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1.
Mammalian cells contain a microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity which catalyzes the gamma-carboxylation of glutamate. While most cells have a limited ability to fully gamma-carboxylate proteins, it has been suggested that the ability of transformed cells to perform this complex post-translational modification may play a role in tumor biology. In this study, we examined the effect of transformation by adenovirus oncogenes on the ability of cells to efficiently gamma-carboxylate a vitamin K-dependent protein. Several morphologically transformed BHK-21 cell lines (BHK-Ad) were isolated following the chromosomal integration of the viral oncogenes E1A/E1B from human adenovirus type 12 (Ad12). The lines were capable of growing in soft agar and low serum and produced functional E1A as determined by promoter activation studies. Using a vector for the expression of the vitamin K-dependent recombinant human protein C (HPC), a regulator of the clotting cascade, Ad-transformed and nontransformed lines secreting rHPC were generated. The rHPC from the transformed and nontransformed cell lines displayed identical serine protease activities, and there were no apparent differences in the proteolytic processing of the proteins, although a minor difference in the proportion of each HPC glycoform was observed. However, the functional anticoagulant activity, which depends on the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) content, was approximately 70% higher in the Ad-transformed lines. Approximately 90% of the rHPC from the Ad-transformed lines exhibited a calcium-dependent (high Gla) elution profile on anion-exchange resin, compared to only 15 to 26% from the nontransformed cell clones. By analyzing endogenous microsomal carboxylase, we determined that enzyme activity increased approximately 50% following transformation. Overall, our data demonstrate that transformation can increase the potential of a cell to efficiently gamma-carboxylate a protein and lend support to the suggested involvement of this post-translational modification in tumor cell function. Further, our results demonstrate a potential means of altering cells to enable full modification of vitamin K-dependent factors for structure/function studies and potentially for therapeutic use.  相似文献   

2.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the modification of specific glutamates in a number of proteins required for blood coagulation and associated with bone and calcium homeostasis. All known vitamin K-dependent proteins possess a conserved eighteen-amino acid propeptide sequence that is the primary binding site for the carboxylase. We compared the relative affinities of synthetic propeptides of nine human vitamin K-dependent proteins by determining the inhibition constants (Ki) toward a factor IX propeptide/gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain substrate. The Ki values for six of the propeptides (factor X, matrix Gla protein, factor VII, factor IX, PRGP1, and protein S) were between 2-35 nM, with the factor X propeptide having the tightest affinity. In contrast, the inhibition constants for the propeptides of prothrombin and protein C are approximately 100-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. The propeptide of bone Gla protein demonstrates severely impaired carboxylase binding with an inhibition constant of at least 200,000-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. This study demonstrates that the affinities of the propeptides of the vitamin K-dependent proteins vary over a considerable range; this may have important physiological consequences in the levels of vitamin K-dependent proteins and the biochemical mechanism by which these substrates are modified by the carboxylase.  相似文献   

3.
Vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the posttranslational modification of glutamate to γ-carboxyglutamate (Gla) in its substrates, the vitamin K-dependent proteins (VKDPs). This modification is required for the activities of the VKDPs. Recent evidence demonstrates previously unrecognized roles for VKDPs as signaling molecules important in the regulation of cell growth, adhesion, and apoptosis, suggesting developmental functions for VKDPs and hence the carboxylase. The tissue distribution and functions of carboxylase in development are unknown. In this study, we isolated and characterized the full-length cDNA encoding the rat carboxylase and analyzed, at the cellular level, the expression of this gene in rat embryos byin situhybridization. We demonstrate that the expression of this gene is highly regulated in a developmental and tissue-specific manner. Hepatocytes, the major site of synthesis of VKDPs of blood coagulation, express carboxylase mRNA late in gestation, in contrast to the central nervous system, mesenchymal, and skeletal tissues which express carboxylase mRNA early during rat embryogenesis. The tissue-specific temporal expression of the carboxylase gene during embryogenesis indicates that vitamin K-dependent carboxylation and the formation of Gla is developmentally regulated. These studies suggest that vitamin K-dependent carboxylation is an important modulator of embryonic VKDP function.  相似文献   

4.
The modification of glutamic acid residues to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) is a post-translational modification catalyzed by the vitamin K-dependent enzyme gamma-glutamylcarboxylase. Despite ubiquitous expression of the gamma-carboxylation machinery in mammalian tissues, only 12 Gla-containing proteins have so far been identified in humans. Because bone tissue is the second most abundant source of Gla-containing proteins after the liver, we sought to identify Gla proteins secreted by bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). We used a proteomics approach to screen the secretome of MSCs with a combination of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and tandem mass spectrometry. The most abundant Gla-containing protein secreted by MSCs was identified as periostin, a previously unrecognized gamma-carboxylated protein. In silico amino acid sequence analysis of periostin demonstrated the presence of four consensus gamma-carboxylase recognition sites embedded within fasciclin-like protein domains. The carboxylation of periostin was confirmed by immunoprecipitation and purification of the recombinant protein. Carboxylation of periostin could be inhibited by warfarin in MSCs, demonstrating its dependence on the presence of vitamin K. We were able to demonstrate localization of carboxylated periostin to bone nodules formed by MSCs in vitro, suggesting a role in extracellular matrix mineralization. Our data also show that another fasciclin I-like protein, betaig-h3, contains Gla. In conclusion, periostin is a member of a novel vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylated protein family characterized by the presence of fasciclin domains. Furthermore, carboxylated periostin is produced by bone-derived cells of mesenchymal lineage and is abundantly found in mineralized bone nodules in vitro.  相似文献   

5.
Precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins are synthesized with a propeptide that is believed to target these proteins for gamma-carboxylation by the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. In this study synthetic propeptides were used to investigate gamma-carboxylation of the prothrombin and factor X precursors in rat liver microsomes. The extent of prothrombin processing by the carboxylase was also investigated. Antisera raised against the human prothrombin and factor X propeptides only recognized precursors with the respective propeptide regions. The data demonstrate structural differences in the propeptide region of the prothrombin and the factor X carboxylase substrates which raises questions about the hypothesis of a common propeptide binding site on the carboxylase for all precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins. The hypothesis of separate binding sites is supported by data which demonstrate differences in binding of the prothrombin and factor X precursors to membrane fragments from rough and smooth microsomes. gamma-Carboxylation of the prothrombin precursors in vitro was investigated with conformational specific antibodies raised against a portion of the Gla (gamma-carboxyglutamic acid) region extending from residue 15 to 24. The synthetic peptide used as antigen contains three of the ten potential Gla sites in prothrombin. It is shown that these antibodies do not recognize mature prothrombin but recognize the decarboxylated protein. It is also demonstrated that the epitope is Ca2(+)-dependent. The antibodies were used to assess gamma-carboxylation of the prothrombin precursor in membrane fragments from microsomal membranes. The results suggest that microsomal gamma-carboxylation does not involve Glu residues 16, 19 and 20 of the Gla region.  相似文献   

6.
Using reduced vitamin K, oxygen, and carbon dioxide, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase post-translationally modifies certain glutamates by adding carbon dioxide to the gamma position of those amino acids. In vertebrates, the modification of glutamate residues of target proteins is facilitated by an interaction between a propeptide present on target proteins and the gamma-glutamyl carboxylase. Previously, the gastropod Conus was the only known invertebrate with a demonstrated vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. We report here the discovery of a gamma-glutamyl carboxylase in Drosophila. This Drosophila enzyme is remarkably similar in amino acid sequence to the known mammalian carboxylases; it has 33% sequence identity and 45% sequence similarity to human gamma-glutamyl carboxylase. The Drosophila carboxylase is vitamin K-dependent, and it has a K(m) toward a model pentapeptide substrate, FLEEL, of about 4 mm. However, unlike the human gamma-glutamyl carboxylase, it is not stimulated by human blood coagulation factor IX propeptides. We found the mRNA for Drosophila gamma-glutamyl carboxylase in virtually every embryonic and adult stage that we investigated, with the highest concentration evident in the adult head.  相似文献   

7.
Some recombinant vitamin K-dependent blood coagulation factors (factors VII, IX, and protein C) have become valuable pharmaceuticals in the treatment of bleeding complications and sepsis. Because of their vitamin K-dependent post-translational modification, their synthesis by eukaryotic cells is essential. The eukaryotic cell harbors a vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation system that converts the proteins to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing proteins. However, the system in eukaryotic cells has limited capacity, and cell lines overexpressing vitamin K-dependent clotting factors produce only a fraction of the recombinant proteins as fully gamma-carboxylated, physiologically competent proteins. In this work we have used recombinant human factor IX (r-hFIX)-producing baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells, engineered to stably overexpress various components of the gamma-carboxylation system of the cell, to determine whether increased production of functional r-hFIX can be accomplished. All BHK cell lines secreted r-hFIX into serum-free medium. Overexpression of gamma-carboxylase is shown to inhibit production of functional r-hFIX. On the other hand, cells overexpressing VKORC1, the reduced vitamin K cofactor-producing enzyme of the vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation system, produced 2.9-fold more functional r-hFIX than control BHK cells. The data are consistent with the notion that VKORC1 is the rate-limiting step in the system and is a key regulatory protein in synthesis of active vitamin K-dependent proteins. The data suggest that overexpression of VKORC1 can be utilized for increased cellular production of recombinant vitamin K-dependent proteins.  相似文献   

8.
During embryonic development of the chick, the onset of calcium transport by the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) is concomitant with the appearance of a calcium-binding protein (CaBP). The development-specific expression of the CaBP in the CAM is inhibited by vitamin K antagonism in ovo with the anticoagulant, warfarin. However, the CaBP remains immunologically detectable in the CAM of warfarin-treated embryos, suggesting the presence of a precursor form of the CaBP. Previously, we have demonstrated that CaBP expression in CAM organ cultures is inducible by vitamin K. Furthermore, the CaBP contains several residues of the modified amino acid, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gamma-CGlu), which has been shown to be formed by vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of glutamic acid in several plasma clotting proteins. This study reports the presence of a post-translational, vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase activity in the CAM. Our results show that explants of CAM incorporate H14CO3 in an age-specific and vitamin K-dependent manner. Incorporation of H14CO3 by the CAM is further potentiated by warfarin treatment of the embryos, presumably owing to an elevation of the amount of endogenous uncarboxylated protein precursor(s). Among the subcellular (nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal, and soluble) fractions of the CAM, only microsomes exhibit specific incorporation of of H14CO3 into gamma-CGlu. The CAM microsomal carboxylation activity is post-translational, vitamin K-dependent, specific for prenylated homologs of vitamin K, sensitive to warfarin, and appears to be unrelated to the activities of biotin-dependent carboxylases or phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Optimal carboxylation activity occurs after incubation of the microsomes with H14CO3 for 60 min at 37 degrees C in the presence of over 100 microgram of vitamin K1/ml.  相似文献   

9.
B A Bouchard  B Furie  B C Furie 《Biochemistry》1999,38(29):9517-9523
The vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the posttranslational modification of glutamic acid to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid in the vitamin K-dependent proteins of blood and bone. The vitamin K-dependent carboxylase also catalyzes the epoxidation of vitamin K hydroquinone, an obligatory step in gamma-carboxylation. Using recombinant vitamin K-dependent carboxylase, purified in the absence of propeptide and glutamic acid-containing substrate using a FLAG epitope tag, the role of free cysteine residues in these reactions was examined. Incubation of the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase with the sulfhydryl-reactive reagent N-ethylmaleimide inhibited both the carboxylase and epoxidase activities of the enzyme. This inhibition was proportional to the incorporation of radiolabeled N-ethylmaleimide. Stoichiometric analyses using [(3)H]-N-ethylmaleimide indicated that the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase contains two or three free cysteine residues. Incubation with propeptide, glutamic acid-containing substrate, and vitamin K hydroquinone, alone or in combination, indicated that the binding of a glutamic acid-containing substrate to the carboxylase makes accessible a free cysteine residue that is important for interaction with vitamin K hydroquinone. This is consistent with our previous observation that binding of a glutamic acid-containing substrate activates vitamin K epoxidation and supports the hypothesis that binding of the carboxylatable substrate to the enzyme results in a conformational change which renders the enzyme catalytically competent.  相似文献   

10.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation of glutamate to gamma-carboxyglutamate was originally well characterized in the mammalian blood clotting cascade. gamma-Carboxyglutamate has also been found in a number of other mammalian proteins and in neuropeptides from the venoms of marine snails belonging to the genus Conus, suggesting wider prevalence of gamma-carboxylation. We demonstrate that an open reading frame from a Drosophila melanogaster cDNA clone encodes a protein with vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylase activity. The open reading frame, 670 amino acids in length, is truncated at the C-terminal end compared with mammalian gamma-carboxylase, which is 758 amino acids. The mammalian gene has 14 introns; in Drosophila there are two much shorter introns but in positions precisely homologous to two of the mammalian introns. In addition, a deletion of 6 nucleotides is observed when cDNA and genomic sequences are compared. In situ hybridization to fixed embryos indicated ubiquitous presence of carboxylase mRNA throughout embryogenesis. Northern blot analysis revealed increased mRNA levels in 12-24-h embryos. The continued presence of carboxylase mRNA suggests that it plays an important role during embryogenesis. Although the model substrate FLEEL is carboxylated by the enzyme, a substrate containing the propeptide of a Conus carboxylase substrate, conantokin G, is poorly carboxylated. Its occurrence in vertebrates, molluscan systems (i.e. Conus), and Drosophila and the apparently strong homology between the three systems suggest that this is a highly conserved and widely distributed post-translational modification in biological systems.  相似文献   

11.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the posttranslational conversion of glutamic acid to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid, an amino acid critical to the function of the vitamin K-dependent blood coagulation proteins. Given the functional similarity of mammalian vitamin K-dependent carboxylases and the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase from Conus textile, a marine invertebrate, we hypothesized that structurally conserved regions would identify sequences critical to this common functionality. Furthermore, we examined the diversity of animal species that maintain vitamin K-dependent carboxylation to generate gamma-carboxyglutamic acid. We have cloned carboxylase homologs in full-length or partial form from the beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas), toadfish (Opsanus tau), chicken (Gallus gallus), hagfish (Myxine glutinosa), horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus), and cone snail (Conus textile) to compare these structures to the known bovine, human, rat, and mouse cDNA sequences. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequences identified a nearly perfectly conserved 38-amino acid residue region in all of these putative carboxylases. In addition, this amino acid motif is also present in the Drosophila genome and identified a Drosophila homolog of the gamma-carboxylase. Assay of hagfish liver demonstrated vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity in this hemichordate. These results demonstrate the broad distribution of the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase gene, including a highly conserved motif that is likely critical for enzyme function. The vitamin K-dependent biosynthesis of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid appears to be a highly conserved function in the animal kingdom.  相似文献   

12.
The liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the post-translational conversion of specific glutamyl to gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues in precursor forms of a limited number of proteins. These proteins contain an amino-terminal extension (propeptide) that is presumed to serve as an enzyme recognition site to assure their normal processing. The free, noncovalently bound propeptide has also been shown to stimulate the in vitro activity of this enzyme. This peptide has now been shown to lower the app Km of a low-molecular-weight Glu site substrate while having no influence on the app Km of the other substrates, vitamin KH2, O2, and CO2/HCO3-. Propeptide addition was shown to have no influence on the ratio of the two products of the enzyme, Gla and vitamin K-2,3-epoxide. Stimulation of carboxylase activity by the propeptide from human factor X was observed in a number of rat tissues and in the liver of a number of different species. Stability of the enzyme in crude microsomal preparations was greatly enhanced by the presence of propeptide. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that this region of the protein substrates for the carboxylase not only serves an enzyme recognition or docking function but also modulates the activity of the enzyme by altering the affinity for one of its substrates.  相似文献   

13.
The gamma-carboxyglutamate-containing proteins are a family of secreted vitamin K-dependent proteins in which some glutamyl residues are post-translationally modified to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues. A vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase enzyme catalyses this post-translational modification. The gamma-carboxylase reaction requires vitamin K in its reduced form, vitamin K hydroquinone, and generates gamma-carboxyglutamate and vitamin K 2,3,-epoxide which is then recycled back to the hydroquinone form by a vitamin K reductase system. Warfarin blocks the vitamin K cycle and hence inhibits the gamma-carboxylase reaction, and this property of Warfarin has led to its wide use in anticoagulant therapy. Until recently, interest in vitamin K-dependent proteins was mostly restricted to the field of hematology. However, the discovery that the anti-coagulant factor protein S and its structural homologue Gas6 (growth arrest-specific gene 6), two vitamin K-dependent proteins, are ligands for the Tyro3/Axl/Mer family of related tyrosine kinase receptors has opened up a new area of research. Moreover, the phenotypes associated with the invalidation of genes encoding vitamin K-dependent proteins or their receptors revealed their implication in regulating phagocytosis during many cell differentiation phenomena such as retinogenesis, neurogenesis, osteogenesis, and spermatogenesis. Additionally, protein S was identified as the major factor responsible for serum-stimulated phagocytosis of apoptotic cells. Therefore, the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of vitamin K-dependent proteins in regulating apoptotic cell phagocytosis may lead to a better understanding of the physiopathology of cell differentiation and could form the framework of new therapeutic strategies aiming at a selective targeting of cell phagocytosis associated pathologies.  相似文献   

14.
While a role has been ascribed to the gamma-carboxyglutamate (Gla) residues in vitamin K-dependent coagulation proteins and the enzyme catalyzing this posttranslational modification has been identified and partially characterized, both the functional significance of a second posttranslationally synthesized amino acid found in these proteins, beta-hydroxyaspartate (Hya), and the aspartyl beta-hydroxylating enzyme remain to be determined. We now report that inhibitors of 2-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases, such as dipyridyl, o-phenanthroline, and pyridine 2,4-dicarboxylate, block hydroxylation of Asp64 in recombinant factor IX molecules produced in three different mammalian expression systems. This hydroxylation was not inhibited by the specific copper chelators 2,9-dimethylphenanthroline or D-penicillamine. The Gla levels in these proteins were unaffected by these compounds and demonstrate that carboxylation proceeds independently of hydroxylation. Using these Hya-deficient recombinant factor IX molecules we demonstrate that this residue does not play a significant role in factor IX binding to endothelial cells under equilibrium conditions. From additional binding studies we have concluded that the Gla domain of factor IX is a major cell binding domain of factor IX. Furthermore, in contrast to studies demonstrating a marked loss of one-stage clotting activity in recombinant factors IX following site-directed mutations of Asp64 to neutral or basic residues (Rees, D. J. G., Jones, I. M., Handford, P. A., Walter, S. J., Esnouf, M. P., Smith, K. J., and Brownlee, G. J. (1988) EMBO J. 7, 2053-2061), we have not found a decrease of one-stage clotting activity with Hya-deficient factor IX. Hya-deficient proteins produced in this manner may prove to be more appropriate to elucidate the function of Hya than those produced by site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

15.
A modification of the assay for vitamin K-dependent carboxylase is described with which the enzyme could be detected in relatively low amounts of cells (n = 106). Using this assay, we could demonstrate vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity in hepatocytes, renal tubular cells, osteoblasts, endothelial cells and macrophages, but not in lymphocytes or platelets. The cultured tumor cells UMR-106, B16 and 5583 also contained vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity. Vitamin K epoxide reductase activity was demonstrated only in cells where vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity was present. The tumor cells possessed remarkably less K epoxide reductase activity than the normal cells. When cells were cultured in medium containing warfarin, the K epoxide reductase activity was found to be decreased and the amount of non-carboxylated precursor protein and increased, suggesting an analogous vitamin K mechanism as in liver.  相似文献   

16.
R Wallin  F Rossi  R Loeser    L L Key  Jr 《The Biochemical journal》1990,269(2):459-464
An osteoblast-like human osteosarcoma cell line (U2-OS) has been shown to possess a vitamin K-dependent carboxylation system which is similar to the system in human HepG2 cells and in liver and lung from the rat. In an 'in vitro' system prepared from these cells, vitamin K1 was shown to overcome warfarin inhibition of gamma-carboxylation carried out by the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. The data suggest that osteoblasts, the cells involved in synthesis of vitamin K-dependent proteins in bone, can use vitamin K1 as an antidote to warfarin poisoning if enough vitamin K1 can accumulate in the tissue. Five precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins were identified in osteosarcoma and HepG2 cells respectively. In microsomes (microsomal fractions) from the osteosarcoma cells these precursors revealed apparent molecular masses of 85, 78, 56, 35 and 31 kDa. When osteosarcoma cells were cultured in the presence of warfarin, vitamin K-dependent 14C-labelling of the 78 kDa precursor was enhanced. Selective 14C-labelling of one precursor was also demonstrated in microsomes from HepG2 cells and from rat lung after warfarin treatment. In HepG2 cells this precursor was identified as the precursor of (clotting) Factor X. This unique 14C-labelling pattern of precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins in microsomes from different cells and tissues reflects a new mechanism underlying the action of warfarin.  相似文献   

17.
Fluorography of 14C-labelled glutamic acid residues in vitamin K-dependent protein precursors in lung microsomes (microsomal fractions) shows that the lung has several substrates that are not found in the liver. These precursor proteins unique to the lung have apparent molecular masses of 65, 53, 50, 36, 31 and 13 kDa. Type II epithelial cells appear to synthesize most of the vitamin K-dependent proteins in the lung. The 36 and the 31 kDa precursors also found in Type-II-cell microsomes have a similar molecular mass to those of surfactant-associated proteins, and we have previously shown [Rannels, Gallaher, Wallin & Rannels (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 5952-5956] that the 36 kDa protein is one of the precursors for these proteins. Immunoblotting of membrane fragments of Type-II-cell microsomes with plasma prothrombin antibodies identified two prothrombin-like antigens of apparent molecular masses 68 and 65 kDa. This raises the question as to whether Type II cells are also a potential site for synthesis of prothrombin and possibly other vitamin K-dependent clotting factors. Pulmonary macrophages appear to be devoid of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity. However, Type II epithelial cells have significant activity, and this activity was unaltered when these cells were maintained in primary culture for 3 days, suggesting that carboxylase activity is expressed in lung alveolar epithelium independently of culture-induced changes in cellular differentiation. Carboxylase activity in Type II cells was enhanced 2-fold when cells were cultured for 24 h in the presence of 50 microM-warfarin. Type II cells, therefore, resemble hepatocytes with regard to their response to coumarin anticoagulant drugs.  相似文献   

18.
The rat liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the carboxylation of peptide-bound glutamyl residues to gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues with the concomitant formation of vitamin K 2,3-epoxide (KO). These studies have demonstrated that the half-reaction, formation of KO, occurs in the absence of carboxylation at low glutamyl substrate concentration but that the ratio of KO/Gla approaches unity as the glutamyl substrate concentration is increased. Utilization of the carboxylase substrate Phe-Leu-[gamma-3H] Glu-Glu-Leu has demonstrated that the ratios of KO/gamma-C-H bonds cleaved and Gla/gamma-C-H bonds cleaved are equivalent at high substrate concentrations and that these ratios approach unity. At low substrate concentrations, KO formation occurs at a higher rate than gamma-H bond cleavage. These data are consistent with a mechanism involving the formation of an oxygenated intermediate from vitamin KH2 and O2 that is converted to KO during hydrogen abstraction from the gamma-position of the Glu substrate. In the absence of a Glu substrate, the intermediate is converted to KO by a mechanism not coupled to glutamyl activation.  相似文献   

19.
The amino acid gamma-carboxyglutamate is the product of post-translational vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of peptide bound glutamic acid residues. Activity of the microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase which catalyzes gamma-carboxyglutamate formation has been studied in numerous tissues, including liver and lung. Catabolism of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins leads to gamma-carboxyglutamate excretion into the urine, thus quantitation of urinary gamma-carboxyglutamate can be used to assess vitamin K status, as well as the turnover of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins. Since fetal urine is a major component of amniotic fluid, samples were obtained during late gestation in the rat (days 18-20) and analyzed for gamma-carboxyglutamate by reversed phase liquid chromatography to better define gestational changes in fetal vitamin K-dependent carboxylation. Relative to gestational age 18 days, amniotic fluid gamma-carboxyglutamate concentrations increased by 25% at 19 days (P less than 0.02) and by 105% at 20 days (P less than 0.001). When expressed per unit creatinine to correct for change in body mass and/or amniotic fluid volume, these differences are 15% (NS) at 19 days and 70% (P less than 0.02) at 20 days. These increases are prevented by maternal treatment with sodium warfarin. Amniotic fluid gamma-carboxyglutamate concentrations are 7-12 times greater than those in adult rat urine. During the same developmental interval (18-20 days), both lung and liver carboxylase activities increase by more than two-fold. These studies suggest that gestational age associated increases in carboxylase activity measured in vitro are associated with increased turnover of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The enzymatic activity of the vitamin K-dependent proteins requires the post-translational conversion of specific glutamic acids to gamma-carboxy-glutamic acid by the integral membrane enzyme, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase. Whether or not cysteine residues are important for carboxylase activity has been the subject of a number of studies. In the present study we used carboxylase with point mutations at cysteines, chemical modification, and mass spectrometry to examine this question. Mutation of any of the free cysteine residues to alanine or serine had little effect on carboxylase activity, although C343A mutant carboxylase had only 38% activity compared with that of wild type. In contrast, treatment with either thiol-reactive reagent 4-acetamido-4'-maleimidylstilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid, disodium salt, or sodium tetrathionate, caused complete loss of activity. We identified the residues modified, using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry, as Cys(323) and Cys(343). According to our results, these residues are on the cytoplasmic side of the microsomal membrane, whereas catalytic residues are expected to be on the lumenal side of the membrane. Carboxylase was partially protected from chemical modification by factor IXs propeptide. Although all mutant carboxylases bound propeptide with normal affinity, chemical modification caused a >100-fold decrease in carboxylase affinity for the consensus propeptide. We conclude that cysteine residues are not directly involved in carboxylase catalysis, but chemical modification of Cys(323) and Cys(343) may disrupt the three-dimensional structure, resulting in inactivation.  相似文献   

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