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1.
The human methylmalonyl CoA mutase (MCM) cDNA has been used to localize the MUT locus on the short arm of chromosome 6 proximal to the glyoxalase locus in 6p deletion cell lines. A HindIII polymorphism identified by the MCM cDNA was used to study linkage relationships of MUT to HLA (A-B-DQ-DR) and D6S4 in the reference CEPH families. The maximum lod score for MUT versus HLA was 3.04 at a recombination fraction of 0.28. The maximum lod score for MUT versus D6S4 was 22.93 at a recombination fraction of 0.01. These data suggest that MUT and D6S4 loci are tightly linked and may be used as one locus in a haplotype form for linkage studies on proximal 6p and diagnostic analysis of pedigrees with mut methylmalonic acidemia.  相似文献   

2.
Structure of the human methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MUT) locus   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
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3.
Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA) can be caused by mutations in the gene coding for the methylmalonyl CoA mutase (MCM) apoenzyme or by mutations in genes required for provision of its adenosylcobalamin cofactor. We have characterized MCM activity, gene structure, and expression in a series of primary fibroblast cell lines derived from patients with MCM apoenzyme deficiency. Southern blot analysis reveals normal HindIII and TaqI polymorphisms but no gross insertions, deletions, rearrangements, or point mutations at restriction endonuclease recognition sequences. Northern blot analysis demonstrates that several cell lines have specifically decreased steady-state levels of MCM mRNA. At least six independent alleles can be delineated by a haplotype of HindIII and TaqI polymorphisms, the level of mRNA expression, and the biochemical phenotype of the cells. These studies confirm the wide phenotypic spectrum of MMA and provide molecular genetic evidence for a variety of independent alleles underlying this disorder.  相似文献   

4.
Methylmalonyl CoA mutase (MCM) catalyzes an essential step in the degradation of several branch-chain amino acids and odd-chain fatty acids. Deficiency of this apoenzyme causes the mut form of methylmalonic acidemia, an often fatal disorder of organic acid metabolism. An MCM cDNA has recently been obtained from human liver cDNA libraries. This clone has been used as a probe to determine the chromosomal location of the MCM gene and MUT locus. Southern blot analysis of DNA from human-hamster somatic-cell hybrid cell lines assigned the locus to region q12-p23 of chromosome 6. In situ hybridization further localized the locus to the region 6p12-21.2. A highly informative RFLP was identified at the MCM gene locus which will be useful for genetic diagnostic and linkage studies.  相似文献   

5.
Murine methylmalonyl CoA mutase (Mut) has been localized to chromosome 17C-D by in situ hybridization in cell line containing a 2.17 Robertsonian translocation. This locus, which was mapped with the help of a murine methylmalonyl CoA mutase cDNA probe, and others on murine chromosome 17 are syntenic, though not necessarily colinear, with loci on human chromosome 6.  相似文献   

6.
Methylmalonic aciduria is a human autosomal recessive disorder of organic acid metabolism resulting from a functional defect in the activity of the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Based upon the homology of the human mutase locus with the mouse locus, we have chosen to disrupt the mouse mutase locus within the critical CoA binding domain using gene-targeting techniques to create a mouse model of methylmalonic aciduria. The phenotype of homozygous knock-out mice (mut-/-) is one of early neonatal lethality. Mice appear phenotypically normal at birth and are indistinguishable from littermates. By 15 h of age, they develop reduced movement and suckle less. This is followed by the development of abnormal breathing, and all of the mice with a null phenotype die by 24 h of age. Urinary levels of methylmalonic and methylcitric acids are grossly increased. Measurement of acylcarnitines in blood shows elevation of propionylcarnitine with no change in the levels of acetylcarnitine and free carnitine. Incorporation of [14C]propionate in primary fibroblast cultures from mut-/- mice is reduced to approximately 6% of normal level, whereas there is no detectable synthesis of mut mRNA in the liver. This is the first mouse model that recapitulates the key phenotypic features of mut0 methylmalonic aciduria.  相似文献   

7.
Methylmalonyl CoA mutase deficiency (methylmalonic acidemia) has been a paradigm for biochemical and somatic cell genetic approaches to human disease. Recently, genes encoding this enzyme have been cloned from several species. These studies have provided information about the primary structure and evolution of this enzyme, the mutations which underlie its deficiency state, and the structure-function determinants which are required for its activity. Gene transfer studies now permit restitution of this enzyme to genetically deficient cells and may enable somatic gene therapy to be undertaken. Molecular genetic studies not only provide more detailed information about this enzyme, but introduce new perspectives on the molecular mechanisms and dynamics of its function and raise new questions about the dyshomeostatic consequences of its deficiency.  相似文献   

8.
Mutations have been described in human methylmalonyl CoA mutase (MCM) that exhibit partial defects in enzyme activity, including cobalamin-dependent (i.e., mut-) or interallelic complementation. This work describes mutations in cells from four patients, three of whom exhibit a cobalamin-dependent phenotype and all four of whom exhibit interallelic complementation. Four novel mutations (R694W, G648D, G630E, and G626C) are identified that cluster near the carboxyl terminus of the protein, a region close to another mut- mutation (G717V). Each of these mutations was shown to express a phenotype congruent with that of the parental cell line, after transfection into mut0 fibroblasts, and each exhibits interallelic complementation in cotransfection assays with clones bearing a R93H mutation. The activity of mutant enzymes expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae parallels the residual activity of the parental cell lines and exhibits novel sensitivities to pH and salt. The clustering of these mutations identifies a region of MCM that most likely represents the cobalamin-binding domain. The location of this domain, as well as the pattern of sequence preservation between the homologous human and Probiono-bacterium shermanii enzymes, suggests a mechanism for interallelic complementation in which the cobalamin-binding defect is complemented in trans from the heterologous subunits of the dimer.  相似文献   

9.
E R Baumgartner  C Bachmann  H Wick 《Enzyme》1976,21(6):553-567
Methylmalonate metabolism was investigated in fibroblasts and leukocytes of two unrelated patient with a B12-nonresponsive type of congenital methylmalonic acidemia. Intact fibroblasts from both patients showed a defective metabolism of methyl-14 c-malonate to 14CO2, whereas no such defect was found in their intact peripheral leukocytes. In disrupted fibroblasts, the conversion of methylmalonyl coenzyme A to succinyl coenzyme A was markedly reduced but was completely normalized by the addition of 5'-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (AdoCb1; 10(-5) mol/l), the specific coenzyme of methylmalonyl coenzyme A mutase. Assays with decreasing concentrations of AdoCbl (10(-5)-10(-11) mol/l) suggested a reduced affinity of the mutase apoenzyme for its coenzyme, implicating yet another variant of this heterogeneous disease.  相似文献   

10.
Haller T  Buckel T  Rétey J  Gerlt JA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(16):4622-4629
The Escherichia coli genome encodes seven paralogues of the crotonase (enoyl CoA hydratase) superfamily. Four of these have unknown or uncertain functions; their existence was unknown prior to the completion of the E. coli genome sequencing project. The gene encoding one of these, YgfG, is located in a four-gene operon that encodes homologues of methylmalonyl CoA mutases (Sbm) and acyl CoA transferases (YgfH) as well as a putative protein kinase (YgfD/ArgK). We have determined that YgfG is methylmalonyl CoA decarboxylase, YgfH is propionyl CoA:succinate CoA transferase, and Sbm is methylmalonyl CoA mutase. These reactions are sufficient to form a metabolic cycle by which E. coli can catalyze the decarboxylation of succinate to propionate, although the metabolic context of this cycle is unknown. The identification of YgfG as methylmalonyl CoA decarboxylase expands the range of reactions catalyzed by members of the crotonase superfamily.  相似文献   

11.
In most animal species and many prokaryotes, methylmalonyl CoA mutase catalyzes isomerization between methylmalonyl CoA and succinyl CoA using adenosylcobalamin as a cofactor. We describe the absence of this enzyme in Aspergillus nidulans based on the absence of enzyme activity in vitro and the failure to metabolize methylmalonate or grow in media containing this organic acid as the sole carbon source. These data contrast previous assumptions that propionate may be metabolized through propionyl CoA and methylmalonyl CoA to the TCA cycle in this organism. This is consistent with the separate evolution of these pathways in animals and lower eukaryotes due to the distinct endosymbiotic origin of their mitochondria.  相似文献   

12.
Primary structure and activity of mouse methylmalonyl-CoA mutase.   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MCM) is an adenosylcobalamin-dependent enzyme that catalyses isomerization between methylmalonyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA (3-carboxypropionyl-CoA). Genetic deficiency of this enzyme in man causes an often fatal disorder of organic acid metabolism termed mut methylmalonicacidaemia. We report cloning of a mouse MCM cDNA and the characterization of its primary structure and biological function. Mouse MCM in fibroblasts and crude liver extracts exhibits activity and reaction kinetics similar to those of the human enzyme. The predicted amino acid sequence of mouse MCM exhibits 94% identity with its human homologue and considerable identity with a prokaryotic MCM. Transfection of the mouse cDNA into cultured cells constitutes an active apoenzyme and can complement genetic deficiency of the apoenzyme in cells from patients with mut methylmalonicacidaemia. These results establish that mouse MCM is homologous to human MCM in structure and function and provides a basis for using the mouse as a model for studying this enzyme and its deficiency state.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined interactions between human methylmalonyl CoA mutase and two critical ligands, its cofactor adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) and its substrate methylmalonyl CoA, by performing in vitro experiments with preparations of mutase apoenzyme and holoenzyme from normal cultured human fibroblasts. When extracts are prepared from cells grown in medium containing high concentrations of hydroxocobalamin, a precursor of AdoCbl, mutase activity measured in Tris-containing buffers in the absence of added AdoCbl accounts maximally for only 50% of that activity measured in the presence of excess AdoCbl. A similar result is observed when mutase holoenzyme is formed in vitro by incubating cell extracts containing apoenzyme with AdoCbl and removing excess AdoCbl by gel filtration. When such holoenzyme preparations are heated at 45 °C and then assayed for activity, their thermostability is less than that of mutase holoenzyme heated in the presence of excess cofactor, but far greater than that of mutase apoenzyme. Methylmalonyl CoA modulates these enzyme-coenzyme interactions, since mutase holoenzyme formed in Triscontaining buffers is resolved to apoenzyme upon exposure to substrate. Qualitatively different data are obtained when buffers containing cations other than Tris are used. Under these conditions, mutase activity measured in the absence of added AdoCbl accounts for nearly 100% of the activity measured in the presence of excess cofactor, whether holoenzyme is formed in intact cells in culture or in cell extracts in vitro. Furthermore, holoenzyme formed in vitro in potassium phosphate buffer is not resolved to apoenzyme upon exposure to substrate. We suggest that the “holoenzyme” form of mutase obtained and assayed in Tris-containing buffers is that molecular species with only one of its two potential AdoCbl binding sites occupied in a catalytically active fashion, and that other ions can influence markedly the interactions between mutase, AdoCbl, and methylmalonyl CoA. These data are consistent, therefore, with the hypothesis that the dimeric mutase apoenzyme is characterized, under certain conditions, by nonequivalent active sites.  相似文献   

14.
Propionyl CoA carboxylase (PPC) is a heteromeric enzyme composed of alpha subunits (PCCA) and beta (PCCB) subunits. We describe cDNA clones expressing human PCCA and complementation of the genetic defect in pccA fibroblasts by DNA-mediated gene transfer. Two cDNA clones were constructed. The first corresponds to the previously reported, putatively full-length, open reading frame. The second encodes a chimera composed of the mitochondrial leader sequence of human methylmalonyl CoA mutase and the mature PCCA protein. Both clones reconstitute propionate flux to normal levels in fibroblasts from patients genetically deficient in PCCA (pccA). The maximal level of propionate flux approached, but never exceeded, the levels seen in control plates of normal cells. In contrast, the maximal level of PPC holoenzyme activity reached only 10%-20% that of normal controls, which corresponded roughly to the fraction of cells actually transformed with the recombinant gene. These data suggest that the level of PCCA expression in fibroblasts does not normally limit PCC holoenzyme activity or propionate flux. The fact that a small fraction of cells reconstitutes propionate flux to normal levels suggests that metabolic cooperation between cells is capable of increasing the metabolic capacity of recombinant enzyme in a subpopulation of cells. These factors may have important implications for the rational design of somatic gene therapy for PCCA deficiency.  相似文献   

15.
Summary We have previously identified a mutation in the gene for methylmalonyl CoA mutase in a patient with the mut- phenotype of methylmalonic aciduria. This mutation (G717V) interferes with the binding of the deoxyadenosylcobalamin cofactor to the apoenzyme producing a mutant holoenzyme that is defective, but not completely inactive, in vitro. This report describes the clinical phenotype associated with this mutation in the original patient and two additional patients who are homozygous for this allele. All three patients presented in the first years of life with multiple episodes of life-threatening organic acidosis and hyperammonemia. None had evidence of disease in the perinatal period, and all three have low-normal intelligence. These three children exhibit a distinctive phenotype of disease that is intermediate between the fulminant and benign forms of methylmalonic aciduria. These data suggest that this phenotype is the specific consequence of the G717V mutation, and that the degree of residual enzyme activity associated with the G717V mutation is close to the threshold required in vivo for maintaining metabolic homeostasis.  相似文献   

16.
The polymerase chain reaction was used to clone a full-length human methylmalonyl-CoA mutase cDNA from a human liver library by priming with sequences from the 5' end of a partial cDNA and sequences in the phage vector. The amino acid sequence predicted from the cDNA corresponds to the authentic amino acid sequences of peptide fragment from purified methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. The open reading frame of the cDNA encodes 742 amino acids (82,283 Da) comprising a 32 amino acid mitochondrial leader sequence and a mature protein of 710 amino acids (78,489 Da). The use of the polymerase chain reaction to "screen" the cDNA library represents a novel application of this technique. The full length will enable analysis of mutations underlying inherited methylmalonic acidemias caused by deficiency of the methylmalonyl-CoA mutase apoenzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Point mutations in the human gene encoding coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin)-dependent methylmalonyl-CoA mutase give rise to an inherited disorder of propionic acid metabolism termed mut methylmalonic aciduria. Almost all such mutations alter amino acids in the homodimeric human enzyme that are identical to residues in the catalytic alpha-subunit of the heterodimeric methylmalonyl-CoA mutase from the bacterium Propionibacterium shermanii, to which the mature human enzyme shows an overall 65% sequence identity. To explore how specific mutations might cause the observed clinical phenotype, 12 known mutations were mapped onto a three-dimensional homology model of the subunit of the human enzyme, generated using the program MODELLER on the basis of the recently published 2.0 A X-ray crystal structure of the P. shermanii methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Eight mutations are found in the C-terminal B12-binding domain, of which 4 (G623R, G626C, G630E, G703R) are in direct contact with the corrin and are clustered around the histidine ligand (H627) provided by the protein to coordinate the cobalt atom of the B12 cofactor. Introduction of a side chain, particularly one that is charged, at any of these positions is expected to disrupt the flavodoxin-like fold and severely impair its binding of B12. Mutation at either of two other highly conserved glycine residues in this domain (G648D, G717V) also disrupts critical elements in the fold as would the introduction of an additional positive charge in the mutation H678R. Mutation of an arginine in a solvent-exposed loop to a hydrophobic residue (R694W) is also pathogenic. The remaining mutations have been mapped to the N-terminal region of the mutase, two of which introduce a buried, uncompensated charge, either near the subunit interface (A377E), or near the narrow channel through which acyl-CoA esters gain access to the active site (W105R). The extreme N-terminus of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase is predicted to make extensive contacts with the other subunit, and a mutant in this region (R93H) may prevent the correct assembly of the dimer.  相似文献   

18.
In humans, deficiencies in coenzyme B12-dependent methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MCM) lead to methylmalonyl aciduria, a rare disease that is often fatal in newborns. Such deficiencies can result from inborn errors in the MCM structural gene or from mutations that impair the assimilation of dietary cobalamins into coenzyme B12 (Ado-B12), the required cofactor for MCM. ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase (ATR) catalyzes the terminal step in the conversion of cobalamins into Ado-B12. Substantial evidence indicates that inherited defects in this enzyme lead to methylmalonyl aciduria, but the corresponding ATR gene has not been identified. Here we report the identification of the bovine and human ATR cDNAs as well as the corresponding human gene. A bovine liver cDNA expression library was screened for clones that complemented an ATR-deficient bacterial strain for color formation on aldehyde indicator medium, and four positive clones were isolated. The DNA sequences of two clones were determined and found to be identical. Sequence similarity searching was then used to identify a homologous human cDNA (89% identity) and its corresponding gene that is located on chromosome XII. The bovine and human cDNAs were independently cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Enzyme assays showed that expression strains produced 87 and 98 nmol/min/mg ATR activity, respectively. These specific activities are in line with values reported previously for bacterial ATR enzymes. Subsequent studies showed that the human cDNA clone complemented an ATR-deficient bacterial mutant for Ado-B12-dependent growth on 1,2-propanediol. This demonstrated that the human ATR is active under physiological conditions albeit in a heterologous host. In addition, Western blots were used to show that ATR expression is altered in cell lines derived from cblB methylmalonyl aciduria patients compared with cell lines from normal individuals. We propose that inborn errors in the human ATR gene identified here result in methylmalonyl aciduria. The identification of genes involved in this disorder will allow improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of this serious disease.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the affinity of methylmalonyl CoA mutase for its required cofactor, adenosylcobalamin, in extracts of control and mutant human cultured fibroblasts. Control enzyme has an apparent Km for adenosylcobalamin of 6–7 × 10?8 M. Five mutant cell lines from patients with methylmalonicacidemia due to a mutase apoenzyme defect were studied. Three have undetectable mutase activity (<0.15% of control) at all cofactor concentrations. Two others, however, have markedly altered Km's for adenosylcobalamin of 2.8 × 10?4 M and 1.7 × 10?5 M. These mutant lines synthesize adenosylcobalamin normally and, by complementation analysis, are genetically identical to all other mutase apoenzyme mutants tested. We conclude that the mutase deficiency in these two cell lines results from structurally altered mutase apoenzymes with markedly reduced affinities for adenosylcobalamin.  相似文献   

20.
In humans, methylmalonyl acidemia is caused by a deficiency of L-methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MUT) controlled by a gene that has been mapped to chromosome 6. The mouse homolog of this gene has now been mapped to mouse chromosome 17. Recombinant inbred and congenic strains place the mouse Mut locus 1.06 cM distal to H-2, between Pgk-2 and Ce-2. The relative order of syntenic probes flanking H-2 on mouse chromosome 17 and HLA on human chromosome 6 is shown to be different.  相似文献   

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