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1.
The tilapia fish Oreochromis alcalicus grahami from Kenya has adapted to living in waters at pH 10.5 by excreting the end product of nitrogen metabolism as urea rather than as ammonia directly across the gills as occurs in most fish. The level of activity in liver of the first enzyme in the urea cycle pathway, carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase III (CPSase III), is too low to account for the observed high rates of urea excretion. We report here the surprising finding that CPSase III and all other urea cycle enzyme activities are present in muscle of this species at levels more than sufficient to account for the rate of urea excretion; in addition, the basic kinetic properties of the CPSase III appear to be different from those of other known type III CPSases. The sequence of the CPSase III cDNA is reported as well as the finding that glutamine synthetase activity is present in liver but not in muscle. This unusual form of adaptation may have occurred because of the apparent impossibility of packaging the needed amount of urea cycle enzymes in liver.  相似文献   

2.
In animals, UTP feedback inhibition of carbamyl phosphate synthetase II (CPSase) controls pyrimidine biosynthesis. Suppressor of black (Su(b) or rSu(b)) mutants of Drosophila melanogaster have elevated pyrimidine pools, and this mutation has been mapped to the rudimentary locus. We report that rSu(b) is a missense mutation resulting in a glutamate to lysine substitution within the second ATP binding site (i.e. CPS.B2 domain) of CPSase. This residue corresponds to Glu780 in the Escherichia coli enzyme (Glu1153 in hamster CAD) and is universally conserved among CPSases. When a transgene expressing the Glu-->Lys substitution was introduced into Drosophila lines homozygous for the black mutation, the resulting flies exhibited the Su(b) phenotype. Partially purified CPSase from rSu(b) and transgenic flies carrying this substitution exhibited a dramatic reduction in UTP feedback inhibition. The slight UTP inhibition observed with the Su(b) enzyme in vitro was due mainly to chelation of Mg2+ by UTP. However, the Km values for glutamate, bicarbonate, and ATP obtained from the Su(b) enzyme were not significantly different from wild-type values. From these experiments, we conclude that this residue plays an essential role in the UTP allosteric response, probably in propagating the response between the effector binding site and the ATP binding site. This is the first CPSase mutation found to abolish feedback inhibition without significantly affecting other enzyme catalytic parameters.  相似文献   

3.
Zhou Z  Metcalf AE  Lovatt CJ  Hyman BC 《Gene》2000,243(1-2):105-114
Given the central role of carbamoylphosphate synthetases in pyrimidine and arginine metabolism in all living organisms, the absence of fundamental information regarding plant CPSase genes is a striking omission [Lawson et al., Mol. Biol. Evol. 13 (1996) 970-977; van den Hoff et al., J. Mol. Evol. 41 (1995) 813-832]. Whereas CPSase gene architecture and aa sequence have proven to be useful characters in establishing ancient and modern genetic affinities, phylogenetic analysis cannot be completed without the inclusion of plant CPSases. We describe the first isolation by molecular cloning of a plant CPSase gene (CPAII) derived from alfalfa (Medicago sativa). DNA sequence analysis reveals a proteobacterial architecture, namely closely linked carA and carB coding domains separated by a short intergenic region, and transcribed as a polycistronic mRNA. CPAII encodes the amino acid residues that typify a CPSase type II enzyme. In addition, an ancient internal duplication has been retained in the plant carB sequence. Partial nucleotide sequencing of additional clones reveals that the alfalfa genome contains multiple CPSase II gene copies which may be tissue-specific in their expression. It appears that with respect to CPSase genes, CPAII resembles the carAB gene of bacteria, and may have preserved much of this ancient gene structure in the alfalfa genome.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The presence of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase III (CPSase III), catalyzing the first step of the urea cycle in fish, in Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus L.) yolk-sac larvae and adult white muscle has been established using gel filtration chromatography to separate the CPSase III from the pyrimidine-pathway related CPSase II. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that teleostean fish express urea cycle enzymes during early development and with recent observations of low levels of CPSase III in muscle tissue. The presence of CPSase III in crude extracts could not be established using sensitive assay conditions to discriminate between CPSase III and CPSase II. However, kinetic characterization after chromatographic separation identified each as typical CPSase II and CPSase III activities, respectively. The CPSase III was less sensitive to activation by N-acetyl- -glutamate and had a higher Km for ammonia than CPSase III found in other species. These results suggest that precise quantitation of low levels of CPSase III in the presence of CPSase II by assaying crude extracts may be difficult unless the enzymes are first separated and the kinetic properties of CPSase III are determined; the results indicate that assaying larval extracts of Atlantic halibut in the presence of uridine triphosphate results in CPSase activity that reflects mostly CPSase III and can, therefore, be used to measure changes in CPSase III activity.  相似文献   

6.
DNA-dependent RNA polymerases I, II, and III (EC 2.7.7.6) were isolated from Xenopus laevis ovaries. The soluble enzymes were precipitated with polyethyleneimine and subjected to chromatography on heparin-Sepharose, DEAE-Sephadex, and phosphocellulose. RNA polymerase I was subjected to an additional chromatographic step on CM-Sephadex. The procedure required 40 h and produced purified RNA polymerase forms IA, IIA, and III in yields of 5 to 40%. The specific activities of RNA polymerases IIA and III (on native DNA) were comparable to those reported from other eukaryotic sources, whereas that of form IA was severalfold greater than the specific activities reported for other purified class I RNA polymerases. The complex subunit compositions of chromatographically purified RNA polymerases IA, IIA, and III were distinct when analyzed by polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, although all three classes contained polypeptides with Mr = 29,000, 23,000, and 19,000. Antibodies prepared against RNA polymerase III showed common antigenic determinants within the class I, II, and III enzymes. The sites responsible for the cross-reaction are located, at least in part, on the common 29,000-dalton polypeptide.  相似文献   

7.
Aquifex aeolicus, an extreme hyperthermophile, has neither a full-length carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (CPSase) resembling the enzyme found in all mesophilic organisms nor a carbamate kinase-like CPSase such as those present in several hyperthermophilic archaea. However, the genome has open reading frames encoding putative proteins that are homologous to the major CPSase domains. The glutaminase, CPS.A, and CPS.B homologs from A. aeolicus were cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and purified to homogeneity. The isolated proteins could catalyze several partial reactions but not the overall synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate. However, a stable 124-kDa complex could be reconstituted from stoichiometric amounts of CPS.A and CPS.B proteins that synthesized carbamoyl phosphate from ATP, bicarbonate, and ammonia. The inclusion of the glutaminase subunit resulted in the formation of a 171-kDa complex that could utilize glutamine as the nitrogen-donating substrate, although the catalytic efficiency was significantly compromised. Molecular modeling, using E. coli CPSase as a template, showed that the enzyme has a similar structural organization and interdomain interfaces and that all of the residues known to be essential for function are conserved and properly positioned. A steady state kinetic study at 78 degrees C indicated that although the substrate affinity was similar for bicarbonate, ammonia, and glutamine, the K(m) for ATP was appreciably higher than that of any known CPSase. The A. aeolicus complex, with a split gene encoding the major synthetase domains and relatively inefficient coupling of amidotransferase and synthetase functions, may be more closely related to the ancestral precursor of contemporary mesophilic CPSases.  相似文献   

8.
Hudson DM  Weis M  Eyre DR 《PloS one》2011,6(5):e19336
Recessive mutations that prevent 3-hydroxyproline formation in type I collagen have been shown to cause forms of osteogenesis imperfecta. In mammals, all A-clade collagen chains with a GPP sequence at the A1 site (P986), except α1(III), have 3Hyp at residue P986. Available avian, amphibian and reptilian type III collagen sequences from the genomic database (Ensembl) all differ in sequence motif from mammals at the A1 site. This suggests a potential evolutionary distinction in prolyl 3-hydroxylation between mammals and earlier vertebrates. Using peptide mass spectrometry, we confirmed that this 3Hyp site is fully occupied in α1(III) from an amphibian, Xenopus laevis, as it is in chicken. A thorough characterization of all predicted 3Hyp sites in collagen types I, II, III and V from chicken and xenopus revealed further differences in the pattern of occupancy of the A3 site (P707). In mammals only α2(I) and α2(V) chains had any 3Hyp at the A3 site, whereas in chicken all α-chains except α1(III) had A3 at least partially 3-hydroxylated. The A3 site was also partially 3-hydroxylated in xenopus α1(I). Minor differences in covalent cross-linking between chicken, xenopus and mammal type I and III collagens were also found as a potential index of evolving functional differences. The function of 3Hyp is still unknown but observed differences in site occupancy during vertebrate evolution are likely to give important clues.  相似文献   

9.
We have isolated and sequenced the genomic DNA from the slime-mould Dictyostelium discoideum multi-gene (PYR1-3) encoding the carbamoyl phosphate synthetase II domain (CPSase, EC.6.3.5.5). We describe sequencing by oligo-walking directly on PCR product in the solid-phase, avoiding subcloning procedures. The 2.4 kb fragment completes the sequence of the PYR1-3 gene, has no introns, and has the same structure as the rudimentary gene of Drosophila melanogaster. Comparison with the carbamoyl phosphate synthetases (CPSase I and CPSase II) of other species supports the hypothesis that this gene has arisen by tandem duplication from a smaller common ancestral gene in the progenote.  相似文献   

10.
Pyrococcus abyssi, a hyperthermophilic archaeon found in the vicinity of deep-sea hydrothermal vents, grows optimally at temperatures around 100 degrees C. Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPSase) from this organism was cloned and sequenced. The active 34-kDa recombinant protein was overexpressed in Escherichia coli when the host cells were cotransformed with a plasmid encoding tRNA synthetases for low-frequency Escherichia coli codons. Sequence homology suggests that the tertiary structure of P. abyssi CPSase, resembling its counterpart in Pyrococcus furiosus, is closely related to the catabolic carbamate kinases and is very different from the larger mesophilic CPSases. P. furiosus CPSase and carbamate kinase form carbamoyl phosphate by phosphorylating carbamate produced spontaneously in solution from ammonia and bicarbonate. In contrast, P. abyssi CPSase has intrinsic bicarbonate-dependent ATPase activity, suggesting that the enzyme can catalyze the phosphorylation of the isosteric substrates carbamate and bicarbonate.  相似文献   

11.
Glutamine-dependent carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (EC 6.3.5.5) catalyzes the first step in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. The mammalian enzyme is part of a 240-kDa multifunctional protein which also has the second (aspartate carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.2), and third (dihydroorotase, EC 3.5.2.3) activities of the pathway. Shigesada et al. (Shigesada, K., Stark, G.R., Maley, J.A., and Davidson, J.N. (1985) Mol. Cell Biol. 175, 1-7) produced a truncated cDNA clone from a Syrian hamster cell line that contained most of the coding region for this protein. We have completed sequencing this clone, known as pCAD142. The cDNA insert contained all of the coding region for the glutaminase (GLN) and carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) domains but lacked a short amino-terminal segment. By comparing the primary structure of the mammalian chimera to monofunctional proteins we have identified the borders of the functional domains. The GLN domain is 21 kDa, close to the size of the functionally similar polypeptide products of the Escherichia coli pabA and hisH genes. The domain has the three regions of homology common to trpG-type glutamine amidotransferases, as well as a fourth region specific to the carbamyl phosphate synthetases. The CPSase domain is similar to other reported CPSases in size (120 kDa), primary structure (37-67% amino acid identity), and homology between its amino and carboxyl halves. Analysis of the nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities among the various carbamyl phosphate synthetases suggests that the gene fusion which joined the GLN and CPS domains was an early event in the evolution of eukaryotic organisms and that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzyme consisting of separate subunits arose by defusion from an ancestral multifunctional protein.  相似文献   

12.
Type I restriction-modification enzymes differ significantly from the type II enzymes commonly used as molecular biology reagents. On hemi-methylated DNAs type I enzymes like the EcoR124I restriction-modification complex act as conventional adenine methylases at their specific target sequences, but unmethylated targets induce them to translocate thousands of base pairs through the stationary enzyme before cleaving distant sites nonspecifically. EcoR124I is a superfamily 2 DEAD-box helicase like eukaryotic double-strand DNA translocase Rad54, with two RecA-like helicase domains and seven characteristic sequence motifs that are implicated in translocation. In Rad54 a so-called extended region adjacent to motif III is involved in ATPase activity. Although the EcoR124I extended region bears sequence and structural similarities with Rad54, it does not influence ATPase or restriction activity as shown in this work, but mutagenesis of the conserved glycine residue of its motif III does alter ATPase and DNA cleavage activity. Through the lens of molecular dynamics, a full model of HsdR of EcoR124I based on available crystal structures allowed interpretation of functional effects of mutants in motif III and its extended region. The results indicate that the conserved glycine residue of motif III has a role in positioning the two helicase domains.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli carbamoylphosphate synthetase (CPSase) is a key enzyme in the pyrimidine nucleotides and arginine biosynthetic pathways. The enzyme harbors a complex regulation, being activated by ornithine and inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP), and inhibited by UMP. CPSase mutants obtained by in vivo mutagenesis and selected on the basis of particular phenotypes have been characterized kinetically. Two residues, serine 948 and threonine 1042, appear crucial for allosteric regulation of CPSase. When threonine 1042 is replaced by an isoleucine residue, the enzyme displays a greatly reduced activation by ornithine. The T1042I mutated enzyme is still sensitive to UMP and IMP, although the effects of both regulators are reduced. When serine 948 is replaced by phenylalanine, the enzyme becomes insensitive to UMP and IMP, but is still activated by ornithine, although to a reduced extent. When correlating these observations to the structural data recently reported, it becomes clear that both mutations, which are located in spatially distinct regions corresponding respectively to the ornithine and the UMP/IMP binding sites, have coupled effects on the enzyme regulation. These results provide an illustration that coupling of regulatory pathways occurs within the allosteric subunit of E. coli CPSase.In addition, other mutants have been characterized, which display altered affinities for the different CPSase substrates and also slightly modified properties towards the allosteric effectors: P165S, P170L, A182V, P360L, S743N, T800F and G824D. Kinetic properties of these modified enzymes are also presented here and correlated to the crystal structure of E. coli CPSase and to the phenotype of the mutants.  相似文献   

14.
15.
We used the known sequence of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA polymerase gamma to clone the genes or cDNAs encoding this enzyme in two other yeasts, Pychia pastoris and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and one higher eukaryote, Xenopus laevis. To confirm the identity of the final X.laevis clone, two antisera raised against peptide sequences were shown to react with DNA polymerase gamma purified from X.laevis oocyte mitochondria. A developmentally regulated 4.6 kb mRNA is recognized on Northern blots of oocyte RNA using the X.laevis cDNA. Comparison of the four DNA polymerase gamma gene sequences revealed several highly conserved sequence blocks, comprising an N-terminal 3'-->5'exonuclease domain and a C-terminal polymerase active center interspersed with gamma-specific gene sequences. The consensus sequences for the DNA polymerase gamma exonuclease and polymerase domains show extensive sequence similarity to DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli. Sequence conservation is greatest for residues located near the active centers of the exo and pol domains of the E.coli DNA polymerase I structure. The domain separating the exonuclease and polymerase active sites is larger in DNA polymerase gamma than in other members of family A (DNA polymerase I-like) polymerases. The S.cerevisiae DNA polymerase gamma is atypical in that it includes a 240 residue C-terminal extension that is not found in the other members of the DNA polymerase gamma family, or in other family A DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Carbamyl phosphate synthesis in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In vitro and "in situ" assays have been developed to test the carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPSase) activity of a series of pyrimidine-requiring mutants of Bacillus subtilis. The enzyme has been shown to be highly unstable, and was successfully extracted only in the presence of 10% glycerol and 1 mM dithiothreitol (Cleland's reagent). It loses activity rapidly when sonicated or when treated with lysozyme. Genetic studies, using mutants, indicate that B. subtilis may possess two CPSases. This possibility and its physiological consequences were probed enzymatically. CPSase activity has been shown to undergo inhibition by both uridine triphosphate and dihydroorotate; activation has been demonstrated in response to phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) and (to a lesser extent) ornithine.  相似文献   

18.
The subunits of the cytochrome oxidase from bovine heart were isolated in large quantities suitable for amino acid sequence studies. The preparation of subunits III, IV, V, VI, and VII for sequence determination can be achieved without employing sodium dodecyl sulfate. The method presented essentially involves pyridine extraction, pH fractionation, ammonium sulfate fractionation, and various types of column chromatography. However, subunits I and II can be prepared only in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate by molecular sieve chromatography; subunit III can also be isolated in this manner. The separation of subunits is found to be hindered by phospholipids associated with the enzyme and therefore the phospholipid-depleted preparation is used as the starting material. The molecular weights of subunits I, II, III, IV, V, VI, and VII are 40,000, 21,000, 14,800, 13,500, 11,600, 9,500, and 7,600, respectively. These values are based on the results of the conventional Weber and Osborn method of gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The amino termini of subunits I and II have been determined as N-formylmethionine, and those of subunits III, IV, V, VI, and VII are alanine, alanine, serine, alanine, and an N-acetyl-blocked residue, respectively. The carboxyl termini for subunits I to VII are lysine, leucine, lysine, histidine, valine, isoleucine, and valine, respectively. The complete amino acid sequence of some subunits has been published and that of other subunits will be reported elsewhere in collaboration with the Amino Acid Sequence Group of Cytochrome Oxidase at the University of Hawaii.  相似文献   

19.
P J Curtis  E Withers  D Demuth  R Watt  P J Venta  R E Tashian 《Gene》1983,25(2-3):325-332
The nucleotide sequence of a clone containing mouse carbonic anhydrase (CA) cDNA in pBR322 has been determined. The cloned cDNA contains all of the coding region except for nucleotides specifying the first eight amino acids, and all of the 3' noncoding region, which consists of 700 nucleotides. A cDNA clone was identified which contains an additional 54 bp at the 5' end, so that the complete amino acid sequence of mouse CA could be deduced. This sequence showed a 73-81% homology with other mammalian CA form II isozymes, 56-63% with form I isozymes, and 52-56% with form III isozymes. By examination of the amino acids which are unique and invariant for each isozyme, the mouse amino acid sequence was found to contain 16 of the 23 residues that are unique and invariant to mammalian CA form II isozymes, but only one or no residue for forms I and III, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
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