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1.
The metabolic pathway of purine nucleotides in parasitic protozoa is a potent drug target for treatment of parasitemia. Guanosine 5’-monophosphate reductase (GMPR), which catalyzes the deamination of guanosine 5’-monophosphate (GMP) to inosine 5’-monophosphate (IMP), plays an important role in the interconversion of purine nucleotides to maintain the intracellular balance of their concentration. However, only a few studies on protozoan GMPR have been reported at present. Herein, we identified the GMPR in Trypanosoma brucei, a causative protozoan parasite of African trypanosomiasis, and found that the GMPR proteins were consistently localized to glycosomes in T. brucei bloodstream forms. We characterized its recombinant protein to investigate the enzymatic differences between GMPRs of T. brucei and its host animals. T. brucei GMPR was distinct in having an insertion of a tandem repeat of the cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) domain, which was absent in mammalian and bacterial GMPRs. The recombinant protein of T. brucei GMPR catalyzed the conversion of GMP to IMP in the presence of NADPH, and showed apparent affinities for both GMP and NADPH different from those of its mammalian counterparts. Interestingly, the addition of monovalent cations such as K+ and NH4+ to the enzymatic reaction increased the GMPR activity of T. brucei, whereas none of the mammalian GMPR’s was affected by these cations. The monophosphate form of the purine nucleoside analog ribavirin inhibited T. brucei GMPR activity, though mammalian GMPRs showed no or only a little inhibition by it. These results suggest that the mechanism of the GMPR reaction in T. brucei is distinct from that in the host organisms. Finally, we demonstrated the inhibitory effect of ribavirin on the proliferation of trypanosomes in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting the availability of ribavirin to develop a new therapeutic agent against African trypanosomiasis.  相似文献   

2.
Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) and guanosine monophosphate reductase (GMPR) belong to the same structural family, share a common set of catalytic residues and bind the same ligands. The structural and mechanistic features that determine reaction outcome in the IMPDH and GMPR family have not been identified. Here we show that the GMPR reaction uses the same intermediate E-XMP* as IMPDH, but in this reaction the intermediate reacts with ammonia instead of water. A single crystal structure of human GMPR type 2 with IMP and NADPH fortuitously captures three different states, each of which mimics a distinct step in the catalytic cycle of GMPR. The cofactor is found in two conformations: an 'in' conformation poised for hydride transfer and an 'out' conformation in which the cofactor is 6 ? from IMP. Mutagenesis along with substrate and cofactor analog experiments demonstrate that the out conformation is required for the deamination of GMP. Remarkably, the cofactor is part of the catalytic machinery that activates ammonia.  相似文献   

3.
Using two 33-mer synthetic oligonucleotides derived from the amino acid sequence of the catalytic site of estradiol 17 beta-dehydrogenase (E2DH) and polyclonal antibodies raised against the enzyme purified from human placenta, clones were isolated from a lambda gt11 human placental cDNA library. A 327-amino acid sequence was deduced from cDNA sequencing. Two mRNA species have been identified in poly(A)+ RNA from human placenta, a major species migrating at 1.3 kb while a minor one is found at approx. 2.2 kb. Primer extension and S1 nuclease analysis indicate that the major mRNA species starts 9-10 nucleotides while the minor mRNA starts 971 nucleotides upstream from the ATG initiating codon, respectively. Sequence analysis of the longest cDNA clone (2092 bp) shows that it possesses identical coding and non-coding sequences in the regions of overlap with the shorter cDNA clones. The 32P-labeled 5' non-coding fragment hybridizes only to the 2.2 kb band, thus providing evidence for the existence of two distinct mRNA species which differ in their 5' noncoding regions. Using hp E2DH-36 cDNA as a probe for in situ hybridization of translocated chromosomes, the human E2DH gene was localized to the q11-q12 region of chromosome 17.  相似文献   

4.
Summary In vitro translation in the rabbit reticulocyte system and transient expression in Cos7 cells were performed to characterize the protein encoded by a chromosome 6-linked human cDNA clone, whose nucleotide sequence is homologous to that of Escherichia coli guanosine monophosphate reductase (GMP reductase) cDNA. The molecular weight of the peptide produced by the cDNA was about 37,000 Dalton, and the protein produced in the Cos7 cells exhibited GMP reductase activity, substantiating that the cDNA is for human GMP reductase. The corresponding genomic clones were obtained from two human genomic libraries. The gene spans about 50 Kb and is composed of 9 exons, which encode 345 amino acid residues. Organization of exons and introns was established by DNA sequencing of each exon and splicing junctions. The gene contains two potential SpI binding sites within exon 1, and a functional atypical polyadenylation signal in exon 9.  相似文献   

5.
Li J  Wei Z  Zheng M  Gu X  Deng Y  Qiu R  Chen F  Ji C  Gong W  Xie Y  Mao Y 《Journal of molecular biology》2006,355(5):980-988
Guanosine monophosphate reductase (GMPR) catalyzes the irreversible and NADPH-dependent reductive deamination of GMP to IMP, and plays a critical role in re-utilization of free intracellular bases and purine nucleosides. Here, we report the first crystal structure of human GMP reductase 2 (hGMPR2) in complex with GMP at 3.0 A resolution. The protein forms a tetramer composed of subunits adopting the ubiquitous (alpha/beta)8 barrel fold. Interestingly, the substrate GMP is bound to hGMPR2 through interactions with Met269, Ser270, Arg286, Ser288, and Gly290; this makes the conformation of the adjacent flexible binding region (residues 268-289) fixed, much like a door on a hinge. Structure comparison and sequence alignment analyses show that the conformation of the active site loop (residues 179-187) is similar to those of hGMPR1 and inosine monophosphate dehydrogenases (IMPDHs). We propose that Cys186 is the potential active site, and that the conformation of the loop (residues 129-133) suggests a preference for the coenzyme NADPH over NADH. This structure provides important information towards understanding the functions of members of the GMPR family.  相似文献   

6.
The primary structures of interferon (IFN)-induced guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) were deduced from cloned human and murine cDNAs. These proteins contained only two of the three sequence motifs typically found in GTP/GDP-binding proteins. The N(T)KXD motif, which is believed to confer guanine specificity in other nucleotide-binding proteins, was absent. Nevertheless, the IFN-induced GBPs exhibited a high degree of selectivity for binding to agarose-immobilized guanine nucleotides. An interesting feature of IFN-induced GBPs is that they strongly bound to GMP agarose in addition to GDP and GTP agaroses but failed to bind to ATP agarose and all other nucleotide agaroses tested. Both GTP and GMP, but not ATP, competed for binding of murine GBP-1 to agarose-immobilized GMP. The IFN-induced GBPs thus define a distinct novel family of proteins with GTP-binding activity. We further demonstrate that human and murine cells contain at least two genes encoding IFN-induced GBPs. The cloned murine cDNA codes for GBP-1, an IFN-induced protein previously shown to be absent from mice of Gbp-1b genotype.  相似文献   

7.
Inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme in the regulation of guanine nucleotide biosynthesis, was purified to homogeneity; and a polyclonal antibody directed against the purified protein was used to isolate human and Chinese hamster IMP dehydrogenase cDNA clones. These clones were sequenced and found to contain an open reading frame of a protein containing 514 amino acids. A sequence of 35 amino acids obtained by analysis of the purified protein is identical to a segment of the protein sequence deduced from the IMP dehydrogenase cDNA. The molecular mass of the deduced protein is 56 kDa, which is the observed molecular mass of the purified protein and of the immunoprecipitated in vitro translation product. Comparison of the protein sequences deduced from the human and Chinese hamster cDNA clones indicates only eight amino acid differences, suggesting that IMP dehydrogenase is a highly conserved protein.  相似文献   

8.
Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and guanine phosphoribosyltransferase activities are essential for the supply of guanine nucleotides in Schistosoma mansoni schistosomules. In crude extracts of adult S. mansoni, these two activities co-elute in size exclusion, ion exchange, and chromatofocusing chromatography and exhibit similar stabilities to heat treatment, suggesting that they are associated in one enzyme protein hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. This enzyme has been purified by a combination of heat treatment at 85 degrees C and chromatofocusing chromatography with elution at an apparent pI of 5.27 +/- 0.15. Pore gradient electrophoresis of the native enzyme followed by subsequent activity staining demonstrate an enzyme molecular weight of 105,000. The activity staining pattern remains the same whether hypoxanthine or guanine is used as the substrate, further supporting the existence of a single protein, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified protein results in a single protein band with a subunit molecular weight estimate of 64,000, suggesting that the native enzyme is a dimer. Preliminary kinetic studies showed that the purified hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase reacted with guanine at a rate twice as fast as it did with hypoxanthine, but it did not act on xanthine at all. A full-length mouse neuroblastoma hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase cDNA clone pHPT5 and a plasmid pSV2-gpt containing the xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase gene for Escherichia coli were utilized as probes on Southern blots of S. mansoni DNA digests, and no significant hybridization was found under relatively relaxed conditions. Polyclonal antibodies made against human erythrocyte hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and E. coli xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase were tested in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays of S. mansoni protein extracts, and no detectable cross-reacting protein was found. S. mansoni hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase thus may bear rather limited homology to mammalian hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase or bacterial xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and could be an attractive target for antischistosomal chemotherapeutic drug design.  相似文献   

9.
The Leishmania guanosine 5′‐monophosphate reductase (GMPR) and inosine 5′‐monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) are purine metabolic enzymes that function maintaining the cellular adenylate and guanylate nucleotide. Interestingly, both enzymes contain a cystathionine‐β‐synthase domain (CBS). To investigate this metabolic regulation, the Leishmania GMPR was cloned and shown to be sufficient to complement the guaC (GMPR), but not the guaB (IMPDH), mutation in Escherichia coli. Kinetic studies confirmed that the Leishmania GMPR catalyzed a strict NADPH‐dependent reductive deamination of GMP to produce IMP. Addition of GTP or high levels of GMP induced a marked increase in activity without altering the Km values for the substrates. In contrast, the binding of ATP decreased the GMPR activity and increased the GMP Km value 10‐fold. These kinetic changes were correlated with changes in the GMPR quaternary structure, induced by the binding of GMP, GTP, or ATP to the GMPR CBS domain. The capacity of these CBS domains to mediate the catalytic activity of the IMPDH and GMPR provides a regulatory mechanism for balancing the intracellular adenylate and guanylate pools.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Guanosine monophosphate (GMP) reductase catalyzes the reductive deamination of GMP to inosine monophosphate (IMP). GMP reductase plays an important role in the conversion of nucleoside and nucleotide derivatives of guanine to adenine nucleotides. In addition, as a member of the purine salvage pathway, it also participates in the reutilization of free intracellular bases. Here we present cloning, expression and purification of Escherichia coli guaC-encoded GMP reductase to determine its kinetic mechanism, as well as chemical and thermodynamic features of this reaction. Initial velocity studies and isothermal titration calorimetry demonstrated that GMP reductase follows an ordered bi-bi kinetic mechanism, in which GMP binds first to the enzyme followed by NADPH binding, and NADP(+) dissociates first followed by IMP release. The isothermal titration calorimetry also showed that GMP and IMP binding are thermodynamically favorable processes. The pH-rate profiles showed groups with apparent pK values of 6.6 and 9.6 involved in catalysis, and pK values of 7.1 and 8.6 important to GMP binding, and a pK value of 6.2 important for NADPH binding. Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects demonstrated that hydride transfer contributes to the rate-limiting step, whereas solvent kinetic isotope effects arise from a single protonic site that plays a modest role in catalysis. Multiple isotope effects suggest that protonation and hydride transfer steps take place in the same transition state, lending support to a concerted mechanism. Pre-steady-state kinetic data suggest that product release does not contribute to the rate-limiting step of the reaction catalyzed by E. coli GMP reductase.  相似文献   

12.
Enzymes of Purine Metabolism in Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides   总被引:8,自引:8,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The major pathways of ribonucleotide biosynthesis in Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides were proposed previously from studies of its usage of radioactive purines and pyrimidines. To interpret more fully the pattern of purine usage, we have assayed cell-free extracts of this organism for several enzymes associated with the salvage synthesis of purine nucleotides. M. mycoides possessed phosphoribosyltransferases for adenine, guanine, and hypoxanthine, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, GMP reductase, GMP kinase, adenylosuccinate synthetase, and adenylosuccinate lyase. Purine nucleoside kinase and adenosine deaminase were not detected. Examination of kinetic properties and regulation of some of the above enzymes revealed differences between M. mycoides and Escherichia coli. Most notable of these were the greater susceptibility of the enzymes from M. mycoides to inhibition by nucleotides and the more widespread involvement of GMP as an inhibitor. Observations on enzyme activities in vitro allow an adequate explanation of the capacity of guanine to provide M. mycoides with its full requirement for purine nucleotides.  相似文献   

13.
The amino acid sequence of mouse liver NAD(P)H:quinone acceptor oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.99.2) has been determined by tandem mass spectrometry and deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA encoding for the enzyme. The electrospray mass spectral analyses revealed, as previously reported (Prochaska HJ, Talalay P, 1986, J Biol Chem 261:1372-1378), that the 2 forms--the hydrophilic and hydrophobic forms--of the mouse liver quinone reductase have the same molecular weight. No amino acid sequence differences were found by tandem mass spectral analyses of tryptic peptides of the 2 forms. Moreover, the amino-termini of the mouse enzymes are acetylated as determined by tandem mass spectrometry. Further, only 1 cDNA species encoding for the quinone reductase was found. These results suggest that the 2 forms of the mouse quinone reductase have the same primary sequences, and that any difference between the 2 forms may be attributed to a labile posttranslational modification. Analysis of the mouse quinone reductase cDNA revealed that the enzyme is 273 amino acids long and has a sequence homologous to those of rat and human quinone reductases. In this study, the mouse quinone reductase cDNA was also ligated into a prokaryotic expression plasmid pKK233.2, and the constructed plasmid was used to transform Escherichia coli strain JM109. The E. coli-expressed mouse quinone reductase was purified and characterized. Although mouse quinone reductase has an amino acid sequence similar to those of the rat and human enzymes, the mouse enzyme has a higher NAD(P)H-menadione reductase activity and is less sensitive to flavones and dicoumarol, 2 known inhibitors of the enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
A rapid and simple method, based on GMP Sepharose affinity chromatography, was used for the purification of human brain hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. A single protein band was detected by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the native purified enzyme. A subunit molecular weight of 25,000 was estimated by SDS gel electrophoresis. The Km values for hypoxanthine and phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate were 50 and 111 microM, respectively. The Ki values for GMP and IMP with phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate were 21 and 37 microM, respectively. The purified enzyme from human brain did not differ significantly from the human erythrocyte one in amino acid composition. The brain and erythrocyte hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferases showed complete immunochemical identity on Ouchterlony double diffusion.  相似文献   

15.
Purine nucleotide biosynthesis was studied in culture forms of Trypanosoma cruzi strain Y, Crithidia deanei (a reduviid trypanosomatid with an endosymbiote) and an aposymbiotic strain of C. deanei (obtained by curing C. deanei with chloramphenicol). Trypanosoma cruzi was found to synthesize purine nucleotides only fring incorporated into both adenine and guanine nucleotides. Similar results were obtained with guanine, indicating that this flagellate has a system for the interconversion of purine nucleotides. Crithidia deanei was able to synthesize purine and pyrimidine nucleotides from glycine ("de novo" pathway) and purine nucleotides from adenine and guanine ("salvage" pathway). Adenine was incorporated into both adenine and guanine nucleotides, while guanine was incorporated into guanine nucleotides only, indicating the presence of a metabolic block at the level of GMP reductase. The aposymbiotic C. deanei strain was unable to utilize glycine for the synthesis of purine nucleotides, although glycine was utilized for synthesizing pyrimidine nucleotides. These results suggest that the endosymbiote is implicated in the de novo purine nucleotide pathway of the C. deanei-endosymbiote complex. The incorporation of adenine and guanine by aposymbiotic C. deanei strain followed a pattern similar to that observed for C. deanei.  相似文献   

16.
We have isolated and sequenced overlapping cDNA clones from a breast carcinoma cDNA library containing the entire coding region of both the R1 and R2 subunits of the human ribonucleotide reductase gene. The coding region of the human R1 subunit comprises 2376 nucleotides and predicts a polypeptide of 792 amino acids (calculated molecular mass 90,081). The sequence of this subunit is almost identical to the equivalent mouse ribonucleotide reductase subunit with 97.7% homology between the mouse and human R1 subunit amino acid sequences. The coding region of the human R2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase comprises 1170 nucleotides and predicts a polypeptide of 389 amino acids (calculated molecular mass 44,883), which is one amino acid shorter than the equivalent mouse subunit. The human and mouse R2 subunits display considerable homology in their carboxy-terminal amino acid sequences, with 96.3% homology downstream of amino acid 68 of the human and mouse R2 proteins. However, the amino-terminal portions of these two proteins are more divergent in sequence, with only 69.2% homology in the first 68 amino acids.  相似文献   

17.
Cloning and expression of human aldose reductase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The complete amino acid sequence of human retina and muscle aldose reductase was determined by nucleotide analysis of cDNA clones isolated using synthetic oligonucleotide probes based on partial amino acid sequences of purified human psoas muscle aldose reductase. The cDNA sequence differs substantially in the noncoding and coding regions of recently published sequences of this enzyme. The mRNA for aldose reductase was abundantly expressed in HeLa cells, but only scarcely in a neuroblastoma cell line. Recombinant baculovirus containing one of the muscle cDNA clones was constructed and used to infect Spodoptera frugiperda (SF9) cells. A prominent protein with an apparent molecular size of 36 kDa was identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the culture medium as well as in the homogenate of SF9 cells after 2 days of infection. Culture medium or the supernatant fraction of cell homogenates containing this protein had high aldose reductase activity which showed characteristics of the reported human enzyme. These findings indicate that the amino acid sequence reported in this paper represents human retina and muscle aldose reductase and that functional human aldose reductase can be expressed in large amounts in a baculovirus expression system. The result should facilitate refined structural analysis and the development of new specific aldose reductase inhibitors for the treatment of diabetic complications.  相似文献   

18.
Previous evidence suggests that guanine nucleotides can directly inhibit N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) and AMPA/kainate receptors and antagonize a variety of cellular functions elicited by these glutamate receptor agonists. We investigated the possibility that the guanine nucleotides GTP, GDP, and GMP exert a neuroprotective effect on cultured rat hippocampal or neocortical neurons exposed to the excitotoxicants NMDA (30 microM) or kainate (300 microM). On co-application with NMDA all three nucleotides revealed a comparable rescue effect from 100 microM nucleotide concentrations onwards, with a higher inhibitory potential in hippocampal than in neocortical cultures. Similarly, kainate-induced neurotoxicity was inhibited by all three nucleotides but the inhibitory potential was lower than after application of NMDA. Guanosine had no effect on either culture system. GTP and GDP where hydrolyzed by hippocampal and cortical cultures with GMP accumulating in the medium, suggesting that hydrolysis of GTP had no effect on the effective nucleotide concentration. Our results show that GTP, GDP, and GMP inhibit NMDA- and kainate-mediated neurotoxicity in cultured hippocampal and neocortical neurons. They suggest that guanine nucleotides may be candidates for broadly antagonizing glutamate receptor-mediated neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Mouse erythrocyte guanine deaminase has been purified to homogeneity. The native enzyme was dimeric, being comprised of two identical subunits of approximately 50,000 Da. The protein sequence was obtained from five cyanogen bromide cleavage products giving sequences ranging from 12 to 25 amino acids in length and corresponding to 99 residues. Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) analysis of expressed sequence databases enabled the retrieval of a human expressed sequence tag cDNA clone highly homologous to one of the mouse peptide sequences. The presumed coding region of this clone was used to screen a human kidney cDNA library and secondarily to polymerase chain reaction-amplify the full-length coding sequence of the human brain cDNA corresponding to an open reading frame of 1365 nucleotides and encoding a protein of 51,040 Da. Comparison of the mouse peptide sequences with the inferred human protein sequence revealed 88 of 99 residues to be identical. The human coding sequence of the putative enzyme was subcloned into the bacterial expression vector pMAL-c2, expressed, purified, and characterized as having guanine deaminase activity with a Km for guanine of 9.5 +/- 1.7 microM. The protein shares a 9-residue motif with other aminohydrolases and amidohydrolases (PGX[VI]DXH[TVI]H) that has been shown to be ligated with heavy metal ions, commonly zinc. The purified recombinant guanine deaminase was found to contain approximately 1 atom of zinc per 51-kDa monomer.  相似文献   

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