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1.
A central step in nucleoside and nucleobase salvage pathways is the hydrolysis of nucleosides to their respective nucleobases. In plants this is solely accomplished by nucleosidases (EC 3.2.2.x). To elucidate the importance of nucleosidases for nucleoside degradation, general metabolism, and plant growth, thorough phenotypic and biochemical analyses were performed using Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA insertion mutants lacking expression of the previously identified genes annotated as uridine ribohydrolases (URH1 and URH2). Comprehensive functional analyses of single and double mutants demonstrated that both isoforms are unimportant for seedling establishment and plant growth, while one participates in uridine degradation. Rather unexpectedly, nucleoside and nucleotide profiling and nucleosidase activity screening of soluble crude extracts revealed a deficiency of xanthosine and inosine hydrolysis in the single mutants, with substantial accumulation of xanthosine in one of them. Mixing of the two mutant extracts, and by in vitro activity reconstitution using a mixture of recombinant URH1 and URH2 proteins, both restored activity, thus providing biochemical evidence that at least these two isoforms are needed for inosine and xanthosine hydrolysis. This mutant study demonstrates the utility of in vivo systems for the examination of metabolic activities, with the discovery of the new substrate xanthosine and elucidation of a mechanism for expanding the nucleosidase substrate spectrum.  相似文献   

2.
When cultures of Azotobacter vinelandii are made anaerobic the adenylate pool size remains constant or increases slightly while the adenylate energy charge decreases. Under these conditions, cell growth stops but the cells remain viable for at least 5 h with the decreased energy charge. The changes in the adenylate pool during the aerobic-anaerobic transition include: the formation of adenylates as a result of RNA degradation; the degradation of a portion of the excess AMP to form hypoxanthine by the sequential actions of AMP nucleosidase and adenine deaminase; an increase in the total adenylate pool which is stabilized at approximately 1.5 times the level in growing cells; and stabilization of the adenylate energy charge at a value near 0.3. The degradation of AMP is regulated by AMP nucleosidase, an allosteric enzyme which is activated by MgATP2? and inhibited by Pi. The in vivo activity of AMP nucleosidase was estimated by measuring the rate of hypoxanthine formation in the culture or by measuring the activity of purified enzyme at the concentrations of AMP, ATP, and Pi found in the cells. The maximum estimated in vivo rate of AMP degradation was less than 3% of the catalytic capacity of AMP nucleosidase. Thus ample activity is present for rapid adjustments of the AMP levels in these cells. Expression of AMP nucleosidase catalytic activity is tightly controlled since high constant concentrations of intracellular AMP can be maintained for extended time periods at low adenylate energy charge values. Under these conditions controlled degradation of AMP can occur to maintain a constant AMP concentration.  相似文献   

3.
Inosine nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.2), the enzyme which hydrolyzes inosine to hypoxanthine and ribose, has been partially purified from Lupinus luteus L. cv. Topaz seeds by extraction of the seed meal with low ionic strength buffer, ammonium sulfate fractionation, and chromatography on aminohexyl-Sepharose, Sephadex G-100, and hydroxyapatite.

Molecular weight of the native enzyme is 62,000 as judged by gel filtration. The inosine nucleosidase exhibits optimum activity around pH 8. Energy of activation for inosine hydrolysis estimated from Arrhenius plot is 14.2 kilocalories per mole. The Km value computed for inosine is 65 micromolar.

Among the inosine analogs tested, the following nucleosides are substrates for the lupin inosine nucleosidase: xanthosine, purine riboside (nebularine), 6-mercaptopurine riboside, 8-azainosine, adenosine, and guanosine. The ratio of the velocities measured at 500 micromolar concentration of inosine, adenosine, and guanosine was 100:11:1, respectively. Specificity (Vmax/Km) towards adenosine is 48 times lower than that towards inosine.

In contrast to the adenosine nucleosidase activity which is absent from lupin seeds and appears in the cotyledons during germination (Guranowski, Pawełkiewicz 1978 Planta 139: 245-247), the inosine nucleosidase is present in both lupin seeds and seedlings.

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4.
Malaria parasite-infected erythrocytes exhibit enhanced glucose utilisation and 6-phospho-1-fructokinase (PFK) is a key enzyme in glycolysis. Here we present the characterisation of PFK from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Of the two putative PFK genes on chromosome 9 (PfPFK9) and 11 (PfPFK11), only the PfPFK9 gene appeared to possess all the catalytic features appropriate for PFK activity. The deduced PfPFK proteins contain domains homologous to the plant-like pyrophosphate (PPi)-dependent PFK β and α subunits, which are quite different from the human erythrocyte PFK protein. The PfPFK9 gene β and α regions were cloned and expressed as His6- and GST-tagged proteins in Escherichia coli. Complementation of PFK-deficient E. coli and activity analysis of purified recombinant proteins confirmed that PfPFK9β possessed catalytic activity. Monoclonal antibodies against the recombinant β protein confirmed that the PfPFK9 protein has β and α domains fused into a 200 kDa protein, as opposed to the independent subunits found in plants. Despite an overall structural similarity to plant PPi-PFKs, the recombinant protein and the parasite extract exhibited only ATP-dependent enzyme activity, and none with PPi. Unlike host PFK, the Plasmodium PFK was insensitive to fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (F-2,6-bP), phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and citrate. A comparison of the deduced PFK proteins from several protozoan PFK genome databases implicates a unique class of ATP-dependent PFK present amongst the apicomplexan protozoans.  相似文献   

5.
5??-Deoxy-5??-methylthioadenosine nucleosidase (MTA nucleosidase, EC 3.2.2.9) was purified from soybean (Glycine max) cotyledon. The nucleosidase was a trimer consisting of three identical subunits with a molecular mass of 59.5?kDa. The nucleosidase was a cobalt-requiring enzyme for its catalytic function. The enzymatic activity increased in a dose-dependent manner in the presence of cobalt. Cobalt was bound to the nucleosidase with a stoichiometry of 1 equivalent of cobalt/subunit. A thiol group-specific reagent reduced the enzymatic activity. Four cysteinyl residues of each subunit are considered to play an important role in binding cobalt.  相似文献   

6.
URH49 is a mammalian protein that is 90% identical to the DExH/D box protein UAP56, an RNA helicase that is important for splicing and nuclear export of mRNA. Although Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Drosophila express only a single protein corresponding to UAP56, mRNAs encoding URH49 and UAP56 are both expressed in human and mouse cells. Both proteins interact with the mRNA export factor Aly and both are able to rescue the loss of Sub2p (the yeast homolog of UAP56), indicating that both proteins have similar functions. UAP56 mRNA is more abundant than URH49 mRNA in many tissues, although in testes URH49 mRNA is much more abundant. UAP56 and URH49 mRNAs are present at similar levels in proliferating cultured cells. However, when the cells enter quiescence, the URH49 mRNA level decreases 3–6-fold while the UAP56 mRNA level remains relatively constant. The amount of URH49 mRNA increases to the level found in proliferating cells within 5 h when quiescent cells are growth-stimulated or when protein synthesis is inhibited. URH49 mRNA is relatively unstable (T½ = 4 h) in quiescent cells, but is stabilized immediately following growth stimulation or inhibition of protein synthesis. In contrast, there is much less change in the content or stability of UAP56 mRNA following growth stimulation. Our observations suggest that in mammalian cells, two UAP56-like RNA helicases are involved in splicing and nuclear export of mRNA. Differential expression of these helicases may lead to quantitative or qualitative changes in mRNA expression.  相似文献   

7.
Nucleoside hydrolases catalyze the cleavage of N-glycosidic bonds in nucleosides, yielding ribose and the respective bases. While nucleoside hydrolase activity has not been detected in mammalian cells, many protozoan parasites rely on nucleoside hydrolase activity for salvage of purines and/or pyrimidines from their hosts. In contrast, uridine phosphorylase is the key enzyme of pyrimidine salvage in mammalian hosts and many other organisms. We show here that the open reading frame (ORF) YDR400w of Saccharomyces cerevisiae carries the gene encoding uridine hydrolase (URH1). Disruption of this gene in a conditionally pyrimidine-auxotrophic S. cerevisiae strain, which is also deficient in uridine kinase (urk1), leads to the inability of the mutant to utilize uridine as the sole source of pyrimidines. Protein extracts of strains overexpressing YDR400w show increased hydrolase activity only with uridine and cytidine, but no activity with inosine, adenosine, guanosine, and thymidine as substrates, demonstrating that ORF YDR400w encodes a uridine-cytidine N-ribohydrolase. Expression of a homologous cDNA from a protozoan parasite (Crithidia fasciculata) in a ura3 urk1 urh1 mutant is sufficient to restore growth on uridine. Growth can also be restored by expression of a human uridine phosphorylase cDNA. Yeast strains expressing protozoan N-ribohydrolases or host phosphorylases could therefore become useful tools in drug screens for specific inhibitors.  相似文献   

8.
The cleavage of the methylthio group from methylthioadenosine is shown to involve two enzymes, a nucleosidase which catalyses the phosphorolytic cleavage of methylthioadenosine to yield adenine and 5-methylthioribose-1-phosphate and an enzyme which uses the latter compound as substrate and catalyses the release of the methylthio group as an ether-extractable product. Three malignant murine hematopoietic cell lines which require methylthio group supplementation for proliferation in vitro are shown to lack methylthioadenosine nucleosidase activity while retaining activity of the second enzyme. Four cell lines which are methylthio-independent in vitro contain activity of both enzymes. The data suggest that the requirement for exogenous methylthio groups in certain cells is caused by the block in their biosynthetic pathway imposed by methylthioadenosine nucleoside phosphorylase deficiency. Secondarily, the data suggest that all cells require methylthio or related groups for division.  相似文献   

9.
A bacterium, Ochrobactrum anthropi, produced a large amount of a nucleosidase when cultivated with purine nucleosides. The nucleosidase was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 170,000 and consists of four identical subunits. It specifically catalyzes the irreversible N-riboside hydrolysis of purine nucleosides, the Km values being 11.8 to 56.3 μM. The optimal activity temperature and pH were 50°C and pH 4.5 to 6.5, respectively. Pyrimidine nucleosides, purine and pyrimidine nucleotides, NAD, NADP, and nicotinamide mononucleotide are not hydrolyzed by the enzyme. The purine nucleoside hydrolyzing activity of the enzyme was inhibited (mixed inhibition) by pyrimidine nucleosides, with Ki and Ki′ values of 0.455 to 11.2 μM. Metal ion chelators inhibited activity, and the addition of Zn2+ or Co2+ restored activity. A 1.5-kb DNA fragment, which contains the open reading frame encoding the nucleosidase, was cloned, sequenced, and expressed in Escherichia coli. The deduced 363-amino-acid sequence including a 22-residue leader peptide is in agreement with the enzyme molecular mass and the amino acid sequences of NH2-terminal and internal peptides, and the enzyme is homologous to known nucleosidases from protozoan parasites. The amino acid residues forming the catalytic site and involved in binding with metal ions are well conserved in these nucleosidases.  相似文献   

10.
AMP-degrading pathways in Azotobacter vinelandii cells were investigated. AMP nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.4) was rapidly synthesized and reached a maximum at 24 h, while the activity of 5-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5) specific for AMP, which was negligible during the logarithmic phase of the growth, first appeared in 24 h-cultures, and reached a maximum after complete exhaustion of sucrose from the growth medium (70 h).Cell-free extracts of A. vinelandii of 48 h-cultures hydrolyzed AMP to ribose 5-phosphate and adenine in the presence of ATP, and adenine was deaminated to hypoxanthine. When ATP was excluded, AMP was dephosphorylated to adenosine, which was further metabolized to inosine, and finally to hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine thus formed was reutilized for the salvage synthesis of IMP under the conditions where 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate was able to be supplied. These results suggest that the levels of ATP can determine the rate of AMP degradation by the AMP nucleosidase- and 5-nucleotidase-pathways. The role of ATP in the AMP degradation was discussed in relation to the regulatory properties of AMP nucleosidase, inosine nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.2) and adenosine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.4).  相似文献   

11.
Hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) (EC 2.4.2.8) is an important enzyme involved in the recycling of purine nucleotides in all cells. Parasitic protozoa of the order Kinetoplastida are unable to synthesize purines de novo and use the salvage pathway for the synthesis of nucleotides; therefore, this pathway is an attractive target for antiparasitic drug design. The hgprt gene was cloned from a Leishmania tarentolae genomic library and the sequence determined. The L. tarentolae hgprt gene contains a 633-nucleotide open reading frame that encodes a 23.4-kDa protein. A pairwise alignment of the different HGPRT's sequences revealed a 26%–53% sequence identity with the Leishmania sequences and 87% identity to the HGPRT of Leishmania donovani. A recombinant protein was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified to homogeneity and found to retain enzymatic activity. The steady-state kinetic parameters were determined for the recombinant enzyme and the enzyme is active as a homodimer in solution. Single crystals were obtained for the L. tarentolae HGPRT representing the first Leishmania HGPRT crystallized and initial crystallographic data were collected. The crystals obtained belong to the orthorhombic space group (P212121) with unit cell parameters a=58.104 Å, b=85.443 Å and c=87.598 Å and diffract to a resolution of 2.3 Å. The availability of the HGPRT enzyme from Leishmania and its crystallization suitable for X-ray diffraction data collection should provide the basis for a functional and structural analysis of this enzyme, which has been proposed as a potential target for rational drug design, in a Leishmania model system.  相似文献   

12.
It has been previously demonstrated in our laboratory that uridine nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.3) is inactivated by yeast protease A (EC 3.4.23.8). A complete purification procedure for protease A from bakers' yeast, which lacks the acidic activation step used by other workers, and the major properties of the enzyme are shown. The enzyme is homogeneous as judged by disc gel electrophoresis. Its molecular weight, calculated from both sodium dodecyl sulfate-disc gel electrophoresis and gel filtration experiments, is around 45,000. The protein does not possess quaternary structure. The isoelectric point is 4.1. Carbohydrate content is around 8%. Amino acids analysis and sulfur analysis reveal the presence of 1-SH group and two disulfide bridges. The free-SH group does not seem to be involved in catalysis. Amino terminal analysis shows that isoleucine is at the amino terminal position. The pH optima are 2.4 for the hydrolysis of azocasein and casein, and 3.3 for the hydrolysis of hemoglobin. The Km value for hemoglobin is 1.7 × 10?5m. The inhibition exerted by pepstatin on the proteolytic activity of protease A is pH dependent. Among various yest enzyme substrates only uridine nucleosidase is inactivated by protease A.  相似文献   

13.
《Phytochemistry》1987,26(10):2655-2660
Inhibition of the enzymes involved in the production of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) and the subsequent salvage of methionine from 5′-methylthioadenosine (MTA) was studied. Possible product inhibition of ACC synthase, which converts S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) to ACC and MTA, and MTA nucleosidase, which hydrolyses MTA to 5-methylthioribose (MTR) and adenine, was investigated. ACC synthase was weakly inhibited by MTA (Ki = 0.2mM). MTA nucleosidase was inhibited by adenine competitively (Ki = 40μM), but not by MTR. Some analogues of the enzymes' substrates were inhibitory. ACC synthase was strongly and competitively inhibited by sinefungin, a SAM analogue (Ki = 2μM); MTA nucleosidase was inhibited by various MTA analogues, including 5′-chloroformycin, 5′-chloroadenosine, and 5′-ethylthioadenosine. The conversion of MTR to methionine in avocado extract was inhibited by the MTR analogues 5-chlororibose and 5-ethylthioribose, which exert their inhibitory effects by inhibiting MTR kinase. The capacity to convert MTR to methionine in ripening apple tissue appears to be ample; thus, this conversion does not appear to be a limiting factor of ethylene production.  相似文献   

14.
A survey of adenine salvage metabolism in cultivated and wildplant species was made by assessment of the levels of adenosinenucleosidase. The enzyme level varied among species from undetectableto 80 µmol min–1 g–1. Significant differencesof enzyme levels are demonstrated between cultivated and wildapple trees and cherry trees respectively. Adenosine nucleosidase level, adenine salvage, adenosine metabolism, enzymes in leaves, metabolic differences  相似文献   

15.
Yeast PAH1-encoded phosphatidate phosphatase is the enzyme responsible for the production of the diacylglycerol used for the synthesis of triacylglycerol that accumulates in the stationary phase of growth. Paradoxically, the growth phase-mediated inductions of PAH1 and phosphatidate phosphatase activity do not correlate with the amount of Pah1p; enzyme abundance declined in a growth phase-dependent manner. Pah1p from exponential phase cells was a relatively stable protein, and its abundance was not affected by incubation with an extract from stationary phase cells. Recombinant Pah1p was degraded upon incubation with the 100,000 × g pellet fraction of stationary phase cells, although the enzyme was stable when incubated with the same fraction of exponential phase cells. MG132, an inhibitor of proteasome function, prevented degradation of the recombinant enzyme. Endogenously expressed and plasmid-mediated overexpressed levels of Pah1p were more abundant in the stationary phase of cells treated with MG132. Pah1p was stabilized in mutants with impaired proteasome (rpn4Δ, blm10Δ, ump1Δ, and pre1 pre2) and ubiquitination (hrd1Δ, ubc4Δ, ubc7Δ, ubc8Δ, and doa4Δ) functions. The pre1 pre2 mutations that eliminate nearly all chymotrypsin-like activity of the 20 S proteasome had the greatest stabilizing effect on enzyme levels. Taken together, these results supported the conclusion that Pah1p is subject to proteasome-mediated degradation in the stationary phase. That Pah1p abundance was stabilized in pah1Δ mutant cells expressing catalytically inactive forms of Pah1p and dgk1Δ mutant cells with induced expression of DGK1-encoded diacylglycerol kinase indicated that alteration in phosphatidate and/or diacylglycerol levels might be the signal that triggers Pah1p degradation.  相似文献   

16.
In order to examine the biosynthesis, interconversion, and degradation of purine and pyrimidine nucleotides in white spruce cells, radiolabeled adenine, adenosine, inosine, uracil, uridine, and orotic acid were supplied exogenously to the cells and the overall metabolism of these compounds was monitored. [8‐14C]adenine and [8‐14C]adenosine were metabolized to adenylates and part of the adenylates were converted to guanylates and incorporated into both adenine and guanine bases of nucleic acids. A small amount of [8‐14C]inosine was converted into nucleotides and incorporated into both adenine and guanine bases of nucleic acids. High adenosine kinase and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activities in the extract suggested that adenosine and adenine were converted to AMP by these enzymes. No adenosine nucleosidase activity was detected. Inosine was apparently converted to AMP by inosine kinase and/or a non‐specific nucleoside phosphotransferase. The radioactivity of [8‐14C]adenosine, [8‐14C]adenine, and [8‐14C]inosine was also detected in ureide, especially allantoic acid, and CO2. Among these 3 precursors, the radioactivity from [8‐14C]inosine was predominantly incorporated into CO2. These results suggest the operation of a conventional degradation pathway. Both [2‐14C]uracil and [2‐14C]uridine were converted to uridine nucleotides and incorporated into uracil and cytosine bases of nucleic acids. The salvage enzymes, uridine kinase and uracil phosphoribosyltransferase, were detected in white spruce extracts. [6‐14C]orotic acid, an intermediate of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, was efficiently converted into uridine nucleotides and also incorporated into uracil and cytosine bases of nucleic acids. High activity of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase was observed in the extracts. A large proportion of radioactivity from [2‐14C]uracil was recovered as CO2 and β‐ureidopropionate. Thus, a reductive pathway of uracil degradation is functional in these cells. Therefore, white spruce cells in culture demonstrate both the de novo and salvage pathways of purine and pyrimidine metabolism, as well as some degradation of the substrates into CO2.  相似文献   

17.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a versatile bacterium that can grow using citronellol or leucine as sole carbon source. For both compounds the degradation pathways converge at the key enzyme 3-methylcrotonyl coenzyme-A carboxylase (MCCase). This enzyme is a complex formed by two subunits (α and β), encoded by the liuD and liuB genes, respectively; both are essential for enzyme function. Previously, both subunits had been separately expressed and then the complex re-constituted, however this methodology is laborious and produces low yield of active enzyme. In this work, the MCCase subunits were co-expressed in the same plasmid and purified in one step by affinity chromatography using the LiuD-His tag protein, interacting with the LiuB-S tag recombinant protein. The purified enzyme lost most of the activity within few hours of storage. The co-expressed subunits formed an (αβ)4 complex that suffered a modification of its oligomerization state after storage, which probably contributed to the loss on activity observed. The recombinant MCCase enzyme presented optimum pH and temperature values of 9.0 and 30o C, respectively. Functionally, MCCase showed Michaelian kinetics behavior with a Km for its substrate and Vmax of 168 μM and 430 nmoles mg−1min−1, respectively. The results suggest that the co-expression and co-purification of the subunits is a suitable procedure to obtain the active complex of the MCCase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a single step.  相似文献   

18.
The baculovirus/insect cell system is widely used for recombinant protein production, but it is suboptimal for recombinant glycoprotein production because it does not provide sialylation, which is an essential feature of many glycoprotein biologics. This problem has been addressed by metabolic engineering, which has extended endogenous insect cell N-glycosylation pathways and enabled glycoprotein sialylation by baculovirus/insect cell systems. However, further improvement is needed because even the most extensively engineered baculovirus/insect cell systems require media supplementation with N-acetylmannosamine, an expensive sialic acid precursor, for efficient recombinant glycoprotein sialylation. Our solution to this problem focused on E. coli N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate 2′-epimerase (GNPE), which normally functions in bacterial sialic acid degradation. Considering that insect cells have the product, but not the substrate for this enzyme, we hypothesized that GNPE might drive the reverse reaction in these cells, thereby initiating sialic acid biosynthesis in the absence of media supplementation. We tested this hypothesis by isolating transgenic insect cells expressing E. coli GNPE together with a suite of mammalian genes needed for N-glycoprotein sialylation. Various assays showed that these cells efficiently produced sialic acid, CMP-sialic acid, and sialylated recombinant N-glycoproteins even in growth media without N-acetylmannosamine. Thus, this study demonstrated that a eukaryotic recombinant protein production platform can be glycoengineered with a bacterial gene, that a bacterial enzyme which normally functions in sialic acid degradation can be used to initiate sialic acid biosynthesis, and that insect cells expressing this enzyme can produce sialylated N-glycoproteins without N-acetylmannosamine supplementation, which will reduce production costs in glycoengineered baculovirus/insect cell systems.  相似文献   

19.
Mx proteins are a family of large GTPases that are induced exclusively by interferon-α/β and have a broad antiviral activity against several viruses, including influenza A virus (IAV). Although the antiviral activities of mouse Mx1 and human MxA have been studied extensively, the molecular mechanism of action remains largely unsolved. Because no direct interaction between Mx proteins and IAV proteins or RNA had been demonstrated so far, we addressed the question of whether Mx protein would interact with cellular proteins required for efficient replication of IAV. Immunoprecipitation of MxA revealed its association with two closely related RNA helicases, UAP56 and URH49. UAP56 and its paralog URH49 play an important role in IAV replication and are involved in nuclear export of IAV mRNAs and prevention of dsRNA accumulation in infected cells. In vitro binding assays with purified recombinant proteins revealed that MxA formed a direct complex with the RNA helicases. In addition, recombinant mouse Mx1 was also able to bind to UAP56 or URH49. Furthermore, the complex formation between cytoplasmic MxA and UAP56 or URH49 occurred in the perinuclear region, whereas nuclear Mx1 interacted with UAP56 or URH49 in distinct dots in the nucleus. Taken together, our data reveal that Mx proteins exerting antiviral activity can directly bind to the two cellular DExD/H box RNA helicases UAP56 and URH49. Moreover, the observed subcellular localization of the Mx-RNA helicase complexes coincides with the subcellular localization, where human MxA and mouse Mx1 proteins act antivirally. On the basis of these data, we propose that Mx proteins exert their antiviral activity against IAV by interfering with the function of the RNA helicases UAP56 and URH49.  相似文献   

20.
Eukaryotic cells respond to DNA damage by activating damage checkpoint pathways, which arrest cell cycle progression and induce gene expression. We isolated a full-length cDNA encoding a 49-kDa protein from Leishmania major, which exhibited significant deduced amino acid sequence homology with the annotated Leishmania sp. DNA damage-inducible (Ddi1-like) protein, as well as with the Ddi1 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In contrast to the previously described Ddi1 protein, the protein from L. major displays three domains: (1) an NH2-terminal ubiquitin like; (2) a COOH terminal ubiquitin-associated; (3) a retroviral aspartyl proteinase, containing the typical D[S/T]G signature. The function of the L. major Ddi1-like recombinant protein was investigated after expression in baculovirus/insect cells and biochemical analysis, revealing preferential substrate selectivity for aspartyl proteinase A2 family substrates, with optimal activity in acidic conditions. The proteolytic activity was inhibited by aspartyl proteinase inhibitors. Molecular modeling of the retroviral domain of the Ddi1-like Leishmania protein revealed a dimer structure that contained a double Asp-Ser-Gly-Ala amino acid sequence motif, in an almost identical geometry to the exhibited by the homologous retroviral aspartyl protease domain of yeast Ddi1 protein. Our results indicate that the isolated Ddi1-like protein is a functional aspartyl proteinase in L. major, opening possibility to be considered as a potential target for novel antiparasitic drugs.  相似文献   

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