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1.
A new method is described for the selective 'in synthesis' labeling of peptides by rhodamine or biotin at a single, predetermined epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue. The alpha-amino group and other lysyl residues of the peptide remain unmodified. Peptides are assembled by the Fmoc approach, which requires mild operative conditions for the final deprotection and cleavage, and ensures little damage of the reporter group. The labeling technique involves the previous preparation of a suitable Lysine derivative, easily obtained from commercially-available protected amino acids. This new derivative, where the reporter group (biotin, or rhodamine) acts now as permanent protection of lysyl side chain functions, is then inserted into the synthesis program as a conventional protected amino acid, and linked to the preceding residue by aid of carbodiimide. A simpler, alternative method is also described for the selective 'in synthesis' labeling of peptides with N-terminal lysyl residues. Several applications of labeled peptides are reported.  相似文献   

2.
Radioiodination of proteins by reductive alkylation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The use of the aliphatic aldehyde, para-hydroxyphenylacetaldehyde as the reactive moiety in the radioiodination of proteins by reductive alkylation is described. The para-hydroxyphenyl group is radiolabeled with 125I, reacted through its aliphatic aldehyde group with primary amino groups on proteins to form a reversible Schiff base linkage which can then be stabilized with the mild reducing agent NaCNBH3. The introduction of the methylene group between the benzene ring and the aldehyde group increases its reactivity with protein amino groups permitting efficient labeling at low aldehyde concentrations. Using this method, radioiodinated proteins with high specific activity can be produced. The reductive alkylation procedure is advantageous in that the labeling conditions are mild, the reaction is specific for lysyl residues, and the modification of the epsilon-ammonium group of lysine results in ionizable secondary amino groups avoiding major changes in protein charge.  相似文献   

3.
Lysyl hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.4), an alpha 2 dimer, catalyzes the formation of hydroxylysine in collagens by the hydroxylation of lysine residues in X-Lys-Gly sequences. We report here on the isolation of cDNA clones coding for the enzyme from a chick embryo lambda gt11 library. Several overlapping clones covering all the coding sequences of the 4-kilobase mRNA and virtually all the noncoding sequences were characterized. These clones encode a polypeptide of 710 amino acid residues and a signal peptide of 20 amino acids. The polypeptide has four potential attachment sites for asparagine-linked oligosaccharides and 9 cysteine residues, at least one of which is likely to be involved in the binding of the Fe2+ atom to a catalytic site. A surprising finding was that no significant homology was found between the primary structures of lysyl hydroxylase and prolyl 4-hydroxylase in spite of the marked similarities in kinetic properties between these two enzymes. A computer-assisted comparison indicated only an 18% identity between lysyl hydroxylase and the alpha-subunit of prolyl 4-hydroxylase and a 19% identity between lysyl hydroxylase and the beta-subunit of prolyl 4-hydroxylase. Visual inspection of the most homologous areas nevertheless indicated the presence of several regions of 20-40 amino acids in which the identity between lysyl hydroxylase and one of the prolyl 4-hydroxylase subunits exceeded 30% or similarity exceeded 40%. Southern blot analyses of chick genomic DNA indicated the presence of only one gene coding for lysyl hydroxylase.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Weanling and perinatal rats were rendered vitamin B-6 (pyridoxine)-deficient. The rat pups were nursed from vitamin B-6-deficient or -sufficient dams and were killed at day 15 after parturition. The weanling rats were fed vitamin B-6-deficient or -sufficient diets and were killed after 5 weeks of treatment. Lung elastin from the groups of rats was then studied with respect to its content of lysine-derived cross-linking amino acids. Lung lysyl oxidase activity was also measured. B-6 deficiency decreased the number of lysine residues in elastin that were converted into the cross-linking amino acid precursor allysine. However, a more significant defect in cross-link formation was an apparent block in the condensation steps leading to the formation of desmosine. Desmosine was decreased, with an increase in the amounts of aldol condensation products (aldol CP) in elastin. It is proposed that the elevation in aldol CP results from the formation of thiazines, which are produced from the reaction between aldehyde and homocysteine. The concentration of homocysteine is significantly elevated in vitamin B-6-deficient rats.  相似文献   

6.
Achromobacter protease I (API) is a lysine-specific serine protease which hydrolyzes specifically the lysyl peptide bond. A gene coding for API was cloned from Achromobacter lyticus M497-1. Nucleotide sequence of the cloned DNA fragment revealed that the gene coded for a single polypeptide chain of 653 amino acids. The N-terminal 205 amino acids, including signal peptide and the threonine/serine-rich C-terminal 180 amino acids are flanking the 268 amino acid-mature protein which was identified by protein sequencing. Escherichia coli carrying a plasmid containing the cloned API gene overproduced and secreted a protein of Mr 50,000 (API') into the periplasm. This protein exhibited a distinct endopeptidase activity specific for lysyl bonds as well. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of API' was the same as mature API, suggesting that the enzyme retained the C-terminal extended peptide chain. The present experiments indicate that API, an extracellular protease produced by gram-negative bacteria, is synthesized in vivo as a precursor protein bearing long extended peptide chains at both N and C termini.  相似文献   

7.
Aldehyde-deficient non-crosslinked collagen obtained from lathyritic rats and collagen from penicillamine-treated rats, which is not deficient in aldehydes but the crosslinking of which is also inhibited, were implanted into the peritoneal cavity of hypophysectomized rats using the diffusion chamber technique. The enzyme lysyl oxidase which catalyses the aldehyde formation in certain lysyl residues of collagen and elastin was extracted from the skin of hypophysectomized rats. The activity of the enzyme was determined following its incubation with an L-[4,5-3H] lysine-labeled elastin substrate prepared from aortas of 17-day-old chick embryos. The result showed that the aldehyde deficient collagen did not crosslink while in the hypophysectomized animal indicating the lack of active lysyl oxidase in the rats. The enzyme activity in the skin of hypophysectomized animals was markedly reduced as compared with the controls indicating directly the dependance of lysyl oxidase activity on pituitary gland hormones.  相似文献   

8.
Lysyl hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.4), an alpha 2 dimer, catalyzes the formation of hydroxylysine in collagens by the hydroxylation of lysine residues in peptide linkages. A deficiency in this enzyme activity is known to exist in patients with the type VI variant of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, but no amino acid sequence data have been available for the wildtype or mutated human enzyme from any source. We report the isolation and characterization of cDNA clones for lysyl hydroxylase from a human placenta lambda gt11 cDNA library. The cDNA clones cover almost all of the 3.2-kb mRNA, including all the coding sequences. These clones encode a polypeptide of 709 amino acid residues and a signal peptide of 18 amino acids. The human coding sequences are 72% identical to the recently reported chick sequences at the nucleotide level and 76% identical at the amino acid level. The C-terminal region is especially well conserved, a 139-amino-acid region, residues 588-727 (C-terminus), being 94% identical between the two species and a 76-amino-acid region, residues 639-715, 99% identical. These comparisons, together with other recent data, suggest that lysyl hydroxylase may contain functionally significant sequences especially in its C-terminal region. The human lysyl hydroxylase gene (PLOD) was mapped to chromosome 1 by Southern blot analysis of human-mouse somatic cell hybrids, to the 1p34----1pter region by using cell hybrids that contain various translocations of human chromosome 1, and by in situ hybridization to 1p36.2----1p36.3. This gene is thus not physically linked to those for the alpha and beta subunits of prolyl 4-hydroxylase, which are located on chromosomes 10 and 17, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Primary structure of single-chain pro-urokinase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Single-chain pro-urokinase is an inactive proenzyme form of human urokinase with a single-chain structure and a Mr of 50,000 and converted to the active two-chain form by catalytic amounts of plasmin. It was isolated from culture fluid of human kidney cells and subjected to chemical (CNBr) and proteolytic (lysyl endopeptidase) degradation. The resulting peptides were separated by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography and subjected to automated sequence analysis. Amino acid sequence of 85% of the 411 residues recovered in 17 peptides were found to be consistent with those of the A chain (157 amino acids) and B chain (253 amino acids) of human urokinase reported by Günzler and co-workers (Günzler, W. A., Steffens, G.J., Otting, F., Kim, S.-M., A., Frankus, E., and Flohé, L. (1982) Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 363, 133-141; 1155-1165; Steffens, G.J., Günzler, W.A., Otting, F., Frankus, E., and Flohé, L. (1982) Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 363, 1043-1058). It revealed the presence of Lys at position 158 in single-chain pro-urokinase through which the two polypeptide chains of human urokinase are unified into one molecule. In addition, firm evidence was found that upon activation by plasmin single-chain pro-urokinase is cleaved at the Lys-Ile bond between residues 158 and 159, resulting in the formation of a two-chain urokinase molecule held together by one disulfide linkage. These results indicate that the cleavage at the Lys-Ile bond between residues 158 and 159 is responsible for conformational change, appearance of enzyme activity and reduction of its high affinity for fibrin.  相似文献   

10.
The amino acid sequence of a short chain neurotoxin obtained from Bungarus fasciatus venom consists of 64 amino acid residues: Arg-Ile-Cys-Leu-Asn-Gln-Gln-Gln-Ser- Thr-Pro-Glu-Asp-Gln-Pro-Thr-Asn-Gly-Gln-Cys-Tyr-Ile-Lys-Thr-Asp-Cys-Gln- Asn-Lys - Thr-Trp-Asn-Thr-His-Arg-Gly-Ser-Arg-Thr-Asp-Arg-Gly-Cys-Gly-Cys-Pro-Lys- Val-Lys - Pro-Gly-Ile-Asn-Leu-Arg-Cys-Cys-Lys-Thr-Asp-Lys-Cys-Asn-Glu. The above result was obtained primarily from the amino acid analyses and sequencing of tryptic peptides accompanied with the necessary analyses and sequencing of the chymotryptic and lysyl endopeptidic peptides for alignment.  相似文献   

11.
Plasminogen binding to cell surfaces results in enhanced plasminogen activation, localization of the proteolytic activity of plasmin on cell surfaces, and protection of plasmin from alpha 2-antiplasmin. We sought to characterize candidate plasminogen binding sites on nucleated cells, using the U937 monocytoid cell as a model, specifically focusing on the role of cell-surface proteins with appropriately placed lysine residues as candidate plasminogen receptors. Lysine derivatives with free alpha-carboxyl groups and peptides with carboxy-terminal lysyl residues were effective inhibitors of plasminogen binding to the cells. One of the peptides, representing the carboxy-terminal 19 amino acids of alpha 2-antiplasmin, was approximately 5-fold more effective than others with carboxy-terminal lysines. Thus, in addition to a carboxy-terminal lysyl residue, other structural features of the cell-surface proteins may influence their affinity for plasminogen. Affinity chromatography has been used to isolate candidate plasminogen receptors from U937 cells. A major protein of Mr 54,000 was recovered and identified as alpha-enolase by immunochemical and functional criteria. alpha-Enolase was present on the cell surface and was capable of binding plasminogen in ligand blotting analyses. Plasminogen binding activity of a molecular weight similar to alpha-enolase also was present in a variety of other cell types. Carboxypeptidase B treatment of alpha-enolase abolished its ability to bind plasminogen, consistent with the presence of a C-terminal lysyl residue. Thus, cell-surface proteins with carboxy-terminal lysyl residues appear to function as plasminogen binding sites, and alpha-enolase has been identified as a prominent representative of this class of receptors.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase [EC 4.1.1.31] of E. coli was inactivated by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonate (TNBS), a reagent known to attack amino groups in polypeptides. When the modified enzyme was hydrolyzed with acid, epsilon-trinitrophenyl lysine (TNP-lysine) was identified as a product. Close similarity of the absorption spectrum of the modified enzyme to that of TNP-alpha-acetyl lysine and other observations indicated that most of the amino acid residues modified were lysyl residues. Spectrophotometric determination suggested that five lysyl residues out of 37 residues per subunit were modified concomitant with the complete inactivation of the enzyme. DL-Phospholactate (P-lactate), a potent competitive inhibitor of the enzyme, protected the enzyme from TNBS inactivation. The concentration of P-lactate required for half-maximal protection was 3 mM in the presence of Mg2+ and acetyl-CoA (CoASAc), which is one of the allosteric activators of the enzyme. About 1.3 lysyl residues per subunit were protected from modification by 10 mM P-lactate, indicating that one or two lysyl residues are essential for the catalytic activity and are located at or near the active site. The Km values of the partially inactivated enzyme for PEP and Mg2+ were essentially unchanged, though Vmax was decreased. The partially inactivated enzyme showed no sensitivity to the allosteric activators, i.e., fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (Fru-1,6-P2) and GTP, or to the allosteric inhibitor, i.e., L-aspartate (or L-malate), but retained sensitivities to other activators, i.e., CoASAc and long-chain fatty acids. P-lactate, in the presence of Mg2+ and CoASAc, protected the enzyme from inactivation, but did not protect it from desensitization to Fru-1,6-P2, GTP, and L-aspartate. However, when the modification was carried out in the presence of L-malate, the enzyme was protected from desensitization to L-aspartate (or L-malate), but was not protected from desensitization to Fru-1,6-P2 and GTP. These results indicate that the lysyl residues involved in the catalytic and regulatory functions are different from each other, and that lysyl residues involved in the regulation by L-aspartate (or L-malate) are also different from those involved in the regulation by Fru-1,6-P2 and GTP.  相似文献   

13.
Collagen glucosyltransferase (GGT) activity has recently been shown to be associated with human lysyl hydroxylase (LH) isoform 3 (LH3) (Heikkinen, J., Risteli, M., Wang, C., Latvala, J., Rossi, M., Valtavaara, M., Myllyl?, R. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 36158-36163). The LH and GGT activities of the multifunctional LH3 protein modify lysyl residues in collagens posttranslationally to form hydroxylysyl and glucosylgalactosyl hydroxylysyl residues respectively. We now report that in the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, where only one ortholog is found for lysyl hydroxylase, the LH and GGT activities are also associated with the same gene product. The aim of the present studies is the identification of amino acids important for the catalytic activity of GGT. Our data indicate that the GGT active site is separate from the carboxyl-terminal LH active site of human LH3, the amino acids important for the GGT activity being located at the amino-terminal part of the molecule. Site-directed mutagenesis of a conserved cysteine at position 144 to isoleucine and a leucine at position 208 to isoleucine caused a marked reduction in GGT activity. These amino acids were conserved in C. elegans LH and mammalian LH3, but not in LH1 or LH2, which lack GGT activity. The data also reveal a DXD-like motif in LH3 characteristic of many glycosyltransferases and the mutagenesis of aspartates of this motif eliminated the GGT activity. Reduction in GGT activity was not accompanied by a change in the LH activity of the molecule. Thus GGT activity can be manipulated independently of LH activity in LH3. These data provide the information needed to design knock-out studies for investigation of the function of glucosylgalactosyl hydroxylysyl residues of collagens in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
D W Chung  E W Davie 《Biochemistry》1984,23(18):4232-4236
cDNAs and the genomic DNA coding for the gamma and gamma' chains of human fibrinogen have been isolated and characterized by sequence analysis. The cDNAs coding for the gamma and gamma' chains share a common nucleotide sequence coding for the first 407 amino acid residues in each polypeptide chain. The predominant gamma chain contains an additional four amino acids on its carboxyl-terminal end (residues 408-411). These four amino acids, together with the 3' noncoding sequences, are encoded by the tenth exon. Removal of the ninth intervening sequence following the processing and polyadenylation reactions yields a mature mRNA coding for the predominant gamma chain. The less prevalent gamma' chain contains 20 amino acids at its carboxyl-terminal end (residues 408-417). These 20 amino acids are encoded by the immediate 5' end of the ninth intervening sequence. This results from an occasional processing and polyadenylation reaction that occurs within the region normally constituting the ninth intervening sequence. Accordingly, the gene for the gamma chain of human fibrinogen gives rise to two mRNAs that differ in sequence on their 3' ends. These mRNAs code for polypeptide chains with different carboxyl-terminal sequences. Both of these polypeptides are incorporated into the fibrinogen molecule present in plasma.  相似文献   

15.
19F NMR spectroscopy was used in conjunction with isotopic labeling to demonstrate that difluorothionoacetyl-protein adducts are formed by metabolites of the nephrotoxic cysteine conjugate S-(1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl)-L-cysteine (TFEC). To determine which amino acid residues can be involved in adduct formation, the reactivity of TFEC metabolites with a variety of N-acetyl amino acids was also investigated. An N alpha-acetyl-N epsilon-(difluorothionoacetyl)lysine (DFTAL) adduct was isolated and characterized by 19F and 13C NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. N alpha-Acetylhistidine and N-acetyltyrosine were found to act as nucleophilic catalysts to facilitate the formation of both the protein and DFTAL adducts. Adduct formation was greatly reduced when lysyl-modified protein was used as the substrate, indicating that lysyl residues are primary sites of adduct formation. However N alpha-acetyllysine, at concentrations of greater than 100-fold in excess compared to protein lysyl residues, was not effective in preventing binding of metabolites to protein. Therefore, nucleophilic catalysis at the surface of the protein may be an important mechanism for the binding of TFEC metabolites to specific lysyl residues in protein. TFEC metabolites were very reactive with the thiol nucleophiles glutathione and N-acetylcysteine. However, the predicted difluorodithioesters could not be isolated. Both stable difluorothioacetamide and less stable difluorodithioester protein adducts may play a role in TFEC-mediated nephrotoxicity.  相似文献   

16.
The DPN-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase of pig heart is totally and irreversibly inactivated by 0.05 M potassium cyanate at pH 7.4 A plot of the rate constant versus cyanate concentration is not linear, but rather exhibits saturation kinetics, implying that cyanate may bind to the enzyme to give an enzyme-cyanate complex (K equal 0.125 M) prior to the covalent reaction. In the presence of manganous ion the addition of isocitrate protects the enzyme against cyanate inactivation, indicating that chemical modification occurs in the active site region of the enzyme. The dependence of the decrease of the rate constant for inactivation on the isocitrate concentration yields a dissociation constant for the enzyme-manganese-isocitrate complex which agrees with the Michaelis constant. The allosteric activator ADP, which lowers the Michaelis constant for isocitrate, does not itself significantly affect the cyanate reaction; however, it strikingly enhances the protection by isocitrate. The addition of the chelator EDTA essentially prevents protection by isocitrate and manganous ion, demonstrating the importance of the metal ion in this process. The substrate alpha-ketoglutarate and the coenzymes DPN and DPNH do not significantly affect the rate of modification of the enzymes by cyanate. Incubation of isocitrate dehydrogenase with 14C-labeled potassium cyanate leads to the incorporation of approximately 1 mol of radioactive cyanate per peptide chain concomitant with inactivation. Analysis of acid hydrolysates of the radioactive enzyme reveals that lysyl residues are the sole amino acids modified. These results suggest that cyanate, or isocyanic acid, may bind to the active site of this enzyme as an analogue of carbon dioxide and carbamylate a lysyl residue at the active site.  相似文献   

17.
Lysyl oxidase (EC 1.4.3.13) initiates the crosslinking of collagens and elastin by catalyzing oxidative deamination of the epsilon-amino group in certain lysine and hydroxylysine residues. We report here on the isolation and characterization of cDNA clones for the enzyme from human placenta and rat aorta lambda gt11 cDNA libraries. A cDNA clone for human lysyl oxidase covers all the coding sequences, 230 nucleotides of the 5' and 299 nucleotides, of the 3' untranslated sequences, including a poly(A) tail of 23 nucleotides. This cDNA encodes a polypeptide of 417 amino acid residues, including a signal peptide of 21 amino acids. Sequencing of two rat lysyl oxidase cDNA clones indicated six differences between the present and the previously published sequence for the rat enzyme [Trackman et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29: 4863-4870], resulting in frameshifts in the translated sequence. The human lysyl oxidase sequence was found to be 78% identical to the revised rat sequence at the nucleotide level and 84% identical at the amino acid level, with the degree of identity unevenly distributed between various regions of the coded polypeptide. Northern blot analysis of human skin fibroblasts RNA indicated that the human lysyl oxidase cDNA hybridizes to at least four mRNA species; their sizes are about 5.5, 4.3, 2.4, and 2.0 kb. Analysis of a panel of 25 human x hamster cell hybrids by Southern blotting mapped the human lysyl oxidase gene to chromosome 5, and in situ hybridization mapped it to 5q23.3-31.2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Primary structure of a ribonuclease from bovine brain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The primary structure of a pyrimidine base-specific ribonuclease from bovine brain was determined. The sequence determined is (sequence; see text). Although the sequence homology of this RNase with bovine pancreatic RNase A is 78.2%, it consists of 140 amino acid residues, and it is 16 amino acid residues longer than RNase A at the carboxyl-terminal. In addition to an N-glycosylated long carbohydrate chain, the bovine brain RNase has two short O-glycosylated carbohydrate chains at the 129th and the 133rd serine residues. The additional C-terminal tail of the bovine brain RNase has a unique composition: 6 proline, 5 hydrophobic amino acids, and two basic amino acids, arginine and histidine.  相似文献   

19.
The nucleotide sequence of an Escherichia coli gene which presumably encodes the H-protein of the glycine cleavage (GCV) enzyme complex is presented. The gene, designated gcvH, encodes a polypeptide of 128 amino acids with a calculated molecular weight of 13,665 daltons. The translation start site was determined by N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of a gcvH-lacZ encoded fusion protein. The E. coli H-protein shows extensive homology with the H-proteins from the pea (Pisum sativum) and the chicken liver GCV enzyme complexes. 85 of 128 amino acid residues are identical or chemically similar between the E. coli and the pea H-proteins, and 74 of 128 amino acid residues are identical or chemically similar between the E. coli and the chicken liver H-proteins. All three proteins have identical amino acid sequences from residues 61-65. This sequence contains the lysyl residue involved in lipoic acid attachment in the chicken liver H-protein.  相似文献   

20.
We have prepared samples of (a) intact calvaria collagen (cross-linked and mineralized), (b) intact tendon collagen (cross-linked but not mineralized), and (c) reconstituted chick calvaria collagen (not cross-linked and not mineralized) containing [methyl-2H3]methionyl, [4,4-2H2]pyrrolidinyl, (4-fluorophenyl)alanyl, and [6-15N]lysyl residues. Using multinuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we have investigated the molecular dynamics of the labeled amino acids. Guided by model compound studies, we reached the following conclusions regarding collagen side chain dynamics from our analysis of line shapes and relaxation rates. At 22 degrees C, imino residues in all samples have flexible rings with root mean square angular fluctuations in the 11-30 degree range. Nearly all labeled amino acid side chains reorient about at least two side chain single bonds. At temperatures below -30 degrees C, most of these side chain motions are absent in all the samples. Surprisingly, in contrast with results obtained for backbone motions, side chain motions are only marginally more hindered in mineralized samples as compared with nonmineralized samples, a result we discuss with reference to collagen-mineral interactions. We also discuss the possible relationship between collagen dynamics and function.  相似文献   

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