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1.
Pineda AO  Ellington WR 《Gene》2001,265(1-2):115-121
Two major gene duplication events are thought to have taken place in the evolution of creatine kinases (CK) in the vertebrates - (1) the formation of distinct mitochondrial (MiCK) and cytoplasmic forms from the primordial gene and (2) subsequent formation of the sarcomeric (sar-) and ubiquitous (ubi-) isoforms of octameric MiCK and muscle (M) and brain (B) isoforms of dimeric, cytoplasmic CK. The genes of these two CK clades reflect a distant divergence as sar- and ubiMiCK genes consistently have nine protein-coding exons while M- and B-CK genes have seven protein-coding exons; these genes share only one common exon. CKs are also widely distributed in the invertebrates and it has recently been shown that MiCKs evolved well before the divergence of the major metazoan groups. In the present communication, we report the structure and topology of the gene for MiCK from the protostome marine worm Chaetopterus variopedatus. The protein-coding region of the gene for this primitive MiCK spans over 10 kb and consists of eight exons, the last five (E4-E8) have identical boundaries to the corresponding exons of sar- and ubiMiCK genes. Exon-3 of the C. variopedatus MiCK gene consists of the corresponding E3 and E4 of the vertebrate MiCKs with no intervening intron. E1 is longer and E2 is shorter in the polychaete MiCK gene than the counterpart sarcomeric and ubiquitous genes. The insertion of the intron in C. variopedatus E3 creating the two exons as well as the rearrangement of the intron between E1 and E2 must have occurred prior to or coincident with the duplication event creating the two vertebrate mitochondrial isoforms. Sarcomeric and ubiMiCKs display substantial differences from their invertebrate MiCK counterparts in properties relating to octamer stability and membrane binding. The evolutionary changes in gene topology may be a component of this functional progression.  相似文献   

2.
Most vertebrates possess two genes for cytoplasmic creatine kinase (CK) coding for muscle (M-CK) and brain (B-CK) isoforms which assemble into homo-dimeric (MM, BB) and hetero-dimeric (MB) active enzymes. In mammals and birds, a significant fraction of MM-CK is bound to the myofibrillar M-line where it is thought to facilitate energy buffering and transport. Myofibrillar binding is mediated by major and minor lysine charge clamp motifs (K104/K115 [major] and K8/K24 [minor] in chicken M-CK) located in the N-terminal region [J. Cell Biol. 149 (2000) 1225]. We have obtained the cDNA and deduced amino acid sequences for cytoplasmic CKs from two hagfish, Myxine glutinosa and Eptatretus stoutii, non-vertebrate craniates, and the sequences for two cytoplasmic CKs from the lamprey Lampetra japonica, a jawless true vertebrate. All four cDNAs code for CKs consisting of approximately 380 residues. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the hagfish and lamprey CKs are coded for by genes which are clearly muscle type (M) creatine kinases. Two of these four M-CKs have the K104/K115-equivalent residues of the major myofibrillar binding region while the other two have the K115 equivalent but lack the corresponding K104 residue. All four M-CKs lack the K8/K24 equivalent elements of the minor myofibrillar binding region. Comparison of these sequences to corresponding sequences of cytoplasmic CKs from two protochordates (tunicate, amphioxus) and M- and B-CKs from true fish and above reveal a pattern of acquisition (and loss) of key lysine residues consistent with the physiological context in which these enzymes operate.  相似文献   

3.
Liu Z  Kim S  Kucuktas H  Karsi A 《Gene》2001,275(2):207-215
In vertebrates, the creatine kinase (CK) family consists of two cytosolic and two mitochondrial isoforms. The two cytosolic isoforms are the muscle type (M-CK) and the brain type (B-CK). Here we report multiple CK isoenzymes in the diploid channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) with one unusual cathodic isoform that was previously found only in pathological situations in human. The cathodic CK isoform existed only in the channel catfish stomach, ovary, and spleen, but not in any other species analyzed such as tilapia, smallmouth bass, chicken, or rat. Two genes encode the multiple forms of the channel catfish M-CK cDNAs. M-CK1 has three alleles, M-CK1.1, M-CK1.2, and M-CK1.3, while M-CK2 has just one allele as determined by analysis of 17 cDNA clones and by allele-specific PCR. M-CK1 encodes a protein of 381 amino acids and the M-CK2 cDNA encodes a protein of 380 amino acids. The two cDNAs shared an 86% identity and both have the nine diagnostic boxes for cytosolic CKs and thus are of cytosolic origin. The M-CK1 gene was isolated, sequenced, and characterized and its promoter should be useful for transgenic research for muscle-specific expression.  相似文献   

4.
We have demonstrated earlier that the per sperm creatine-N-phosphotransferase (CK) activity was increased in oligospermic vs. normospermic men. The increased sperm CK activity is related to higher concentrations of cellular CK, which may indicate a defect of cytoplasmic extrusion during spermatogenesis. In the present work, we examined whether in spermatozoa, similar to muscle, there is a change in the synthesis of B-CK and M-CK isoforms during cellular differentiation. In 109 normospermic and 50 oligospermic specimens (sperm concentrations 60.6 +/- 3.7 vs. 8.8 +/- 1.3 million sperm/ml; all values expressed as mean +/- SEM), the relative concentrations of the M-CK isoform (M-CK/M-CK + B-CK) were 27.2% +/- 2.1% vs. 6.7% +/- 0.9% (P less than 0.001). The per sperm CK activities showed comparable differences (0.21 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.89 +/- 0.1 CK IU/100 million sperm; P less than 0.001) in the two groups, and there was a close correlation between per sperm CK activities and M-CK concentrations (R = 0.69, P less than 0.001, N = 159). This indicates that the loss of cytoplasm and the commencement of M-CK isoform synthesis are related events during the last phase of spermatogenesis, also that the incidence of spermatozoa with incomplete cellular maturation is higher in oligospermic specimens. In characterizing the M-CK, we found that sperm (unlike muscle tissue) lack the MB hybrid of CK dimers. However, in the presence of muscle M-CK, the muscle-sperm MB-CK hybrid has formed. Thus in sperm and muscle the M-CK isoforms are structurally different, whereas the B-CKs are apparently homologous.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Creatine kinase (CK) is coded for by at least four loci in higher vertebrates--two cytoplasmic isoforms, muscle (M) and brain (B), and two mitochondrial isoforms, sarcomeric and ubiquitous. M is expressed primarily in skeletal muscle, while B is expressed in a variety of cells, including cardiac and smooth muscle fibers, neurons, transport epithelia, and photoreceptors. M and B subunits form very stable homodimers (MM [M-CK], BB [B-CK]) and heterodimers (MB). M-CK is capable of binding to the M line of the myofibril, thereby creating an energy transfer microcompartment; BB and MB CKs are not. M- and B-like CKs are present in all vertebrates yet examined, including fish. Cytoplasmic, dimeric CKs are widely distributed in the invertebrates. The only available amino acid sequence for an invertebrate dimeric CK, that of the protostome polychaete Chaetopterus variopedatus, is just as similar to the vertebrate M isoform as to the B isoform. Echinoderms lack dimeric, cytoplasmic CKs, which appear to be replaced by a dimeric arginine kinase which evolved secondarily from CK. Thus, it is likely that the gene duplication event producing the M and B isoforms occurred after the divergence of the chordates from echinoderms. To narrow down the timing of this duplication event, we obtained the cDNA and deduced amino acid sequences of dimeric CKs from the tunicate Ciona intestinalis (subphylum Urochordata) and the lancelet Branchiostoma floridae (subphylum Cephalochordata). Our results show that these CKs are strikingly similar to both invertebrate and vertebrate CKs. However, phylogenetic analyses by neighbor-joining and parsimony show that these two enzymes appeared to have diverged before the point of divergence of the M and B isoforms. Thus, the gene duplication event for formation of the muscle and brain isoforms of CK most likely occurred during the radiation of the fish, a time noted for gene duplication events at a variety of other loci.  相似文献   

6.
Creatine kinase (CK) is a member of a group of phosphoryl transfer enzymes called phosphagen kinases that play a key role in cellular energy transactions in animals. Three CK isoform gene families are known—cytoplasmic CK (CK), flagellar CK (fCK), and mitochondrial CK (MiCK). Each of the isoforms has a unique gene structure (intron/exon organization). A broad array of other phosphagen kinases is present in animals. Some of these enzymes are found only in annelids and closely related groups including glyocyamine kinase (GK), lombricine kinase (LK), taurocyamine kinase (TK), and a unique arginine kinase (AK) restricted to annelids. Phylogenetic analyses of these annelid phosphagen kinases indicate that they appear to have evolved from a CK-like ancestor. To gain a greater understanding of the relationship of the CK isoforms to the annelid enzymes, we have determined the intron/exon organization of the genes for the following phosphagen kinases: Eisenia LK, Sabellastarte AK, and Arenicola mitochondrial TK (MiTK). Analysis of genomic database for the polychaete Capitella sp. yielded two putative LK genes [cytoplasmic LK and mitochondrial LK (MiLK)]. The intron/exon organization of these genes was compared with available data for cytoplasmic and mitochondrial CKs, and an annelid GK. Surprisingly, these annelid genes, irrespective of whether they are cytoplasmic (LK, AK, and GK) or mitochondrial (MiTK and MiLK), had the same 8-intron/9-exon organization and were strikingly similar to MiCK genes sharing seven of eight splice junctions. These results support the view that the MiCK gene is basal and ancestral to the phosphagen kinases unique to annelids.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetic properties of the cytoplasmic and the mitochondrial iso-enzymes of creatine kinase from striated muscle were studied in vitro and in vivo. The creatine kinase (CK) iso-enzyme family has a multi-faceted role in cellular energy metabolism and is characterized by a complex pattern of tissue-specific expression and subcellular distribution. In mammalian tissues, there is always co-expression of at least two different CK isoforms. As a result, previous studies into the role of CK in energy metabolism have not been able to directly differentiate between the individual CK species. Here, we describe experiments which were directed at achieving this goal. First, we studied the kinetic properties of the muscle-specific cytoplasmic and mitochondrial CK isoforms in purified form under in vitro conditions, using a combination of P-31 NMR and spectrophotometry. Secondly, P-31 NMR measurements of the flux through the CK reaction were carried out on intact skeletal and heart muscle from wild-type mice and from transgenic mice, homozygous for a complete deficiency of the muscle-type cytoplasmic CK isoform. Skeletal muscle and heart were compared because they differ strongly in the relative abundance of the CK isoforms. The present data indicate that the kinetic properties of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial CK are substantially different, both in vitro and in vivo. This finding particularly has implications for the interpretation of in vivo studies with P-31 NMR. (Mol Cell Biochem 174: 33–42, 1997)  相似文献   

8.
We isolated cytoplasmic glycocyamine kinase (GK) and creatine kinase (CK) from the tropical marine worm Namalycastis sp. by ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200, and DEAE-5PW chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) showed that the isolated GK is highly purified and appears to be a heterodimer of two distinct subunits, alpha and beta, with molecular masses of approximately 40 kDa. The complete nucleotide sequences of the cDNAs for Namalycastis GKalpha and GKbeta were 1527 (encoding 374 amino acids) and 1579 bp (encoding 390 amino acids), respectively. The predicted amino acid sequences differ only in the N-terminal 50 residues. This is consistent with the characteristics of Neanthes GKalpha and GKbeta chains, which we have previously shown to be generated by alternative splicing. The recombinant enzymes GKalpha, GKbeta, and CK from Namalycastis were successfully expressed in Escherichia coli as maltose-binding protein fusion proteins. In contrast to the stable GKbeta enzyme, GKalpha was quite unstable, and its activity decreased remarkably with time. Thus, the N-terminal 50 residues appear to play a key role in enzyme stability. The kinetic parameters for the native GK heterodimer were similar to GKbeta, suggesting that GKalpha would have an activity similar to GKbeta if part of a heterodimer. This is the first report of precise kinetic parameters for GK. Finally, based on our results, we present a model for pluriphosphagen function in Namalycastis wherein cytoplasmic GK and CK and mitochondrial CK function together with phosphocreatine and phosphoglycocyamine to enable cells to respond quickly to a sudden large energy requirement.  相似文献   

9.
Annelids as a group express a variety of phosphagen kinases including creatine kinase (CK), glyocyamine kinase (GK), lombricine kinase (LK), taurocyamine kinase (TK) and a unique arginine kinase (AK) restricted to annelids. In prior work, we have determined and compared the intron/exon organization of the annelid genes for cytoplasmic GK, LK, AK, and mitochondrial TK and LK (MiTK and MiLK, respectively), and found that these annelid genes, irrespective of cytoplasmic or mitochondrial, have the same 8-intron/9-exon organization strikingly similar to mitochondrial CK (MiCK) genes. These results support the view that the MiCK gene is basal and ancestral to the phosphagen kinases unique to annelids. To gain a greater understanding of the evolutionary processes leading to the diversity of annelid phosphagen kinases, we determined for the first time the intron/exon organization of a cytoplasmic CK gene from a polychaete as well as that of another polychaete MiCK gene. These gene structures, coupled with a phylogenetic analyses of annelid enzymes and assessment of the fidelity of substrate specificity of some these phosphagen kinases, provide insight into the pattern of radiation of the annelid enzymes. Annelid phosphagen kinases appeared to have diverged in the following order (earliest first): (1) cytoplasmic AK, LK and TK, (2) GK, and (3) mitochondrial MiLK and MiTK. Interestingly, phylogenetic analyses showed that the above phosphagen kinases appear to be basal to all CK isoforms (mitochondrial, cytoplasmic and flagellar CKs). This somewhat paradoxical placement of CKs most likely reflects a higher rate of evolution and radiation of the annelid-specific LK, TK and GK genes than the CK isoform genes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Embryonic stem cells (ESCs), representing a population of undifferentiated pluripotent cells with both self-renewal and multilineage differentiation characteristics, are capable of spontaneous differentiation into cardiomyocytes. The present study sought to define the kinetic characterization of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and creatine kinase (CK) of ESC- and neonatal-derived cardiomyocytes. Spontaneously differentiated cardiomyocytes from embryoid bodies (EBs) derived from mouse ESC line (Royan B1) and neonatal cardiomyocytes were dispersed in a buffer solution. Enzymes were extracted by sonication and centrifugation for kinetic evaluation of LDH and CK with spectrophotometric methods. While a comparison between the kinetic properties of the LDH and CK of both groups revealed not only different Michaelis constants and optimum temperatures for LDH but also different Michaelis constants and optimum pH for CK, the pH profile of LDH and optimum temperature of CK were similar. In defining some kinetic properties of cardiac metabolic enzymes of ESC-derived cardiomyocytes, our results are expected to further facilitate the use of ESCs as an experimental model.  相似文献   

12.
To study the physiological role of the creatine kinase/phosphocreatine (CK/PCr) system in cells and tissues with a high and fluctuating energy demand we have concentrated on the site-directed inactivation of the B- and M-CK genes encoding the cytosolic CK protein subunits. In our approach we used homologous recombination in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells from strain 129/Sv. Using targeting constructs based on strain 129/Sv isogenic DNA we managed to ablate the essential exons of the B-CK and M-CK genes at reasonably high frequencies. ES clones with fully disrupted B-CK and two types of M-CK gene mutations, a null (M-CK) and leaky (M-CK1) mutation, were used to generate chimaeric mutant mice via injection in strain C57BL/6 derived blastocysts. Chimaeras with the B-CK null mutation have no overt abnormalities but failed to transmit the mutation to their offspring. For the M-CK and M-CK1 mutations successful transmission was achieved and heterozygous and homozygous mutant mice were bred. Animals deficient in MM-CK are phenotypically normal but lack muscular burst activity. Fluxes through the CK reaction in skeletal muscle are highly impaired and fast fibres show adaptation in cellular architecture and storage of glycogen. Mice homozygous for the leaky M-CK allele, which have 3-fold reduced MM-CK activity, show normal fast fibres but CK fluxes and burst activity are still not restored to wildtype levels.  相似文献   

13.
The cDNA and deduced amino-acid sequences for dimeric and octameric isoforms of creatine kinase (CK) from a protostome, the polychaete Chaetopterus variopedatus, were elucidated and then analysed in the context of available vertebrate CK sequences and the recently determined crystal structure of chicken sarcomeric mitochondrial CK (MiCK). As protostomes last shared a common ancestor with vertebrates roughly 700 million years ago, observed conserved residues may serve to confirm or reject contemporary hypotheses about the roles of particular amino acids in functional/structural processes such as dimer/octamer formation and membrane binding. The isolated cDNA from the dimeric CK consisted of 1463 nucleotides with an open reading frame of 1116 nucleotides encoding a 372-amino-acid protein having a calculated molecular mass of 41.85 kDa. The percentage identity of C. variopedatus dimeric CK to vertebrate CK is as high as 69%. The octameric MiCK cDNA is composed of 1703 nucleotides with an open reading frame of 1227 nucleotides. The first 102 nucleotides of the open reading frame encode a 34-amino-acid leader peptide whereas the mature protein is composed of 375 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 42.17 kDa. The percentage identity of C. variopedatus MiCK to vertebrate CK is as high as 71%. This similarity is also evident in residues purported to be important in the structure and function of dimeric and octameric CK: (a) presence of seven basic amino acids in the C-terminal end thought to be important in binding of MiCK to membranes; (b) presence of a lysine residue (Lys110 in chicken MiCK) also thought to be involved in membrane binding; and (c) presence of a conserved tryptophan thought to be important in dimer stabilization which is present in all dimeric and octameric guanidino kinases. However, C. variopedatus MiCK lacks the N-terminal heptapeptide present in chicken MiCK, which is thought to mediate octamer stabilization. In contrast with vertebrate MiCK, polychaete octamers are very stable indicating that dimer binding into octamers may be mediated by additional and/or other residues. Phylogenetic analyses showed that both octamer and dimer evolved very early in the CK lineage, well before the divergence of deuterostomes and protostomes. These results indicate that the octamer is a primitive feature of CK rather than being a derived and advanced character.  相似文献   

14.
We are using the isoenzymes of creatine kinase (CK) to investigate the effect of specific proteolytic modification on the abilities of enzyme subunits to establish precise subunit-subunit recognition in vitro. Previous work by others has shown that treatment of the MM isoenzyme of rabbit CK with Proteinase K results in a specific proteolytic modification and inactivation of the enzyme. In the present work, we show that both the MM and BB isoenzymes of chicken CK are also specifically modified by Proteinase K, resulting in over 98% loss of catalytic activity and approx. 10% decreases in subunit molecular masses of the enzymes. Similar reactions appear to occur when the isoenzymes are treated with Pronase E. Limited amino acid sequence analysis of intact and Proteinase K-modified MM-CK suggests that the proteolytic modification results from a single peptide-bond cleavage occurring between alanine residues 328 and 329, about 50 amino acid residues from the C-terminal end; the active-site cysteine residue was recovered in the large protein fragment of modified M-CK subunits. Proteolytically modified M-CK and B-CK subunits were able to refold and reassociate into dimeric structures after treatment with high concentrations of LiCl and at low pH. Thus the proteolytically modified CK subunits retain their ability to refold and to establish precise subunit-subunit recognition in vitro.  相似文献   

15.
Here we define the kinetics of the creatine kinase (CK) reaction in an intact mammalian heart containing the full range of CK isoenzymes. Previously derived kinetic constants [Schimerlik, M. I., & Cleland, W. W. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 8418-8423] were refit for the reaction occurring at 37 degrees C. Steady-state metabolite concentrations from 31P NMR and standard biochemical techniques were determined. 31P magnetization transfer data were obtained to determine unidirectional creatine kinase fluxes in hearts with differing total creatine contents and differing mitochondrial CK activities during KCl arrest and isovolumic work for both the forward reaction (MgATP synthesis) and reverse reaction (phosphocreatine synthesis). The NMR kinetic data and substrate concentration data were used in conjunction with a kinetic model based on MM-CK in solution to determine the applicability of the solution-based kinetic models to the CK kinetics of the intact heart. Our results indicated that no single set of rate equation constants could describe both the KCl-arrested and working hearts. We used our experimental data to constrain the solution-derived kinetic model and derived a second set of rate equation constants, which describe the isovolumic work state. Analysis of our results indicates that the CK reaction is rate limited in the direction of ATP synthesis, the size of the guanidino substrate pool drives the measured CK flux in the intact heart, and during isovolumic work the CK reaction operates under saturating conditions; that is, the substrate concentrations are at least 2-fold greater than the Km or Kim for each substrate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The regulation of adenosine kinase (AK) activity has the potential to control intracellular and interstitial adenosine (Ado) concentrations. In an effort to study the role of AK in Ado homeostasis in the central nervous system, two isoforms of the enzyme were cloned from a mouse brain cDNA library. Following overexpression in bacterial cells, the corresponding proteins were purified to homogeneity. Both isoforms were enzymatically active and found to possess K(m) and V(max) values in agreement with kinetic parameters described for other forms of AK. The distribution of AK in discrete brain regions and various peripheral tissues was defined. To investigate the possibility that AK activity is regulated by protein phosphorylation, a panel of protein kinases was screened for ability to phosphorylate recombinant mouse AK. Data from these in vitro phosphorylation studies suggest that AK is most likely not an efficient substrate for PKA, PKG, CaMKII, CK1, CK2, MAPK, Cdk1, or Cdk5. PKC was found to phosphorylate recombinant AK efficiently in vitro. Further analysis revealed, however, that this PKC-dependent phosphorylation occurred at one or more serine residues associated with the N-terminal affinity tag used for protein purification.  相似文献   

17.
Creatine kinase (CK) provides ATP buffering in skeletal muscle and is expressed as 1) cytosolic myofibrillar CK (M-CK) and 2) sarcomeric mitochondrial CK (ScCKmit) isoforms that differ in their subcellular localization. The diaphragm (Dia) expresses both M-CK and ScCKmit in abundance. We compared the power and work output of 1) control CK-sufficient (Ctl), 2) M-CK-deficient [M-CK(-/-)], 3) ScCKmit-deficient [ScCKmit(-/-)], and 4) combined M-CK/ScCKmit-deficient null mutant [CK(-/-)] Dia during repetitive isotonic activations to determine the effect of CK phenotype on Dia function. Maximum power was obtained at approximately 0.4 tetanic force in all groups. M-CK(-/-) and ScCKmit(-/-) Dia were able to sustain power and work output at Ctl levels during repetitive isotonic activation (75 Hz, 330-ms duration repeated each second at 0.4 tetanic force load), and the duration of sustained Dia shortening was 67 +/- 4 s in M-CK(-/-), 60 +/- 4 s in ScCKmit(-/-), and 62 +/- 5 s in Ctl Dia. In contrast, CK(-/-) Dia power and work declined acutely and failed to sustain shortening altogether by 40 +/- 6 s. We conclude that Dia power and work output are not absolutely dependent on the presence of either M-CK or ScCKmit, whereas the complete absence of CK acutely impairs Dia shortening capacity during repetitive activation.  相似文献   

18.
We have amplified two cDNAs, coding for creatine kinases (CKs), from the skeletal muscle of sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus by PCR, and cloned these cDNAs into pMAL plasmid. These are the first CK cDNA and deduced amino acid sequences from cetaceans to be reported. One of the two amino acid sequences is a cytoplasmic, muscle-type isoform (MCK), while the other was identified as a sarcomeric, mitochondrial isoform (sMiCK) that included a mitochondrial targeting peptide. The amino acid sequences of sperm whale MCK and sMiCK showed 94–96% sequence identity with corresponding isoforms of mammalian CKs, and all of the key residues necessary for CK function were conserved. The phylogenetic analyses of vertebrate CKs with three independent methods (neighbor-joining, maximum-likelihood and Bayes) supported the clustering of sperm whale MCK with Bos and Sus MCKs, in agreement with the contemporary view that these groups are closely related. Sperm whale MCK and sMiCK were expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with maltose-binding protein, and the kinetic constants (K m, K d and k cat) were determined for the forward reaction. Comparison of kinetic constants with those of human and mouse CKs indicated that sperm whale MCK has a comparable affinity for creatine (K mCr = 9.38 mM) to that of human MCK, and the sMiCK has two times higher affinity for creatine than the human enzyme. Both the MCK and sMiCK of sperm whale display a synergistic substrate binding (K d /K m = 3.1–7.8) like those of other mammalian CKs.  相似文献   

19.
Sequence homology and structure predictions of the creatine kinase isoenzymes   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Comparisons of the protein sequences and gene structures of the known creatine kinase isoenzymes and other guanidino kinases revealed high homology and were used to determine the evolutionary relationships of the various guamidino kinases. A CK framework is defined, consisting of the most conserved sequence blocks, and diagnostic boxes are identified which are characteristic for anyone creatine kinase isoenzyme (e.g. for vertebrate B-CK) and which may serve to distinguish this isoenzyme from all others (e.g. from M-CKs and Mi-CKs). Comparison of the guanidino kinases by near-UV and far-UV circular dichroism further indicates pronounced conservation of secondary structure as well as of aromatic amino acids that are involved in catalysis.Abbreviations GuaK guanidino kinase - CK creatine kinase - B-and M-CK brain and muscle cytosolic CK isoenzyme - Mi-CK mitochondrial CK isoenzyme - ArgK arginine kinase - Cr creatine - PCr phosphorylcreatine - PArg phosphorylarginine  相似文献   

20.
The regulation of creatine kinase (CK) induction during muscle differentiation was analyzed with MM14 mouse myoblasts. These cells withdraw from the cell cycle and commit to terminal differentiation when fed with mitogen-depleted medium. Myoblasts contained trace amounts of an isozyme of brain CK (designated BB-CK), but differentiation was accompanied by the induction of two other isozymes of muscle and brain CKs (designated MM-CK and MB-CK). Increased CK activity was detectable within 6 h of mitogen removal, 3 h after the first cells committed to differentiation and 6 h before fusion began. By 48 h, MM-CK activity increased more than 400-fold, MB-CK activity increased more than 150-fold, and BB-CK activity increased more than 10-fold. Antibodies prepared against purified mouse MM-CK cross-reacted with muscle and brain CKs (designated M-CK and B-CK, respectively) from a variety of species and were used to demonstrate that the increase in enzymatic activity was paralleled by an increase in the protein itself. CK antibodies were also used to aid in identifying cDNA clones to M-CK. cDNA sequences which corresponded to protein-coding regions cross-hybridized with B-CK mRNA; however, a subclone containing the 3'-nontranslated region was unique and was used to quantitate M-CK mRNA levels during myoblast differentiation. M-CK mRNA was not detectable in myoblasts, but within 5 to 6 h of mitogen withdrawal (6 to 7 h before fusion begins) it accumulated to about 30 molecules per cell. By 24 h, myotubes contained approximately 1,100 molecules per nucleus of M-CK mRNA.  相似文献   

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