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1.
CheR methyltransferase from Salmonella typhimurium was directly photolabeled with S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine. The labeled protein was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and then was detected by fluorography. The methylase-S-adenosyl-L-methionine adduct was found to be stable under the experimental conditions employed. Labeling was found to be a function of the concentration of enzyme, S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet), and the intensity and time of UV irradiation. The extent of labeling and protein methylation was found to be inhibited by S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine, S-adenosyl-L-ethionine, and sinefungin, which are known to compete with AdoMet for the same binding site on the enzyme. Our earlier data showed that the enzyme has 2 cysteine residues and that these are important for enzyme activity. Here, we show that sulfhydryl reagents inhibit the photolabeling of the substrate to the enzyme, indicating the presence of cysteine in the vicinity of the substrate-binding site. We also found that when Cys31 was modified to Ser, no photolabeling of CheR was observed, whereas a modification of Cys229 to Ser had little effect on the ability of AdoMet to label the enzyme. This suggests that Cys31 is located at or near AdoMet-binding site. The labeled protein was cleaved at tryptophan residues, generating two major fragments, each containing 1 cysteine residue. SDS-PAGE and fluorography of the cleaved products indicated the presence of the label being associated with the Cys31 fragment. Similar results were obtained when the labeled protein was cleaved at glutamic acid residues using V8 protease. A tryptic digest of the labeled protein showed two radioactive peptide peaks when subjected to separation on reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography. The labeled peptides were further digested to free amino acids, and the labeled amino acid was identified as S-methylcysteine by thin layer chromatography. These results indicate that Cys31 may be involved with substrate binding, as well as with catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Ultraviolet irradiation of EcoRII methyltransferase in the presence of its substrate, S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet), results in the formation of a stable enzyme-substrate adduct. This adduct can be demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after irradiation of the enzyme in the presence of either [methyl-3H]AdoMet or [35S]AdoMet. The extent of photolabeling is low. Under optimal conditions, 4.5 pmol of [3H]AdoMet is incorporated into 100 pmol of enzyme. Use of the 8-azido derivative of AdoMet as the photolabeling substrate increases the incorporation by approximately 2-fold. However, this adduct, unlike the one formed with AdoMet, is not stable when treated with thiol reagents or precipitated with trichloroacetic acid. A catalytically active conformation of the enzyme is needed for AdoMet photolabeling. Heat-inactivated enzyme or proteins for which AdoMet is not a substrate or cofactor do not undergo adduct formation. Two other methyltransferases, MspI and dam methylases are also shown to form adducts with AdoMet upon UV irradiation. The binding constant of the EcoRII methyltransferase for AdoMet determined with the photolabeling reaction is 11 microM, which is similar to the binding constant of 9 microM previously reported (Friedman, S. (1986) Nucleic Acids Res. 14, 4543-4556). The AdoMet analogs S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (Ki = 0.83 microM) and sinefungin (Ki = 4.3 microM) are effective inhibitors of photolabeling, whereas S-adenosyl-D-homocysteine (Ki = 46 microM) is a poor inhibitor. These experiments indicate that AdoMet becomes covalently bound at the AdoMet-binding site on the enzyme molecule. The EcoRII methyltransferase-AdoMet adduct is very stable and could be used to identify the AdoMet-binding site on DNA methyltransferases.  相似文献   

3.
Y Takata  M Fujioka 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4369-4374
Exposure of rat guanidinoacetate methyltransferase to ultraviolet light in the presence of S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine ([methyl-3H]AdoMet) results in covalent linking of radioactivity to the enzyme protein. The incorporation of radioactivity shows no lag and is linear with respect to time up to 1 h. The photolabeling is saturable with [methyl-3H]AdoMet, and the binding constant of the enzyme for AdoMet determined in this experiment is similar to that obtained by equilibrium dialysis. Low concentrations of competitive inhibitors S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine and sinefungin effectively prevent the photoinduced labeling by AdoMet. Although guanidinoacetate methyltransferase is irreversibly inactivated upon ultraviolet irradiation in the absence of AdoMet, the enzyme inactivated by 1-h exposure to ultraviolet irradiation has been shown to bind AdoMet with an affinity identical to that of the native enzyme. These results indicate that photolabeling occurs at the active site. Following proteolysis of the [methyl-3H]-AdoMet-labeled enzyme with chymotrypsin, a radioactive peptide is isolated having a sequence Asp-Thr-X-Pro-Leu-Ser-Glu-Glu-Thr-Trp. The peptide corresponds to residues 134-143, with X being modified Tyr-136. The same peptide is photolabeled when [carboxy-14C]AdoMet is used. High-performance liquid chromatography of this peptide after acid hydrolysis and phenyl isothiocyanate derivatization suggests that the entire molecule of AdoMet is attached to Tyr-136.  相似文献   

4.
Radiosequence analysis of peptide fragments of the estrogen receptor (ER) from MCF-7 human breast cancer cells has been used to identify cysteine 530 as the site of covalent attachment of an estrogenic affinity label, ketononestrol aziridine (KNA), and an antiestrogenic affinity label, tamoxifen aziridine (TAZ). ER from MCF-7 cells was covalently labeled with [3H]TAZ or [3H]KNA and purified to greater than 95% homogeneity by immunoadsorbent chromatography. Limit digest peptide fragments, generated by prolonged exposure of the labeled receptor to trypsin, cyanogen bromide, or Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, were purified to homogeneity by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and the position of the labeled residue was determined by sequential Edman degradation. With both aziridines, the labeled residue was at position 1 in the tryptic peptide, position 2 in the cyanogen bromide peptide, and position 7 in the V8 protease peptide. This localizes the site of labeling to a single cysteine at position 530 in the receptor sequence. The identity of cysteine as the site of labeling was confirmed by HPLC comparison of the TAZ-labeled amino acid (as the phenylthiohydantoin and phenylthiocarbamyl derivatives) and the KNA-labeled amino acid (as the phenylthiocarbamyl derivative) with authentic standards prepared by total synthesis. Cysteine 530 is located in the hormone binding domain of the receptor, near its carboxyl terminus. This location is consistent with earlier studies using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to analyze the size of the proteolytic fragments containing the covalent labeling sites for TAZ and KNA and the antigen recognition sites for monoclonal antibodies. The fact that both the estrogenic and antiestrogenic affinity labeling agents react covalently with the same cysteine indicates that differences in receptor-agonist and receptor-antagonist complexes do not result in differential covalent labeling of amino acid residues in the hormone binding domain.  相似文献   

5.
Using the technique of ultraviolet-mediated cross-linking of substrate deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) to their acceptor site [Abraham, K. I., & Modak, M. J. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1176-1182], we have labeled the Klenow fragment of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (Pol I) with [alpha-32P]dTTP. Covalent cross-linking of [alpha-32P]dTTP to the Klenow fragment is shown to be at the substrate binding site by the following criteria: (a) the cross-linking reaction requires dTTP in its metal chelate form; (b) dTTP is readily competed out by other dNTPs as well as by substrate binding site directed reagents; (c) labeling with dTTP occurs at a single site as judged by peptide mapping. Under optimal conditions, a modification of approximately 20% of the enzyme was achieved. Following tryptic digestion of the [alpha-32P]dTTP-labeled Klenow fragment, reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography demonstrated that 80% of the radioactivity was contained within a single peptide. The amino acid composition and sequence of this peptide identified it as the peptide spanning amino acid residues 876-890 in the primary sequence of E. coli Pol I. Chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion of the labeled tryptic peptide in each case yielded a single smaller fragment that was radioactive. Amino acid analysis and sequencing of these smaller peptides further narrowed the dTTP cross-linking site to within the region spanning residues 876-883. We concluded that histidine-881 is the primary attachment site for dTTP in E. coli DNA Pol I, since during amino acid sequencing analysis of all three radioactive peptides loss of the histidine residue at the expected cycle is observed.  相似文献   

6.
Recent results using proteases suggest that dexamethasone 21-mesylate (Dex-Mes) labeling of the rat hepatoma tissue culture (HTC) cell glucocorticoid receptor occurs at one or a few closely grouped cysteine residues (Simons, S.S., Jr. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 9669-9675). In this study, a more direct approach was used both to establish that only one cysteine is labeled by [3H]Dex-Mes and to identify the amino acid sequence containing this labeled cysteine. Various analytical procedures did not provide the purification of the extremely hydrophobic Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion fragment that is required for unique amino acid sequencing data. Therefore, Edman degradation was performed on the limit protease digest mixtures which appeared to contain only one 3H-labeled peptide. These degradation experiments revealed the number of amino acid residues between the NH2 terminus of each peptide and the [3H]Dex-Mes-labeled cysteine. A comparison of these amino acid spacings with the published amino acid sequence of the HTC cell glucocorticoid receptor (Miesfeld, R., Rusconi, S., Godowski, P. J., Maler, B. A., Okret, S., Wikstom, A-C., Gustafsson, J-A., and Yamamoto, K. R. (1986) Cell 46, 389-399) indicated that the one cysteine labeled by [3H]Dex-Mes is Cys-656. Further analysis of the receptor sequence for the presence of the observed grouping of proteolytic cleavage sites, but without any preconditions as to which amino acid was labeled, gave Asp-122 and Cys-656 as the only two possibilities. Potential labeling of Asp-122 could be eliminated on the basis of immunological and genetic evidence. We, therefore, conclude that the single Dex-Mes-labeled site of the HTC cell glucocorticoid receptor has been identified as Cys-656. Since several lines of evidence indicate that [3H]Dex-Mes labeling of the receptor occurs in the steroid binding site, Cys-656 is the first amino acid which can be directly associated with a particular property of the glucocorticoid receptor.  相似文献   

7.
We employed a highly specific photoaffinity labeling procedure, using (14)C-labeled S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) to define the chemical structure of the AdoMet binding centers on cyclosporin synthetase (CySyn). Tryptic digestion of CySyn photolabeled with either [methyl-(14)C]AdoMet or [carboxyl-(14)C]AdoMet yielded the sequence H(2)N-Asn-Asp-Gly-Leu-Glu-Ser-Tyr-Val-Gly-Ile-Glu-Pro-Ser-Arg-COOH (residues 10644-10657), situated within the N-methyltransferase domain of module 8 of CySyn. Radiosequencing detected Glu(10654) and Pro(10655) as the major sites of derivatization. [carboxyl-(14)C]AdoMet in addition labeled Tyr(10650). Chymotryptic digestion generated the radiolabeled peptide H(2)N-Ile-Gly-Leu-Glu-Pro-Ser-Gln-Ser-Ala-Val-Gln-Phe-COOH, corresponding to amino acids 2125-2136 of the N-methyltransferase domain of module 2. The radiolabeled amino acids were identified as Glu(2128) and Pro(2129), which are equivalent in position and function to the modified residues identified with tryptic digestions in module 8. Homology modeling of the N-methyltransferase domains indicates that these regions conserve the consensus topology of the AdoMet binding fold and consensus cofactor interactions seen in structurally characterized AdoMet-dependent methyltransferases. The modified sequence regions correspond to the motif II consensus sequence element, which is involved in directly complexing the adenine and ribose components of AdoMet. We conclude that the AdoMet binding to nonribosomal peptide synthetase N-methyltransferase domains obeys the consensus cofactor interactions seen among most structurally characterized low molecular weight AdoMet-dependent methyltransferases.  相似文献   

8.
Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase commits tetrahydrofolate-bound one carbon units to use in the regeneration of the methyl group of adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) in eucaryotes and its activity is allosterically inhibited by AdoMet. Limited proteolysis and scanning transmission electron microscopy have been employed to show that the enzyme is a dimer of identical subunits and that each subunit is composed of spatially distinct domains with molecular masses of approximately 40 and 37 kDa (Matthews, R. G., Vanoni, M. A., Hainfeld, J. F., and Wall, J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 11647-11650). We now report the use of the photoaffinity label 8-azido-S-adenosylmethionine (8-N3AdoMet) to locate the binding site for the allosteric inhibitor on the 37-kDa domain. In the absence of light, 8-N3AdoMet is itself an inhibitor of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase activity, with a Ki value 4.8-fold higher than AdoMet, and like AdoMet it induces slow transitions between active and inactive forms. Photoaffinity labeling is dependent on irradiation with ultraviolet light and is prevented by AdoMet but not by ATP. Limited proteolysis of the photolabeled enzyme results in the formation of a labeled 37-kDa fragment which is further processed to a labeled 34-kDa fragment. On conversion of the 34-kDa fragment to a 31-kDa polypeptide, all label is lost, suggesting that the labeling is restricted to an approximately 3-kDa region near one end of the 37-kDa polypeptide. Limited proteolysis of the native enzyme, while completely desensitizing the enzyme to inhibition by AdoMet or 8-N3AdoMet, does not prevent subsequent photolabeling of the 37-kDa peptide fragment. This photolabeling does not occur in the presence of excess AdoMet. These latter experiments suggest that the desensitization of the enzyme eliminates the ability of allosteric effectors to stabilize an inactive form of the enzyme, but does not abolish specific binding of 8-N3AdoMet or AdoMet.  相似文献   

9.
The active site of chicken gizzard myosin was labeled by direct photoaffinity labeling with [3H]UDP. [3H] UDP was stably trapped at the active site by addition of vanadate (Vi) and Co2+. The extraordinary stability of the myosin.Co2+.[3H]UDP.Vi complex (t1/2 greater than 5 days at 0 degrees C) allowed it to be purified free of extraneous [3H]UDP before irradiation began. Upon UV irradiation, greater than 60% of the trapped [3H]UDP was photoincorporated into the active site. Only the 200-kDa heavy chain was labeled, confirming earlier results (Maruta, H., and Korn, E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 499-502) using [3H]UTP. Extensive tryptic digestion of photolabeled myosin subfragment 1 followed by high performance liquid chromatography separations and removal of nucleotide phosphates by treatment with alkaline phosphatase allowed two labeled peptides to be isolated. Sequencing of the labeled peptides and radioactive counting showed that Glu185 was the residue labeled. Since UDP is a "zero-length" cross-linker, Glu185 is located at the purine-binding pocket of the active site of smooth myosin and adjacent to the glycine-rich loop which binds the polyphosphate portion of ATP. This Glu residue is conserved in smooth and nonmuscle myosins and is the same residue identified previously by [3H]UTP photolabeling in Acanthamoeba myosin II (Atkinson, M. A., Robinson, E. A., Appella, E., and Korn, E. D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1844-1848).  相似文献   

10.
B S Gibbs  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1991,30(27):6795-6802
A pterin analogue, 5-[(3-azido-6-nitrobenzylidene)amino]-2,6-diamino-4-pyrimidinone (ANBADP), was synthesized as a probe of the pterin binding site of phenylalanine hydroxylase. The photoaffinity label has been found to be a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme with respect to 6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin, having a Ki of 8.8 +/- 1.1 microM. The irreversible labeling of phenylalanine hydroxylase by the photoaffinity label upon irradiation is both concentration and time dependent. Phenylalanine hydroxylase is covalently labeled with a stoichiometry of 0.87 +/- 0.08 mol of label/enzyme subunit. 5-Deaza-6-methyltetrahydropterin protects against inactivation and both 5-deaza-6-methyltetrahydropterin and 6-methyltetrahydropterin protect against covalent labeling, indicating that labeling occurs at the pterin binding site. Three tryptic peptides were isolated from [3H]ANBADP-photolabeled enzyme and sequenced. All peptides indicated the sequence Thr-Leu-Lys-Ala-Leu-Tyr-Lys (residues 192-198). The residues labeled with [3H]ANBADP were Lys198 and Lys194, with the majority of the radioactivity being associated with Lys198. The reactive sulfhydryl of phenylalanine hydroxylase associated with activation of the enzyme was also identified by labeling with the chromophoric label 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein [Parniak, M. A., & Kaufman, S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 6876]. Labeling of the enzyme resulted in 1 mol of fluorescein bound per phenylalanine hydroxylase subunit and a concomitant activation of phenylalanine hydroxylase to 82% of the activity found with phenylalanine-activated enzyme. Tryptic and chymotryptic peptides were isolated from fluorescein-labeled enzyme and sequenced. The modified residue was identified as Cys236.  相似文献   

11.
The N- and C-terminal amino acid sequences of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase [EC 4.1.1.31] from Escherichia coli K-12 were determined to establish the primary structure deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the cloned gene for the enzyme (Fujita, N., Miwa, T., Ishijima, S., Izui, K., & Katsuki, H. (1984) J. Biochem. 95, 909-916). As predicted from the nucleotide sequence, two polypeptides were produced upon treatment with hydroxylamine, which specifically cleaves the Asn-Gly bond, and their amino acid compositions were also in accordance with those predicted. The tryptic peptides which contained cysteine residues labeled with a fluorescent reagent, N-[7-(dimethylamino)-4-methylcoumarinyl]maleimide, were isolated by high-performance liquid chromatography and partially sequenced. All of them could be assigned on the deduced primary structure. The modified cysteine residues were Cys-157, Cys-385, Cys-458, Cys-568, Cys-665, and Cys-754. Furthermore, the essential cysteine residue which is presumably located at or near the active site was tentatively identified as Cys-568, since it was consistently protected against the modification by 2-phospholactate, a substrate analog.  相似文献   

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

13.
Dantrolene is a drug that suppresses intracellular Ca(2+) release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) in skeletal muscle and is used as a therapeutic agent in individuals susceptible to malignant hyperthermia. Although its precise mechanism of action has not been elucidated, we have identified the N-terminal region (amino acids 1-1400) of the skeletal muscle isoform of the ryanodine receptor (RyR1), the primary Ca(2+) release channel in SR, as a molecular target for dantrolene using the photoaffinity analog [(3)H]azidodantrolene. Here, we demonstrate that heterologously expressed RyR1 retains its capacity to be specifically labeled with [(3)H]azidodantrolene, indicating that muscle specific factors are not required for this ligand-receptor interaction. Synthetic domain peptides of RyR1 previously shown to affect RyR1 function in vitro and in vivo were exploited as potential drug binding site mimics and used in photoaffinity labeling experiments. Only DP1 and DP1-2s, peptides containing the amino acid sequence corresponding to RyR1 residues 590-609, were specifically labeled by [(3)H]azidodantrolene. A monoclonal anti-RyR1 antibody that recognizes RyR1 and its 1400-amino acid N-terminal fragment recognizes DP1 and DP1-2s in both Western blots and immunoprecipitation assays and specifically inhibits [(3)H]azidodantrolene photolabeling of RyR1 and its N-terminal fragment in SR. Our results indicate that synthetic domain peptides can mimic a native, ligand-binding conformation in vitro and that the dantrolene-binding site and the epitope for the monoclonal antibody on RyR1 are equivalent and composed of amino acids 590-609.  相似文献   

14.
S Friedman  S Som    L F Yang 《Nucleic acids research》1991,19(19):5403-5408
Binding of the EcoRII DNA methyltransferase to azacytosine-containing DNA protects the enzyme from digestion by proteases. The limit digest yields a product having a Mr on SDS-PAGE 20% less than the intact protein. The N terminus of the tryptic digestion product was sequenced and found to be missing the N terminal 82 amino acids. Under the conditions used unbound enzyme was digested to small peptides. Protection of the enzyme from protease digestion implies that the enzyme undergoes major conformational changes when bound to DNA. The trypsin sensitive region of the EcoRII methyltransferase occurs prior to the first constant region shared with other procaryotic DNA(cytosine-5)methyltransferases. To determine if this region played a role in substrate binding or specificity, N-terminal deletion mutants were studied. Deletion of 97 amino acids resulted in a decrease of enzyme activity. Further deletions caused a complete loss of activity. Enzyme deleted through amino acid 85 was purified and found to have the same specificity as wild type however there was an increase in Km for both S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) and DNA of 27 and 18 fold respectively. The N-terminus of the EcoRII methylase, although a variable region present in many procaryotic DNA(cytosine-5)methylases, plays no role in determining enzyme specificity, although it does contribute to the interaction with both AdoMet and DNA.  相似文献   

15.
S P Batra  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1986,25(12):3508-3515
6-[(4-Bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-6-deaminoadenosine 5'-diphosphate (6-BDB-TADP) has been shown to react at the reduced diphosphopyridine nucleotide (DPNH) inhibitory site of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase with incorporation of 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit [Batra, S. P., & Colman, R. F. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 4940-4946]. The modified enzyme had lost one of the six free sulfhydryl groups per enzyme subunit as detected by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate). In the unmodified enzyme digested with trypsin, six cysteinyl peptides labeled with [14C]iodoacetic acid were detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), whereas only five were observed in the 6-BDB-TADP-modified enzyme. A cysteinyl peptide has been isolated from modified enzyme digested with trypsin and chymotrypsin. Purification of the nucleotidyl peptide was accomplished by chromatography on phenyl boronate-agarose, followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-25 and Bio-Gel P-4 in 50 mM ammonium bicarbonate, pH 8.0. The modified peptides were finally purified by HPLC on a C18 column using 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid with an acetonitrile gradient. By comparison of the amino acid composition and N-terminal residue of the isolated peptide with the known amino acid sequence of the enzyme, the peptide in the DPNH inhibitory site labeled by 6-BDB-TADP has been identified as the 19-membered fragment from Glu-311 to Lys-329. A unique residue, Cys-319, was identified as the reactive amino acid within the DPNH inhibitory site.  相似文献   

16.
R Mahmood  M Elzinga  R G Yount 《Biochemistry》1989,28(9):3989-3995
A portion of the active site of rabbit skeletal myosin near the ribose ring of ATP can be labeled by the photoaffinity analogue 3'(2')-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)adenosine triphosphate (Bz2ATP). The specificity of the photolabeling was assured by first trapping [14C]Bz2ATP at the active site by use of thiol cross-linking agents [Mahmood, R., Cremo, C., Nakamaye, K., & Yount, R. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14479-14486]. Five radioactive peptides were isolated by high-performance liquid chromatography after extensive trypsin and subtilisin digestion of photolabeled myosin subfragment 1. Four of these peptides were sequenced by Edman techniques, and all originated from a region with the sequence Gly-Glu-Ile-Thr-Val-Pro-Ser-Ile-Asp-Asp-Gln, which corresponds to rabbit myosin heavy chain residues 318-328. The fifth labeled peptide had an amino acid composition appropriate for residues 312-328. Amino acid composition, radiochemical analysis, and sequence data indicate that Ser-324 is the major amino acid residue photolabeled by Bz2ATP. Spectrophotometric evidence indicates that the benzophenone carbonyl group has inserted into a C-H bond from either the alpha- or beta-carbon of serine. These results place Ser-324 at a distance of 6-7 A from the 3'(2') ribose oxygens of ATP bound at the active site of myosin.  相似文献   

17.
Purified mitochondrial energy-linked nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (TH) is inhibited by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), and NAD(H) protects the enzyme against this inhibition [Phelps, D.C., and Hatefi, Y. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 4475-4480]. The tryptic digest of TH treated with [14C]DCCD showed a single radioactive peak upon FPLC chromatography. This radioactive peak was absent from tryptic digests of TH treated with [14C]DCCD in the presence of NADH. Sequence analysis of the radioactive peak showed that it contained two peptides, one derived from the other as a result of incomplete cleavage by trypsin of a lysyl-glutamyl bond. After further digestion with Staphylococcus V8 protease, the smaller radioactive fragment was isolated and sequenced. The amino acid sequence of this fragment, as determined by manual Edman degradation, was Ala-Glu-Met-Lys. The second residue was modified. Amino acid analysis and sequence studies on the radioactive tryptic peptide mixture indicated that the sequence around the DCCD-modified residue was Glu-Met-Ser-Lys-Glu-Phe-Ile-Glu-Ala-Glu-Met-Lys. In other studies, this sequence has been found in the amino acid sequence of TH as predicted from the corresponding cDNA. The DCCD-modified peptide is near the site of NAD(H) binding, as labeled with radioactive p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-5'-adenosine. Furthermore, there is a high degree of homology in this region between the amino acid sequences of the bovine heart TH and the alpha subunit of the Escherichia coli TH.  相似文献   

18.
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (terminal transferase) was specifically modified in the nucleotide binding site by the substrate photoaffinity analogue [gamma-32P]-8-azido-dATP. The alpha and beta polypeptides of photolabeled terminal transferase were resolved by high-performance liquid chromatography. The beta polypeptide was digested with trypsin and fractionated by reverse-phase chromatography. Two 32P-containing fractions were isolated and subjected to amino acid sequence analysis. Peptides were identified as Ile209-Lys232 (B26) and Val233-Lys239 (B27). Peptide B26 was further resolved into two overlapping species; one contained an additional lysine residue at the N-terminus which resulted from tryptic cleavage between Lys207 and Lys208. In order to ensure that the sequenced peptides corresponded to the photolabeled species, we devised an anion-exchange procedure to isolate photolabeled peptides from the mixture. Analysis of photolabeled peptides from terminal transferase alpha beta using DEAE-cellulose chromatography followed by reverse-phase HPLC confirmed that the photolabeled species were peptides B26 and B27. Peptide B26, the major photolabeled species, contained a conserved octapeptide region found in several eucaryotic DNA polymerases. In addition, peptide B27 was flanked by a sequence that has been implicated in triphosphate binding in other proteins. Structure predictions, based on sequence data, place the two peptides identified by photolabeling in spatial proximity consistent with the participation of both in the nucleotide binding domain.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-Transporting ATPase of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum contains several SH groups which are reactive with N-ethylmaleimide (MalNEt) at pH 7.0. The location of the one which is most reactive with MalNEt (SHN, Kawakita et al. J. Biochem. 87, 609 (1980)) was identified on the amino acid sequence of the ATPase. SHN was labeled by reacting sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes with [14C] MalNEt to a labeling density of 1 mol/mol ATPase. [14C]MalNEt-labeled membranes were digested with thermolysin and 14C-labeled SHN peptides were fractionated by Sephadex LH-20 chromatography to give two major peaks of radioactivity. [14C]-MalNEt-labeled peptides were further purified to homogeneity by C18-reversed phase HPLC. Two radioactive peptides containing modified cysteine (Cys), Leu-Gly-Cys-Thr-Ser and Val-Cys-Lys-Met, were finally obtained in roughly equal amounts and in reasonable recovery. Both of these sequences were found in the amino acid sequence of Ca2+-transporting ATPase (Brandl et al. Cell 44, 597 (1986)), and Cys344 and Cys364 were identified as the targets of MalNEt-modification. Thus, 0.5 mol/mol ATPase of each Cys residue actually reacted rapidly with MalNEt under the conditions leading to SHN-modification. Modification of either one with MalNEt may negatively affect the reactivity of the other. Both of the highly reactive SH groups are located in the neighborhood of Asp351, the phosphorylation site of ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
3'(2')-O-(4-Benzoyl)benzoyl-ATP (Bz2ATP) was used as a photoaffinity label of the ATP binding site of unphosphorylated chicken gizzard myosin. Specific photolabeling of the active site of 6 S myosin was assured by forming a stable myosin.Co(II)Bz2ADP.orthovanadate complex (termed trapping) prior to irradiation. Co2+ was used in place of Mg2+ to prevent the known photoreaction of vanadate with myosin which destabilizes the trapped complex. [3H] Bz2ADP.Pi was also stably trapped on gizzard myosin by forming the 10 S folded conformation of the protein in the presence of [3H]Bz2ATP and Mg2+. Irradiation of 6 S myosin containing orthovanadate trapped [3H] Bz2ADP or 10 S trapped [3H]Bz2ADP.Pi gave 32 and 30% covalent incorporation, respectively. The 50-kDa and precursor 68-kDa tryptic peptides of the subfragment-1 heavy chain derived from both forms of myosin were found to contain essentially all of the covalently attached [3H]Bz2ADP. Parallel experiments with untrapped [3H]Bz2ADP showed extensive nonspecific labeling of all of the major tryptic peptides and the light chains. Eight labeled peptides, isolated from 6 and 10 S photolabeled myosin, contained the sequence G319-H-V-P-I-X-A-Q326, where X corresponds to labeled proline 324. [14C]Bz2ADP was previously shown to label serine 324 in skeletal subfragment-1 (Mahmood, R., Elzinga, M., and Yount, R. G. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 3989-3995), which corresponds to alanine 325 in the gizzard sequence. Thus, this region of the 50-kDa tryptic fragment, near the nucleotide binding site, in both skeletal and smooth muscle myosins, must fold in essentially the same manner.  相似文献   

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