme. The methylation of exogenous phosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine proceeded at a slower rate. Incubation of trypsin with the aorta microsomes reduced the enzymatic activity and reduced the relative yield of phosphatidyl-N-monomethylethanolamine. Phospholipase C degraded the methylated phospholipids, but phosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine appeared to be less accessible to the phospholipase. The phospholipid methylation activity was inhibited by the addition of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine or by L-homocysteinethiolactone. When intact strips of rat aorta were incubated with L-[methyl-3H]methionine, [3H]methyl groups were incorporated into phospholipids. This incorporation was inhibited when L-homocysteinethiolactone was added to the incubation. Polarized fluorescence of diphenylhexatriene in aorta microsomes was measured to determine the apparent membrane fluidity. When intact strips of aorta were incubated with methionine or with L-homocysteinethiolactone, methionine enhanced and L-homocysteinethiolactone decreased apparent fluidity of the microsomal membranes. Phospholipid methylation activity was examined in aorta microsomes prepared from genetically spontaneous hypertensive SHR strain rats. Phospholipid methylation activity was substantially greater in the SHR aorta microsomes than in microsomes prepared from Wistar-Kyoto WKY control strain aorta. Membrane fluidity was greater in the SHR aorta microsomes than in the WKY aorta microsomes. The hypothesis that phospholipid methylation activity influences fluidity of membranes and the possible involvement of methylated phospholipids in aorta membrane functions are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
In bacterial chemotaxis, the chemoreceptors [methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs)] transduce chemotactic signals through the two-component histidine kinase CheA. At low but not high attractant concentrations, chemotactic signals must be amplified. The MCPs are organized into a polar lattice, and this organization has been proposed to be critical for signal amplification. Although evidence in support of this model has emerged, an understanding of how signals are amplified and modulated is lacking. We probed the role of MCP localization under conditions wherein signal amplification must be inhibited. We tested whether a large increase in attractant concentration (a change that should alter receptor occupancy from c. 0% to > 95%) would elicit changes in the chemoreceptor localization. We treated Escherichia coli or Bacillus subtilis with a high level of attractant, exposed cells to the cross-linking agent paraformaldehyde and visualized chemoreceptor location with an anti-MCP antibody. A marked increase in the percentage of cells displaying a diffuse staining pattern was obtained. In contrast, no increase in diffuse MCP staining is observed when cells are treated with a repellent or a low concentration of attractant. For B. subtilis mutants that do not undergo chemotaxis, the addition of a high concentration of attractant has no effect on MCP localization. Our data suggest that interactions between chemoreceptors are decreased when signal amplification is unnecessary.  相似文献   

14.
It has previously been shown that incubation of mammalian cell cytosolic extracts with the protein kinase inhibitor tyrphostin A25 results in enhanced transfer of methyl groups from S-adenosyl-[methyl-3H]methionine to proteins. These findings were interpreted as demonstrating tyrphostin stimulation of a novel type of protein carboxyl methyltransferase. We find here, however, that tyrphostin A25 addition to mouse heart cytosol incubated with S-adenosyl-[methyl-3H]methionine or S-adenosyl-[methyl-14C]methionine stimulates the labeling of small molecules in addition to proteins. Base treatment of both protein and small molecule fractions releases volatile radioactivity, suggesting labile ester-like linkages of the labeled methyl group. Production of both the base-volatile product and labeled protein occurs with tyrphostins A25, A47, and A51, but not with thirteen other tyrphostin family members. These active tyrphostins all contain a catechol moiety and are good substrates for recombinant and endogenous catechol-O-methyltransferase. Inhibition of catechol-O-methyltransferase activity with tyrphostin AG1288 prevents both base-volatile product formation and protein labeling from methyl-labeled S-adenosylmethionine in heart, kidney, and liver, but not in testes or brain extracts. These results suggest that the incorporation of methyl groups into protein follows a complex pathway initiated by the methylation of select tyrphostins by endogenous catechol-O-methyltransferase. We suggest that the methylated tyrphostins are further modified in the cell extract and covalently attached to cellular proteins. The presence of endogenous catechols in cells suggests that similar reactions can also occur in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Adaptation in the chemosensory pathways of bacteria like Escherichia coli is mediated by the enzyme-catalyzed methylation (and demethylation) of glutamate residues in the signaling domains of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). MCPs can be methylated in trans, where the methyltransferase (CheR) molecule catalyzing methyl group transfer is tethered to the C terminus of a neighboring receptor. Here, it was shown that E. coli cells exhibited adaptation to attractant stimuli mediated through either engineered or naturally occurring MCPs that were unable to tether CheR as long as another MCP capable of tethering CheR was also present, e.g., either the full-length aspartate or serine receptor (Tar or Tsr). Methylation of isolated membrane samples in which engineered tethering and substrate receptors were coexpressed demonstrated that the truncated substrate receptors (trTsr) were efficiently methylated in the presence of tethering receptors (Tar with methylation sites blocked) relative to samples in which none of the MCPs had tethering sites. The effects of ligand binding on methylation were investigated, and an increase in rate was produced only with serine (the ligand specific for the substrate receptor trTsr); no significant change in rate was produced by aspartate (the ligand specific for the tethering receptor Tar). Although the overall efficiency of methylation was lower, receptor-specific effects were also observed in trTar- and trTsr-containing samples, where neither Tar nor Tsr possessed the CheR binding site at the C terminus. Altogether, the results are consistent with a ligand-induced conformational change that is limited to the methylated receptor dimer and does not spread to adjacent receptor dimers.  相似文献   

16.
Halophilic archaea, such as eubacteria, use methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) to sense their environment. We show here that BasT is a halobacterial transducer protein (Htp) responsible for chemotaxis towards five attractant amino acids. The C-terminus of the protein exhibits the highly conserved regions that are diagnostic for MCPs: the signalling domain for communication with the histidine kinase and the methylation sites that interact with the methylation/demethylation enzymes for adaptation. Hydropathy analysis predicts an enterobacterial-type transducer protein topology for BasT, with an extracellular putative ligand-binding domain flanked by two transmembrane helices and a cytoplasmic domain. BasT-inactivated mutant cells are missing a membrane protein radiolabelled with L-[methyl-3H]-methionine in wild-type cells, confirming that BasT is methylatable and membrane bound. Behavioural analysis of the basT mutant cells by capillary and chemical-in-plug assays demonstrates complete loss of chemotactic responses towards five (leucine, isoleucine, valine, methionine and cysteine) of the six attractant amino acids for Halobacterium salinarum, whereas they still respond to arginine. The volatile methyl group production assays also corroborate these findings and confirm that BasT signalling induces methyl group turnover. Our data identify BasT as the chemotaxis transducer protein for the branched chain amino acids leucine, isoleucine and valine as well as for methionine and cysteine. Thus, BasT and the arginine sensor Car cover the entire spectrum of chemotactic responses towards attractant amino acids in H. salinarum.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of Ca2+ loading, induced by the ionophore A23187, on methyl esterification of membrane proteins (i.e. bands 2.1, 3, 4.1 and 4.5) has been investigated in intact human erythrocytes. When the cells were incubated with L-[methyl-3H]methionine, 40 microM CaCl2 and 10 microM A23187 induce a 50% inhibition of membrane protein methyl esterification. This effect is selectively due to the increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration, as it is antagonized by 10 mM EGTA, and other divalent cations such as Mn2+ do not exert any inhibition. In order to clarify the mechanism(s) of the reported inhibition, the various events involved in the methyl esterification process in vivo were analyzed. L-Methionine uptake as well as protein methylase II activity are not directly affected by altered intracellular Ca2+ concentrations. Conversely in the Ca2+-loaded erythrocytes the conversion of [3H]methionine into [3H]AdoMet, catalyzed by AdoMet synthetase, decreases up to 25%. When the undialyzed erythrocyte cytosolic fraction is assayed in vitro for AdoMet synthetase the activity of the enzyme from the CaCl2/A23187-treated erythrocytes is significantly lower than the control, up to 5 mM ATP. This result suggests that in the Ca2+-loaded erythrocytes the ATP intracellular concentration is significantly lowered. The direct evaluation of ATP intracellular concentration, by HPLC, confirms a significant drop of ATP level, as a consequence of the Ca2+ loading. The removal of Ca2+ from the cells quantitatively restores both the AdoMet synthesis and the methyl esterification levels. The possible role of altered ATP intracellular concentrations as a regulatory factor in the AdoMet-dependent reactions as well as in post-translational protein methylation related to the ageing process is also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In the present paper a study on the enzymatic methyl esterification of proteins in the bovine lens has been presented. The data obtained show that the synthesis of the methyl donor (AdoMet) as well as the methyl esterification of proteins are operative in the lens incubated in the presence of L-(methyl-14C) methionine and the amount of labelled methyl esters decreases during cell ageing. Furthermore, the Authors suggest the usefulness of this model system in the evaluation of the overall AdoMet metabolism in aging.  相似文献   

20.
In this study, we have demonstrated that two unique proteins in Bacillus subtilis chemotaxis, CheC and CheD, interact. We have shown this interaction both by using the yeast two-hybrid system and by precipitation of in vitro translated products using glutathione-S-transferase fusions and glutathione agarose beads. We have also shown that CheC inhibits B. subtilis CheR-mediated methylation of B. subtilis methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) but not of Escherichia coli MCPs. It was previously reported that cheC mutants tend to swim smoothly and do not adapt to addition of attractant; cheD mutants have very poorly methylated MCPs and are very tumbiy, similar to cheA mutants. We hypothesize that CheC exerts its effect on MCP methylation in B. subtilis by controlling the binding of CheD to the MCPs. In absence of CheD, the MCPs are poor substrates for CheR and appear to tie up, rather than activate, CheA. The regulation of CheD by CheC may be part of a unique adaptation system for chemotaxis in B. subtilis, whereby high levels of CheY-P brought about by attractant addition would allow CheC to interact with CheD and consequently leave the MCPs, reducing CheA activity and hence the levels of CheY-P.  相似文献   

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