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1.
The epsilon-amino group of Lys-166 of Rhodospirillum rubrum ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase was postulated as the essential base which initiates catalysis by abstracting the proton at C-3 of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (Hartman, F. C., Soper, T. S., Niyogi, S. K., Mural, R. J., Foote, R. S., Mitra, S., Lee, E. H., Machanoff, R., and Larimer, F. W. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 3496-3501). To scrutinize this possibility, the site-directed Gly-166 mutant, totally devoid of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase activity, was examined for its ability to catalyze each of three partial reactions. When carbamylated at Lys-191 (i.e. activated with CO2 and Mg2+), wild-type enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of 2-carboxy-3-keto-D-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate, the six-carbon reaction intermediate of the carboxylase reaction (Pierce, J., Andrews, T. J., and Lorimer, G. H. (1986a) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10248-10256). Likewise, when carbamylated at Lys-191, the Gly-166 mutant also catalyzed the hydrolysis of this reaction intermediate. The carbamylated wild type catalyzed the enolization of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate as indicated by the transfer of 3H radioactivity from [3-3H]ribulose, 1,5-bisphosphate to the medium. However, even when carbamylated at Lys-191, the mutant protein did not catalyze the enolization of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate. Additionally, unlike the decarbamylated wild-type enzyme, which catalyzed the decarboxylation of 2-carboxy-3-keto-D-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate in the absence of Mg2+, the mutant protein was inactive in this partial reaction. These properties exclude the epsilon-amino group of Lys-166 as an obligatory participant in the hydrolysis of 2-carboxy-3-keto-D-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate. In contrast, these properties are consistent with the epsilon-amino group of Lys-166 functioning as an acid-base catalyst in the enolization of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (when the enzyme is carbamylated) and in the decarboxylation of 2-carboxy-3-keto-D-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (when the enzyme is decarbamylated). Alternatively, Lys-166 may stabilize the transition states of these two partial reactions.  相似文献   

2.
Affinity labeling and comparative sequence analyses have placed Lys-166 of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum at the active site. The unusual nucleophilicity and acidity of the epsilon-amino group of Lys 166 (pKa = 7.9) suggest its involvement in catalysis, perhaps as the base that enolizes ribulosebisphosphate (Hartman, F.C., Milanez, S., and Lee, E.H. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 13968-13975). In attempts to clarify the role of Lys-166 of the carboxylase, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to replace this lysyl residue with glycine, alanine, serine, glutamine, arginine, cysteine, or histidine. All seven of these mutant proteins, purified by immunoaffinity chromatography, are severely deficient in carboxylase activity; the serine mutant, which is the most active, has a kcat only 0.2% that of the wild-type enzyme. Although low, the carboxylase activity displayed by some of the mutant proteins proves that Lys-166 is not required for substrate binding and argues that the detrimental effects brought about by amino acid substitutions at position 166 do not reflect gross conformational changes. As demonstrated by their ability to tightly bind a transition-state analogue (2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate) in the presence of CO2 and Mg2+, some of the mutant proteins undergo the carbamylation reaction that is required for activation of the wild-type enzyme. Since Lys-166 is required neither for activation (i.e. carbamylation by CO2) nor for substrate binding, it must be essential to catalysis. When viewed within the context of previous related studies, the results of site-directed mutagenesis are entirely consistent with Lys-166 functioning as the base that initiates catalysis by abstracting the C-3 proton from ribulosebisphosphate. An alternative possibility that Lys-166 acts to stabilize a transition state in the reaction pathway cannot be rigorously excluded.  相似文献   

3.
M Inoue  H Yamada  T Yasukochi  T Miki  T Horiuchi  T Imoto 《Biochemistry》1992,31(42):10322-10330
The "right-sided" and "left-sided" substrate binding modes at the lower saccharide binding subsites (D-F sites) of chicken lysozyme were investigated by utilizing mutant lysozymes secreted from yeast. We constructed the following mutant lysozymes; "left-sided" substitution of Asn46 to Asp, deletion of Thr47, and insertion of Gly between Thr47 and Asp48 and "right-sided" substitution of Asn37 to Gly. Analyses of their activities and substrate binding abilities showed that Asn46 and Thr47 are involved in the initial enzyme-substrate complex and Asn37 is involved in the transition state. These results support an earlier proposal that interactions between substrate and residues at the left side of lysozyme stabilize a catalytically inactive enzyme-substrate complex, while interactions between substrate and residues at the right side stabilize the catalytically active complex [Pincus, M. R., & Scheraga, H. A. (1979) Macromolecules 12, 633-644]. These results are also consistent with the proposed kinetic mechanism for lysozyme reaction that the rearrangement of an initial enzyme-substrate complex (beta-complex) to another complex (gamma-complex) is required for catalytic hydrolysis [Banerjee S. K., Holler, E., Hess, G. P., & Rupley, J. A. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 4355-4367].  相似文献   

4.
In bacteria, coenzyme A is synthesized in five steps from pantothenate. The flavoprotein Dfp catalyzes the synthesis of the coenzyme A precursor 4'-phosphopantetheine in the presence of 4'-phosphopantothenate, cysteine, CTP, and Mg(2+) (Strauss, E., Kinsland, C., Ge, Y., McLafferty, F. W., and Begley, T. P. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 13513-13516). It has been shown that the NH(2)-terminal domain of Dfp has 4'-phosphopantothenoylcysteine decarboxylase activity (Kupke, T., Uebele, M., Schmid, D., Jung, G., Blaesse, M., and Steinbacher, S. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 31838-31846). Here I demonstrate that the COOH-terminal CoaB domain of Dfp catalyzes the synthesis of 4'-phosphopantothenoylcysteine. The exchange of conserved amino acid residues within the CoaB domain revealed that the synthesis of 4'-phosphopantothenoylcysteine occurs in two half-reactions. Using the mutant protein His-CoaB N210D the putative acyl-cytidylate intermediate of 4'-phosphopantothenate was detectable. The same intermediate was detectable for the wild-type CoaB enzyme if cysteine was omitted in the reaction mixture. Exchange of the conserved Lys(289) residue, which is part of the strictly conserved (289)KXKK(292) motif of the CoaB domain, resulted in complete loss of activity with neither the acyl-cytidylate intermediate nor 4'-phosphopantothenoylcysteine being detectable. Gel filtration experiments indicated that CoaB forms dimers. Residues that are important for dimerization are conserved in CoaB proteins from eubacteria, Archaea, and eukaryotes.  相似文献   

5.
The hexameric cylindrical Hsp100 chaperone ClpA mediates ATP-dependent unfolding and translocation of recognized substrate proteins into the coaxially associated serine protease ClpP. Each subunit of ClpA is composed of an N-terminal domain of approximately 150 amino acids at the top of the cylinder followed by two AAA+ domains. In earlier studies, deletion of the N-domain was shown to have no effect on the rate of unfolding of substrate proteins bearing a C-terminal ssrA tag, but it did reduce the rate of degradation of these proteins (Lo, J. H., Baker, T. A., and Sauer, R. T. (2001) Protein Sci. 10, 551-559; Singh, S. K., Rozycki, J., Ortega, J., Ishikawa, T., Lo, J., Steven, A. C., and Maurizi, M. R. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 29420-29429). Here we demonstrate, using both fluorescence resonance energy transfer to measure the arrival of substrate at ClpP and competition between wild-type and an inactive mutant form of ClpP, that this effect on degradation is caused by diminished stability of the ClpA-ClpP complex during translocation and proteolysis, effectively disrupting the targeting of unfolded substrates to the protease. We have also examined two larger ssrA-tagged substrates, CFP-GFP-ssrA and luciferase-ssrA, and observed different behaviors. CFP-GFP-ssrA is not efficiently unfolded by the truncated chaperone whereas luciferase-ssrA is, suggesting that the former requires interaction with the N-domains, likely via the body of the protein, to stabilize its binding. Thus, the N-domains play a key allosteric role in complex formation with ClpP and may also have a critical role in recognizing certain tag elements and binding some substrate proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The active site of ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase is constituted from domains of adjacent subunits and includes an intersubunit electrostatic interaction between Lys 168 and Glu48, which has been recently identified by x-ray crystallography (Andersson, I., Knight, S., Schneider, G., Lindqvist, Y., Lundqvist, T., Br?ndén, C.-I., and Lorimer, G.H. (1989) Nature 337, 229-234; Lundqvist, T., and Schneider, G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7078-7083). To examine the structural and functional requirements for this interaction, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to replace Lys168 of the homodimeric enzyme from Rhodospirillum rubrum with arginine, glutamine, or glutamic acid. All three substitutions result in mutant enzymes with less than or equal to 0.1% of wild-type activity. The nonconservative substitution of Lys168 with a glutamyl residue precludes the formation of a stable dimer, explaining the consequential abolition of enzymic activity. Both the Arg168 and Gln168 mutant proteins are isolated as stable dimers, even though the latter obviously lacks an electrostatic interaction present in the wild-type enzyme. Despite the absence of overall carboxylase activity, these two mutant proteins serve as catalysts for the enolization of ribulose bisphosphate, as measured by exchange of the C3 proton with solvent. These observations, as well as ligand-binding properties of the mutant proteins, are consistent with Lys168 facilitating a catalytic step subsequent to enolization.  相似文献   

7.
Domain movement is sometimes essential for substrate recognition by an enzyme. X-ray crystallography of aminotransferase with a series of aliphatic substrates showed that the domain movement of aspartate aminotransferase was changed dramatically from an open to a closed form by the addition of only one CH(2) to the side chain of the C4 substrate CH(3)(CH(2))C((alpha))H(NH(3)(+))COO(-). These crystallographic results and reaction kinetics (Kawaguchi, S., Nobe, Y., Yasuoka, J., Wakamiya, T., Kusumoto, S., and Kuramitsu, S. (1997) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 122, 55-63; Kawaguchi, S. and Kuramitsu, S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 18353-18364) enabled us to estimate the free energy required for the domain movement.  相似文献   

8.
L J Ferrin  A S Mildvan 《Biochemistry》1985,24(24):6904-6913
The conformations and binding site environments of Mg2+TTP and Mg2+dATP bound to Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I and its large (Klenow) fragment have been investigated by proton NMR. The effect of the large fragment of Pol I on the NMR line widths of the protons of Mg2+TTP detected one binding site for this substrate with a dissociation constant of 300 +/- 100 microM and established simple competitive binding of deoxynucleoside triphosphates at this site in accord with previous equilibrium dialysis experiments with whole Pol I [Englund, P. T., Huberman, J.A., Jovin, T.M., & Kornberg, A. (1969) J. Biol. Chem. 244, 3038]. Primary negative nuclear Overhauser effects were used to calculate interproton distances on enzyme-bound Mg2+dATP and Mg2+TTP. These distances established that each substrate was bound with an anti-glycosidic torsional angle (chi) of 50 +/- 10 degrees for Mg2+dATP and 40 +/- 10 degrees for Mg2+TTP. The sugar pucker of both substrates was predominantly O1'-endo, with a C5'-C4'-C3'-O3' exocyclic torsional angle (delta) of 95 +/- 10 degrees for Mg2+dATP and 100 +/- 10 degrees for Mg2+TTP. The consistency of these conformations with those previously proposed, on the basis of distances from Mn2+ at the active site [Sloan, D. L., Loeb, L. A., Mildvan, A.S., & Feldman, R.J. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 8913], indicates a unique conformation for each bound nucleotide. The chi and delta values of the bound substrates are appropriate for nucleotide units of B DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
ADAMTS-4 (aggrecanase-1) and ADAMTS-5 (aggrecanase-2) are multidomain metalloproteinases belonging to the ADAMTS family. We have previously reported that human ADAMTS-5 has much higher aggrecanolytic activity than human ADAMTS-4. To investigate the different proteolytic activity of the two enzymes, we generated a series of chimeras by exchanging various non-catalytic domains of the two proteinases. We found that the catalytic domain of ADAMTS-5 has higher intrinsic catalytic ability than that of ADAMTS-4. The studies also demonstrated that the non-catalytic domains of ADAMTS-5 are more effective modifiers than those of ADAMTS-4, making both catalytic domains more active against aggrecan, an Escherichia coli-expressed interglobular domain of aggrecan and fibromodulin. Addition of the C-terminal thrombospondin type I motif of ADAMTS-5 to the C terminus of ADAMTS-4 increased the activity of ADAMTS-4 against aggrecan and fibromodulin severalfold. In contrast to previous reports (Kashiwagi, M., Enghild, J. J., Gendron, C., Hughes, C., Caterson, B., Itoh, Y., and Nagase, H. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 10109-10119 and Gao, G., Plaas, A., Thompson, V. P., Jin, S., Zuo, F., and Sandy, J. D. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 10042-10051), our detailed investigation of the role of the C-terminal spacer domain of ADAMTS-4 indicated that full-length ADAMTS-4 is approximately 20-times more active against aggrecan than its spacer domain deletion mutant, even at the Glu373-Ala374 site of the interglobular domain. This discrepancy is most likely due to selective inhibition of full-length ADAMTS-4 by heparin, particularly for cleavage at the Glu373-Ala374 bond. However, removal of the spacer domain from ADAMTS-4 greatly enhanced more general proteolytic activity against non-aggrecan substrates, e.g. E. coli-expressed interglobular domain, fibromodulin, and carboxymethylated transferrin.  相似文献   

10.
Bacteriophage P22 scaffolding subunits are elongated molecules that interact through their C termini with coat subunits to direct icosahedral capsid assembly. The soluble state of the subunit exhibits a partially folded intermediate during equilibrium unfolding experiments, whose C-terminal domain is unfolded (Greene, B., and King, J. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 16135-16140). Four mutant scaffolding proteins exhibiting temperature-sensitive defects in different stages of particle assembly were purified. The purified mutant proteins adopted a similar conformation to wild type, but all were destabilized with respect to wild type. Analysis of the thermal melting transitions showed that the mutants S242F and Y214W further destabilized the C-terminal domain, whereas substitutions near the N terminus either destabilized a different domain or affected interactions between domains. Two mutant proteins carried an additional cysteine residue, which formed disulfide cross-links but did not affect the denaturation transition. These mutants differed both from temperature-sensitive folding mutants found in other P22 structural proteins and from the thermolabile temperature-sensitive mutants described for T4 lysozyme. The results suggest that the defects in these mutants are due to destabilization of domains affecting the weak subunit-subunit interactions important in the assembly and function of the virus precursor shell.  相似文献   

11.
From the systematic replacements of amino acid residues of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI with those of its thermophilic counterpart, the basic protrusion domain including region 6 (R6) from residues 91 to 95 was found to increase the structural stability of the mutant protein (Kimura, S., Nakamura, H., Hashimoto, T., Oobatake, M., and Kanaya, S. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 21535-21542). Further mutagenesis concentrating in the R6 region has revealed that replacements of Lys95 at the left-handed structure with Gly or Asn essentially enhances the protein stability. Gly and Asn substitutions stabilize the protein up to 1.9 kcal/mol and 0.9 kcal/mol in the free energy changes of unfolding, respectively. We propose that the amino acid substitution of left-handed non-Gly residue with Gly or Asn residue can be used as one of the general strategies to enhance protein stability, when such a non-Gly residue itself does not seriously contribute to protein stability.  相似文献   

12.
A mechanism of activation of the ATP.Mg-dependent protein phosphatase (FC.M) has been proposed (Jurgensen, S., Shacter, E., Huang, C. Y., Chock, P. B., Yang, S.-D., Vandenheede, J. R., and Merlevede, W. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5864-5870) in which a transient phosphorylation by the kinase FA of the modulator subunit (M) is the driving force for the transition of the inactive catalytic subunit (FC) into its active conformation. Incubation of FC.M with kinase FA and Mg2+ and adenosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate results in thiophosphorylation of M and also a conformational change in the phosphatase catalytic subunit; however, the enzyme remains inactive. Proteolysis of this inactive, thiophosphorylated complex causes proteolytic destruction of the modulator subunit and yields an active phosphorylase phosphatase species. Similar treatment of the native inactive enzyme does not yield active phosphatase. Evidence is presented, suggesting that a molecule of modulator is bound at an "inhibitory site" on the native enzyme. This modulator does not prevent the conformational change in the phosphatase catalytic subunit upon incubation with kinase FA and ATP.Mg but does partially inhibit the expression of the phosphorylase phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

13.
The polymerization of acetyl-CoA carboxylase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Citrate, an allosteric activator of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, induces polymerization of an inactive protomeric form of the enzyme into an active filamentous form composed of 10-20 protomers. The light-scattering properties of the carboxylase were used to study the kinetics of its polymerization and depolymerization. From stopped flow kinetic studies, we have established that polymerization is a second order process, with a second order rate constant of 597,000 M-1 s-1. There appear to be two steps which limit polymerization of the inactive carboxylase protomer: 1) a rapid citrate-induced conformational change which is independent of enzyme concentration and leads to an active protomeric form of the enzyme (Beaty, N. B., and Lane, M. D. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 13043-13050, preceding paper) and 2) the dimerization of the active protomer, which constitutes the first step of polymerization and is enzyme concentration-dependent. Dimerization is the rate-limiting step of acetyl-CoA carboxylase polymerization. Depolymerization of fully polymerized acetyl-CoA carboxylase is caused by malonyl-CoA, ATP X Mg, and Mg2+. Both malonyl-CoA and ATP X Mg (and HCO-3) compete with citrate in the maintenance of a given state of the protomer-polymer equilibrium apparently by carboxylating the enzyme to form enzyme-biotin-CO-2 which destablizes the polymeric form. Free citrate is the species responsible for polymerizing the enzyme and Mg2+ causes depolymerization of the enzyme by lowering the concentration of free citrate.  相似文献   

14.
The role of Asp-462 in regulating Akt activity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Protein kinase Akt, an important downstream target of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, is one of the major survival factors in mammalian cells. It has been shown that phosphorylation of the C-terminal hydrophobic motif is required for Akt activation. The activated Akt then phosphorylates several pro-apoptotic proteins and prevents apoptosis mediated by caspases and the mitochondria. Interestingly, Akt has also been implicated to be a direct substrate of caspases in apoptotic cells induced by Fas (Widmann, C., Gibson, S., and Johnson, G. L. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 7141-7147) and anoikis (Bachelder, R. E., Wendt, M. A., Fujita, N., Tsuruo, T., and Mercurio, A. M. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 34702-34707). In this study we showed that cytokine withdrawal resulted in Akt degradation by caspases as well. Furthermore, we demonstrated residue Asp-462 of Akt1 which is just upstream of the hydrophobic motif to be the primary cleavage site. The Akt1 mutant (D462N) that prevented caspase cleavage was more stable during factor withdrawal and enhanced cell survival. The Akt truncation mutant mimicking the caspase cleavage product lost its kinase activity and functioned as a dominant negative to promote cell death. Our results suggest that the balance between Akt and caspase activity controls cell survival. In particular, caspases are able to render Akt inactive and dominantly inhibit the Akt pathway by cleaving off the C-terminal hydrophobic motif. Consequently, the survival signal is quickly down-regulated to allow apoptosis to occur.  相似文献   

15.
The individual zinc endoproteinases of the tissue degrading matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family share a common catalytic architecture but are differentiated with respect to substrate specificity, localization, and activation. Variation in domain structure and more subtle structural differences control their characteristic specificity profiles for substrates from among four distinct classes (Nagase, H., and Woessner, J. F. J. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 21491-21494). Exploitation of these differences may be decisive for the design of anticancer or other drugs, which should be highly selective for their particular MMP targets. Based on the 1.8-A crystal structure of human neutrophil collagenase (MMP-8) in complex with an active site-directed inhibitor (RO200-1770), we identify and describe new structural determinants for substrate and inhibitor recognition in addition to the primary substrate recognition sites. RO200-1770 induces a major rearrangement at a position relevant to substrate recognition near the MMP-8 active site (Ala206-Asn218). In stromelysin (MMP-3), competing stabilizing interactions at the analogous segment hinder a similar rearrangement, consistent with kinetic profiling of several MMPs. Despite the apparent dissimilarity of the inhibitors, the central 2-hydroxypyrimidine-4,6-dione (barbiturate) ring of the inhibitor RO200-1770 mimics the interactions of the hydroxamate-derived inhibitor batimastat (Grams, F., Reinemer, P., Powers, J. C., Kleine, T., Pieper, M., Tschesche, H., Huber, R., and Bode, W. (1995) Eur. J. Biochem. 228, 830-841) for binding to MMP-8. The two additional phenyl and piperidyl ring substituents of the inhibitor bind into the S1' and S2' pockets of MMP-8, respectively. The crystal lattice contains a hydrogen bond between the O(gamma) group of Ser209 and N(delta)1 of His207 of a symmetry related molecule; this interaction suggests a model for recognition of hydroxyprolines present in physiological substrates. We also identify a collagenase-characteristic cis-peptide bond, Asn188-Tyr189, on a loop essential for collagenolytic activity. The sequence conservation pattern at this position marks this cis-peptide bond as a determinant for triple-helical collagen recognition and processing.  相似文献   

16.
Twomey C  McCarthy JV 《FEBS letters》2006,580(17):4015-4020
Previously we described presenilin-1 (PS1) as a GSK-3beta substrate [Kirschenbaum, F., Hsu, S.C., Cordell, B. and McCarthy, J.V. (2001) Substitution of a glycogen synthase kinase-3beta phosphorylation site in presenilin 1 separates presenilin function from beta-catenin signalling. J. Biol. Chem. 276, 7366-7375; Kirschenbaum, F., Hsu, S.C., Cordell, B. and McCarthy, J.V. (2001) Glycogen synthase kinase-3beta regulates presenilin 1 C-terminal fragment levels. J. Biol. Chem. 276, 30701-30707], though it has not been determined whether PS1 is a primed or unprimed GSK-3beta substrate. A means of separating GSK-3beta activity toward primed and unprimed substrates was identified in the GSK-3beta-R96A phosphate binding pocket mutant [Frame, S., Cohen, P. and Biondi, R.M. (2001) A common phosphate binding site explains the unique substrate specificity of GSK3 and its inactivation by phosphorylation. Mol. Cell 7, 1321-1327], which is unable to phosphorylate primed but retains the ability to phosphorylate unprimed GSK-3beta substrates. By using wild type GSK-3beta, GSK-3beta-R96A, and a pharmacological modulator of GSK-3beta activity, we demonstrate that PS1 is an unprimed GSK-3beta substrate. These findings have important implications for regulation of PS1 function and the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

17.
Glycosidase and lectins both bind sugars, but only the glycosidases have catalytic activity. The glycosidases occur among over 100 evolved protein families and Family 18 is one of the two chitinases (EC 3, 2.1.14) families. Interestingly, lectins are also in this evolutionary group of Family 18 glycosidase proteins. The proteins belonging to the enzymatically inactive class are referred to as chitolectins and have a binding site that is highly similar to the catalytic Family 18 enzymes. We present a comparison of the recently obtained structures of two Family 18 chitolectins, MGP40 [A.K. Mohanty, G. Singh, M. Paramasivam, K. Saravanan, T. Jabeen, S. Sharma, S. Yadav, P. Kaur, P. Kumar, A. Srinivasan, T.P. Singh, Crystal structure of a novel regulatory 40kDa mammary gland protein (MGP-40) secreted during involution, J. Biol. Chem. 278 (2003) 14451-14460.] and HumGP39 [F. Fusetti, T. Pijning, K.H. Kalk, E. Bos, B.W. Dijkstra, Crystal structure and carbohydrate-binding properties of the human cartilage glycoprotein-39, J. Biol. Chem. 278 (2003) 37753-37760; D.R. Houston, D.R. Anneliese, C.K. Joanne, D.M.V. Aalten, Structure and ligand-induced conformational change of the 39kDa glycoprotein from human articular chondrocytes, J. Biol. Chem. 278 (2003) 30206-30212.] with a focus on the glycosidase active site. We compare the sequence and the structure of these two Family 18 protein classes. The difference between the active and inactive protein is a glutamic acid which acts as the essential acid/base residue for chitin cleavage and is replaced with leucine or glutamine in the chitolectins. Furthermore, a mechanism for the interaction between the chitolectin and oligosaccharides was proposed.  相似文献   

18.
In previous studies, we reported the isolation and characterization of a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant (pgsG) defective in glucuronyltransferase I (GlcATI). This enzyme adds the terminal GlcA residue in the core protein-linkage tetrasaccharide (GlcAbeta1,3Galbeta1,3Galbeta1, 4Xylbeta-O-) on which glycosaminoglycan assembly occurs (Bai, X. M., Wei, G., Sinha, A., and Esko, J. D. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 13017-13024; Wei, G., Bai, X. M., Sarkar, A. K., and Esko, J. D. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 7857-7864). Here we show that incorporation of 35SO4 into glycosaminoglycans in the mutant is temperature-sensitive, with greater synthesis occurring at 33 degrees C compared with 37 degrees C. Wild-type cells show the opposite thermal dependence. Rabbit antiserum to hamster GlcATI failed to detect cross-reactive material in pgsG cells by immunofluorescence and Western blotting. Furthermore, expression of chimeric proteins composed of mutant GlcATI fused to IgG binding domain of protein A or to green fluorescent protein did not yield the proteins at the expected mass. The green fluorescent protein-tagged version appeared as a truncated protein, and immunofluorescence showed large perinuclear bodies at 30 degrees C. At 37 degrees C, the fusion protein was not readily detectable. Sequencing cDNAs from mutant and wild-type cells revealed a single base transition (G331A) in the open reading frame in pgsG cells, which resulted in a Val-111-->Met substitution. These data suggest that pgsG cells contain a labile form of GlcATI that causes conditional expression of glycosaminoglycans dependent on temperature.  相似文献   

19.
ADP-ribosylation of the bovine brain rho protein by botulinum toxin type C1   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
We have separated at least six GTP-binding proteins (G proteins) with Mr values between 20,000 and 25,000 from bovine brain crude membranes (Kikuchi, A., Yamashita, T., Kawata, M., Yamamoto, K., Ideda, K., Tanimoto, T., and Takai, Y. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 2897-2904). Three of these G proteins were copurified with the proteins ADP-ribosylated by botulinum toxin type C1. One G protein ADP-ribosylated by this toxin was identified to be the bovine brain rho protein (rho p20) which was purified to near homogeneity (Yamamoto, K., Kondo, J., Hishida, T., Teranishi, Y., and Takai, Y. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 9926-9932). rho p20 was ADP-ribosylated by botulinum toxin type C1 in time- and dose-dependent manners. About 0.4 mol of ADP-ribose was maximally incorporated into 1 mol of rho p20. The ADP-ribosylation of rho p20 was dependent on the presence of Mg2+. GTP enhanced the ADP-ribosylation in the presence of a low concentration (50 nM) of Mg2+ but not in the presence of a high concentration (0.5 mM) of Mg2+. The high concentration of Mg2+ fully stimulated the ADP-ribosylation even in the absence of GTP. The ADP-ribosylation of rho p20 did not affect its GTP gamma S-binding and GTPase activities. These results indicate that there are at least three G proteins ADP-ribosylated by botulinum toxin type C1 in bovine brain crude membranes and that one of them is rho p20. Two other G proteins have not yet been identified, but neither the c-ras protein, ADP-ribosylation factor for Gs, nor a G protein with a Mr of 24,000 was ADP-ribosylated by this toxin.  相似文献   

20.
Guo RT  Kuo CJ  Ko TP  Chou CC  Liang PH  Wang AH 《Biochemistry》2004,43(24):7678-7686
Octaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase (OPPs) catalyzes consecutive condensation reactions of farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) with five molecules of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) to generate C(40) octaprenyl pyrophosphate (OPP) which constitutes the side chain of menaquinone. We have previously reported the X-ray structure of OPPs from Thermotoga maritima, which is composed entirely of alpha-helices joined by connecting loops and is arranged with nine core helices around a large central cavity [Guo, R. T., Kuo, C. J., Ko, T. P., Chou, C. C., Shr, R. L., Liang, P. H., and Wang, A. H.-J. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 4903-4912]. A76 and S77 are located on top of the active site close to where FPP is bound. A76Y and A76Y/S77F OPPs mutants produce C(20), indicating that the substituted larger residues interfere with the substrate chain elongation. Surprisingly, the A76Y/S77F mutant synthesizes a larger amount of C(20) than the A76Y mutant. In the crystal structure of the A76Y/S77F mutant, F77 is pushed away by Y76, thereby creating more space between those two large amino acids to accommodate the C(20) product. A large F132 residue at the bottom of the tunnel-shaped active site serves as the "floor" and determines the final product chain length. The substitution of F132 with a small Ala, thereby removing the blockade, led to the synthesis of a C(50) product larger than that produced by the wild-type enzyme. On the basis of the structure, we have sequentially mutated the large amino acids, including F132, L128, I123, and D62, to Ala underneath the tunnel. The products of the F132A/L128A/I123A/D62A mutant reach C(95), beyond the largest chain length generated by all known trans-prenyltransferases. Further modifications of the enzyme reaction conditions, including new IPP derivatives, may allow the preparation of high-molecular weight polyprenyl products resembling the rubber molecule.  相似文献   

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