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1.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) is an amphitropic protein regulating phosphatidylcholine synthesis. Lipid-induced folding of its amphipathic helical (AH) membrane-binding domain activates the enzyme. In this study we examined the membrane deforming property of CCT in vitro by monitoring conversion of vesicles to tubules, using transmission electron microscopy. Vesicle tubulation was proportional to the membrane density of CCT and proceeded either as growth from a pre-formed surface bud, or as a global transformation of roughly spherical vesicles into progressively thinner tubules. The tubulation pathway depended on the lipid compositional heterogeneity of the vesicles, with heterogeneous mixtures supporting the bud-extension pathway. Co-existence of vesicles alongside thick and thin tubules suggested that CCT can discriminate between flat membrane surfaces and those with emerging curvature, binding preferentially to the latter. Thin tubules had a limiting diameter of ~12nm, likely representing bilayer cylinders with a very high density of 1 CCT/50 lipids. The AH segment was necessary and sufficient for tubulation. AH regions from diverse CCT sources, including C. elegans, had tubulation activity that correlated with α-helical length. The AH motifs in CCT and the Parkinson's-related protein, α-synuclein, have similar features, however the CCT AH was more effective in its membrane remodeling function. That CCT can deform vesicles of physiologically relevant composition suggests that CCT binding to membranes may initiate deformations required for organelle morphogenesis and at the same time stimulate synthesis of the PC required for the development of these regions.  相似文献   

2.
Taneva S  Johnson JE  Cornell RB 《Biochemistry》2003,42(40):11768-11776
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltranferase (CCT) regulates phosphatidylcholine (PC) biosynthesis. Its activity is controlled by reversible interactions with membrane lipids, mediated by an internal segment referred to as domain M. Although domain M peptides adopt an amphipathic alpha-helical structure when membrane bound, the structure of this domain in the context of the whole enzyme in the lipid-free and lipid-bound state is unknown. Here we derive lipid-induced secondary structural changes in CCTalpha using circular dichroism and three deconvolution programs. The analysis of two fragments, CCT236 (CCT1-236, housing the catalytic domain) and a synthetic domain M peptide (CCT237-293) aided the assignment of structural change to specific domains. To carry out this study, we developed a micellar lipid activating system that would avoid generation of CCT-induced lipid vesicle aggregates that interfere with the CD analysis. Lysophosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol (LPC/PG) mixed micelles supported full activation of CCT and caused an increase in the alpha-helix content of full-length CCT from 25 to 41%, at the expense of all other conformations. LPC/PG also induced an increase in alpha-helix content of the domain M peptide from 7 to 85% at the expense of all other conformers. This lipid system did not significantly affect the secondary structure of CCT236, nor did it affect the proteolytic fragmentation pattern of this region within full-length CCT, suggesting that the region containing the catalytic domain changes very little upon membrane activation of CCT. Our data suggest that lipids trigger a conformational switch in domain M from a mixed structure to an alpha-helix, thus creating a hydrophobic face for membrane insertion. Our results negate the idea that domain M is entirely helical in both the soluble and membrane-bound forms of CCT.  相似文献   

3.
Calmodulin is a universal calcium-sensing protein that has pleiotropic effects. Here we show that calmodulin inhibits a new SCF (Skp1-Cullin-F-box) E3 ligase component, FBXL2. During Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection, SCF (FBXL2) targets the key enzyme, CCTα, for its monoubiquitination and degradation, thereby reducing synthesis of the indispensable membrane and surfactant component, phosphatidylcholine. P. aeruginosa triggers calcium influx and calcium-dependent activation of FBXL2 within the Golgi complex, where it engages CCTα. FBXL2 through its C terminus binds to the CCTα IQ motif. FBXL2 knockdown increases CCTα levels and phospholipid synthesis. The molecular interaction of FBXL2 with CCTα is opposed by calmodulin, which traffics to the Golgi complex, binds FBXL2 (residues 80 to 90) via its C terminus, and vies with the ligase for occupancy within the IQ motif. These observations were recapitulated in murine models of P. aeruginosa-induced surfactant deficiency, where calmodulin gene transfer reduced FBXL2 actions by stabilizing CCTα and lessening the severity of inflammatory lung injury. The results provide a unique model of calcium-regulated intermolecular competition between an E3 ligase subunit and an antagonist that is critically relevant to pneumonia and lipid homeostasis.  相似文献   

4.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) is a multi-domain enzyme that regulates phosphatidylcholine synthesis. It converts to an active form upon binding cell membranes, and interdomain dissociations have been hypothesized to accompany this process. To identify these interdomain and membrane interactions, the tertiary structures of three forms of CCTalpha were probed by monitoring accessibility to proteases. Time-limited digestion with chymotrypsin or arginine C of soluble CCTalpha (CCT(sol)), phospholipid vesicle-bound CCT (CCT(mem)), and a soluble constitutively active CCT truncated at amino acid 236 generated complex mixtures of peptides that were resolved and identified by gel electrophoresis/immunoblotting and by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry, with or without coupling to capillary liquid chromatography. Identification of cleavage sites enabled assembly of peptide bond accessibility maps for each CCT form. Our results reveal a approximately 80-residue core within the catalytic domain (domain C) as the most inaccessible region in all three forms and the C-terminal phosphorylation domain as the most accessible. Membrane binding has little effect on the protease accessibility of these domains. To map the protease sites onto the catalytic domain, its three-dimensional structure was modeled from the atomic coordinates of glycerol-phosphate cytidylyltransferase (Protein Data Bank code 1COZ). The protease inaccessibility of most sites in domain C could be explained by burial or location within secondary structural elements. The accessibility of the N-terminal domain (domain N) was enhanced upon membrane binding. Residues Phe(234)-Leu(303) were inaccessible in CCT(mem), suggesting burial in the membrane. Surprisingly, residues Leu(274)-Leu(303) of this domain were also inaccessible in CCT(sol). We propose that this region is buried by interdomain contacts with domain N in CCT(sol). Membrane binding and burial of domain M in the lipid bilayer may disrupt this interaction, leading to increased exposure of sites in domain N.  相似文献   

5.
We are probing the regulation of phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis by angiotensin II. In the accompanying paper, we showed that manipulation of the lipid second messengers, arachidonic acid or hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid, produced downstream of the angiotensin AT1a receptor did not affect the PC synthesis rates in a manner consistent with direct activation of the rate limiting enzyme in the pathway, CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). However, suppression of diacylglycerol (DAG) production with an inhibitor of phospholipase C-beta reduced angiotensin-dependent PC synthesis as well as ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Here, we show that the stimulation of PC synthesis and activation of CCT by angiotensin requires a signaling pathway that involves protein kinase C and ERK1/2. The inhibitors bis-indolylmaleimide I and PD98059 blocked ERK1/2 phosphorylation and completely eliminated angiotensin stimulation of the CCT-catalyzed reaction and PC synthesis. Exogenous addition of DAG using a lipid vesicle delivery system exactly mimicked the kinetics of angiotensin-promoted PC synthesis, suggesting that this mode of DAG delivery can effectively substitute for the DAG generated downstream of the activated AT1a receptor. Moreover, exogenous DAG activated ERK1/2, and the activation of PC synthesis by DAG was blocked by inhibition of protein kinase C and MEK. These data suggest that angiotensin-dependent DAG and the exogenously supplied DAG stimulate PC synthesis, not solely by direct action on CCT, but via a signaling pathway involving protein kinase C and ERK1/2. Angiotensin did not alter the net phosphorylation state of CCT as probed by immunoprecipitation of 32P-labeled CCT. Angiotensin stimulation of ERK1/2 likely mediates effects on CCT via a process other than CCT dephosphorylation.  相似文献   

6.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT), a rate-limiting enzyme in phosphatidylcholine synthesis, is regulated by reversible membrane interactions mediated by an amphipathic helical domain (M) that binds selectively to anionic lipids. CCT is a dimer; thus the functional unit has two M domains. To probe the functional contribution of each domain M we prepared a CCT heterodimer composed of one full-length subunit paired with a CCT subunit truncated before domain M that was also catalytically dead. We compared this heterodimer to the full-length homodimer with respect to activation by anionic vesicles, vesicle binding affinities, and promotion of vesicle aggregation. Surprisingly for all three functions the dimer with just one domain M behaved similarly to the dimer with two M domains. Full activation of the wild-type subunit was not impaired by loss of one domain M in its partner. Membrane binding affinities were the same for dimers with one versus two M domains, suggesting that the two M domains of the dimer do not engage a single bilayer simultaneously. Vesicle cross-bridging was also unhindered by loss of one domain M, suggesting that another motif couples with domain M for cross-bridging anionic membranes. Mutagenesis revealed that the positively charged nuclear localization signal sequence constitutes that second motif for membrane cross-bridging. We propose that the two M domains of the CCT dimer engage a single bilayer via an alternating binding mechanism. The tethering function involves the cooperation of domain M and the nuclear localization signal sequence, each engaging separate membranes. Membrane binding of a single M domain is sufficient to fully activate the enzymatic activity of the CCT dimer while sustaining the low affinity, reversible membrane interaction required for regulation of CCT activity.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis in animal cells is generally controlled by cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP):phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). This enzyme is amphitropic, that is, it can interconvert between a soluble inactive form and a membrane-bound active form. The membrane-binding domain of CCT is a long amphipathic alpha helix that responds to changes in the physical properties of PC-deficient membranes. Binding of this domain to membranes activates CCT by relieving an inhibitory constraint in the catalytic domain. This leads to stimulation of PC synthesis and maintenance of membrane PC content. Surprisingly, the major isoform, CCT alpha, is localized in the nucleus of many cells. Recently, a new level of its regulation has emerged with the discovery that signals that stimulate PC synthesis recruit CCT alpha from an inactive nuclear reservoir to a functional site on the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

8.
Membrane phosphatidylcholine homeostasis is maintained in part by a sensing device in the key regulatory enzyme, CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). CCT responds to decreases in membrane phosphatidylcholine content by reversible membrane binding and activation. Two prominent isoforms, CCTα and -β2, have nearly identical catalytic domains and very similar membrane binding amphipathic helical (M) domains but have divergent and structurally disordered N-terminal (N) and C-terminal phosphorylation (P) regions. We found that the binding affinity of purified CCTβ2 for anionic membranes was weaker than CCTα by more than an order of magnitude. Using chimeric CCTs, insertion/deletion mutants, and truncated CCTs, we show that the stronger affinity of CCTα can be attributed in large part to the electrostatic membrane binding function of the polybasic nuclear localization signal (NLS) motif, present in the unstructured N-terminal segment of CCTα but lacking in CCTβ2. The membrane partitioning of CCTβ2 in cells enriched with the lipid activator, oleic acid, was also weaker than that of CCTα and was elevated by incorporation of the NLS motif. Thus, the polybasic NLS can function as a secondary membrane binding motif not only in vitro but in the context of cell membranes. A comparison of phosphorylated, dephosphorylated, and region P-truncated forms showed that the in vitro membrane affinity of CCTβ2 is more sensitive than CCTα to phosphorylation status, which antagonizes membrane binding of both isoforms. These data provide a model wherein the primary membrane binding motif, an amphipathic helical domain, works in collaboration with other intrinsically disordered segments that modulate membrane binding strength. The NLS reinforces, whereas the phosphorylated tail antagonizes the attraction of domain M for anionic membranes.  相似文献   

9.
The dependence of the lateral distribution of membrane proteins on the size, protein/lipoid molar ratio, and the magnitude of the interaction potentials has been investigated by computer modeling protein-lipid distributions with Monte Carlo calculations. These results have allowed us to develop a quantitative characterization of the distribution of membrane proteins and to correlate these distributions with experimental observables. The topological arrangement of protein domains, protein plus annular lipid domains, and free lipid domains is described in terms of radial distribution, pair connectedness, and cluster distribution functions. The radial distribution functions are used to measure the distribution of intermolecular distances between protein molecules, whereas the pair connectedness functions are used to estimate the physical extension of compositional domains. It is shown that, at characteristic protein/lipid molar ratios, previously isolated domains become connected, forming domain networks that extend over the entire membrane surface. These changes in the lateral connectivity of compositional domains are paralleled by changes in the calculated lateral diffusion coefficients and might have important implications for the regulation of diffusion controlled processes within the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
The genome of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans contains several genes that appear to encode proteins similar to CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). We have isolated a 1044-nucleotide cDNA clone from a C. elegans cDNA library that encodes the 347-amino acid version of CCT that is most similar to previously-identified CCTs. Native and His-tagged forms were expressed and purified using a baculovirus expression system. The enzyme was maximally activated by 5 microM phosphatidylcholine:oleate (50:50) vesicles with a k(cat) value in the presence of lipid 37-fold greater than the k(cat) value in the absence of lipid. To localize the region of C. elegans CCT critical for lipid activation, a series of C-terminal truncation mutants was analyzed. CCT truncated after amino acids 225 or 245 was quite active in the absence of lipids and not further activated in the presence of lipids, supporting the concept that the lipid-activation segment is inhibitory to catalysis in the absence of lipids. CCT truncated after amino acids 266, 281, or 319 was activated by lipid similar to wild-type enzyme. Kinetic analysis in the absence of lipid revealed the lipid-independent CCT truncated after amino acid 245 to have a k(cat) value 15-fold greater than either full-length CCT or CCT truncated after amino acid 266. We conclude that elements critical for activation of C. elegans CCT by lipids are contained within amino acids 246-266, that this region is inhibitory in the absence of lipids, and that the inhibition is relieved by the association of the enzyme with lipid.  相似文献   

11.
It has been two decades since the lipid raft hypothesis was first presented. Even today, whether these nanoscale cholesterol-rich domains are present in cell membranes is not completely resolved. However, especially in the last few years, a rich body of literature has demonstrated both the presence and the importance of non-random distribution of biomolecules on the membrane, which is the focus of this review. These new developments have pushed the experimental limits of detection and have brought us closer to observing lipid domains in the plasma membrane of live cells. Characterization of biomolecules associated with lipid rafts has revealed a deep connection between biological regulation and function and membrane compositional heterogeneities. Finally, tantalizing new developments in the field have demonstrated that lipid domains might not just be associated with the plasma membrane of eukaryotes but could potentially be a ubiquitous membrane-organizing principle in several other biological systems. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Emergence of Complex Behavior in Biomembranes edited by Marjorie Longo.  相似文献   

12.
The CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) governs the rate of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) biosynthesis, and its activity is governed by interaction with membrane lipids. The carboxy-terminus was dissected to delineate the minimum sequences required for lipid responsiveness. The helical domain is recognized as a site of lipid interaction, and all three tandem alpha-helical repeats from residues 257 through 290 were found to be required for regulation of enzymatic activity by this domain. Truncation of the carboxy-terminus to remove one or more of the alpha-helical repeats yielded catalytically compromised proteins that were not responsive to lipids but retained sufficient activity to accelerate PtdCho biosynthesis when overexpressed in vivo. The role of the helical region in lipid-activation was tested further by excising residues 257 through 309 to yield a protein that retained a 57-residue carboxy terminal domain fused to the catalytic core. This construct tested the hypothesis that the helical region inhibits activity in the absence of lipid rather than activates the enzyme in the presence of lipid. This hypothesis predicts constitutive activity for CCTalpha[Delta257-309]; however, this protein was tightly regulated by lipid with activities comparable to the full-length CCTalpha, in both the absence and presence of lipid. Activation of CCTalpha[Delta257-309] was dependent exclusively on anionic lipids, whereas full-length CCTalpha responded to either anionic or neutral lipids. Phosphatidic acid delivered in Triton X-100 micelles was the preferred activator of the second lipid-activation domain. These data demonstrate that CCTalpha can be regulated by lipids by two independent domains: (i) the three amphipathic alpha-helical repeats that interact with both neutral and anionic lipid mixtures and (ii) the last 57 residues that interact with anionic lipids. The results show that both domains are inhibitory in the absence of lipid and activating in the presence of lipid. Removal of both domains results in a nonresponsive, dysregulated enzyme with reduced activity. The data also demonstrate for the first time that the 57-residue carboxy-terminal domain in CCTalpha participates in lipid-mediated regulation and is sufficient for maximum activation of enzyme activity.  相似文献   

13.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) regulates the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine in mammalian cells. In order to understand the mechanism by which this enzyme controls phosphatidylcholine synthesis, we have initiated studies of CCT from the model genetic system, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The yeast CCT gene was isolated from genomic DNA using the polymerase chain reaction and was found to encode tyrosine at position 192 instead of histidine, as originally reported. Levels of expression of yeast CCT activity in Escherichia coli or in the yeast, Pichia pastoris, were somewhat low. Expression of yeast CCT in a baculovirus system as a 6x-His-tag fusion protein was higher and was used to purify yeast CCT by a procedure that included delipidation. Kinetic characterization revealed that yeast CCT was activated approximately 20-fold by 20 microM phosphatidylcholine:oleate vesicles, a level 5-fold lower than that necessary for maximal activation of rat CCT. The k(cat) value was 31.3 s(-1) in the presence of lipid and 1.5 s(-1) in the absence of lipid. The K(m) values for the substrates CTP and phosphocholine did not change significantly upon activation by lipids; K(m) values in the presence of lipid were 0.80 mM for phosphocholine and 1.4 mM for CTP while K(m) values in the absence of lipid were 1.2 mM for phosphocholine and 0.8 mM for CTP. Activation of yeast CCT, therefore, appears to be due to an increase in the k(cat) value upon lipid binding.  相似文献   

14.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) catalyzes the rate-limiting step in phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis, and its activity is regulated by reversible association with membranes, mediated by an amphipathic helical domain M. Here we describe a new feature of the CCTalpha isoform, vesicle tethering. We show, using dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy, that dimers of CCTalpha can cross-bridge separate vesicles to promote vesicle aggregation. The vesicles contained either class I activators (anionic phospholipids) or the less potent class II activators, which favor nonlamellar phase formation. CCT increased the apparent hydrodynamic radius and polydispersity of anionic phospholipid vesicles even at low CCT concentrations corresponding to only one or two dimers per vesicle. Electron micrographs of negatively stained phosphatidylglycerol (PG) vesicles confirmed CCT-mediated vesicle aggregation. CCT conjugated to colloidal gold accumulated on the vesicle surfaces and in areas of vesicle-vesicle contact. PG vesicle aggregation required both the membrane-binding domain and the intact CCT dimer, suggesting binding of CCT to apposed membranes via the two M domains situated on opposite sides of the dimerization domain. In contrast to the effects on anionic phospholipid vesicles, CCT did not induce aggregation of PC vesicles containing the class II lipids, oleic acid, diacylglycerol, or phosphatidylethanolamine. The different behavior of the two lipid classes reflected differences in measured binding affinity, with only strongly binding phospholipid vesicles being susceptible to CCT-induced aggregation. Our findings suggest a new model for CCTalpha domain organization and membrane interaction, and a potential involvement of the enzyme in cellular events that implicate close apposition of membranes.  相似文献   

15.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT), an amphitropic enzyme that regulates phosphatidylcholine synthesis, is composed of a catalytic head domain and a regulatory tail. The tail region has dual functions as a regulator of membrane binding/enzyme activation and as an inhibitor of catalysis in the unbound form of the enzyme, suggesting conformational plasticity. These functions are well conserved in CCTs across diverse phyla, although the sequences of the tail regions are not. CCT regulatory tails of diverse origins are composed of a long membrane lipid-inducible amphipathic helix (m-AH) followed by a highly disordered segment, reminiscent of the Parkinson disease-linked protein, α-synuclein, which we show shares a novel sequence motif with vertebrate CCTs. To unravel features required for silencing, we created chimeric enzymes by fusing the catalytic domain of rat CCTα to the regulatory tail of CCTs from Drosophila, Caenorhabditis elegans, or Saccharomyces cerevisiae or to α-synuclein. Only the tail domains of the two invertebrate CCTs were competent for both suppression of catalytic activity and for activation by lipid vesicles. Thus, both silencing and activating functions of the m-AH can tolerate significant changes in length and sequence. We identified a highly amphipathic 22-residue segment in the m-AH with features conserved among animal CCTs but not yeast CCT or α-synuclein. Deletion of this segment from rat CCT increased the lipid-independent Vmax by 10-fold, equivalent to the effect of deleting the entire tail, and severely weakened membrane binding affinity. However, membrane binding was required for additional increases in catalytic efficiency. Thus, full activation of CCT may require not only loss of a silencing conformation in the m-AH but a gain of an activating conformation, promoted by membrane binding.  相似文献   

16.
17.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) catalyzes the conversion of phosphocholine and cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) to CDP-choline for the eventual synthesis of phosphatidylcholine (PC). The enzyme is regulated by reversible association with cellular membranes, with the rate of catalysis increasing following membrane association. Two isoforms of CCT appear to be present in higher eukaryotes, including Drosophila melanogaster, which contains the tandem genes Cct1 and Cct2. Before this study, the CCT1 isoform had not been characterized and the cellular location of each enzyme was unknown. In this investigation, the cDNA encoding the CCT1 isoform from D. melanogaster has been cloned and the recombinant enzyme purified and characterized to determine catalytic properties and the effect of lipid vesicles on activity. CCT1 exhibited a V max of 23904 nmol of CDP-choline min (-1) mg (-1) and apparent K m values for phosphocholine and CTP of 2.29 and 1.21 mM, respectively, in the presence of 20 muM PC/oleate vesicles. Cytidylyltransferases require a divalent cation for catalysis, and the cation preference of CCT1 was found to be as follows: Mg (2+) > Mn (2+) = Co (2+) > Ca (2+) = Ni (2+) > Zn (2+). The activity of the enzyme is stimulated by a variety of lipids, including phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylserine, diphosphatidylglycerol, and the fatty acid oleate. Phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidic acid, however, did not have a significant effect on CCT1 activity. The cellular location of both CCT1 and CCT2 isoforms was elucidated by expressing green fluorescent fusion proteins in cultured D. melanogaster Schneider 2 cells. CCT1 was identified as the nuclear isoform, while CCT2 is cytoplasmic.  相似文献   

18.
Lipid body accumulation within leukocytes is a common feature in both clinical and experimental infectious, neoplasic and other inflammatory conditions. Here, we will review the contemporary evidence related to the biogenesis and structure of leukocyte lipid bodies (also known as lipid droplets) as inflammatory organelles. Studies of leukocyte lipid bodies are providing functional, ultrastructural and protein compositional evidences that lipid bodies are not solely storage depots of neutral lipid. Over the past years substantial progresses have been made to demonstrate that lipid body biogenesis is a highly regulated process, that culminate in the compartmentalization of a specific set of proteins and lipids, that place leukocyte lipid bodies as inducible cytoplasmic organelles with roles in cell signaling and activation, regulation of lipid metabolism, membrane trafficking and control of the synthesis and secretion of inflammatory mediators. Pertinent to the roles of lipid bodies in inflammation and cell signaling, enzymes involved in eicosanoid synthesis are localized at lipid bodies and lipid bodies are sites for eicosanoid generation. Collectively, lipid bodies in leukocytes are emerging as critical regulators of different inflammatory diseases, key markers of leukocyte activation and attractive targets for novel anti-inflammatory therapies.  相似文献   

19.
The genome of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans contains several genes that appear to encode proteins similar to CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). We have isolated a 1044-nucleotide cDNA clone from a C. elegans cDNA library that encodes the 347-amino acid version of CCT that is most similar to previously-identified CCTs. Native and His-tagged forms were expressed and purified using a baculovirus expression system. The enzyme was maximally activated by 5 μM phosphatidylcholine:oleate (50:50) vesicles with a kcat value in the presence of lipid 37-fold greater than the kcat value in the absence of lipid. To localize the region of C. elegans CCT critical for lipid activation, a series of C-terminal truncation mutants was analyzed. CCT truncated after amino acids 225 or 245 was quite active in the absence of lipids and not further activated in the presence of lipids, supporting the concept that the lipid-activation segment is inhibitory to catalysis in the absence of lipids. CCT truncated after amino acids 266, 281, or 319 was activated by lipid similar to wild-type enzyme. Kinetic analysis in the absence of lipid revealed the lipid-independent CCT truncated after amino acid 245 to have a kcat value 15-fold greater than either full-length CCT or CCT truncated after amino acid 266. We conclude that elements critical for activation of C. elegans CCT by lipids are contained within amino acids 246–266, that this region is inhibitory in the absence of lipids, and that the inhibition is relieved by the association of the enzyme with lipid.  相似文献   

20.
In mammalian cells a complex interplay regulates the distribution of cholesterol between intracellular membrane compartments. One important aspect of cholesterol regulation is intracellular cholesterol storage in neutral lipid storage organelles called lipid droplets or lipid bodies (LBs). Recent work has thrust the LB into the limelight as a complex and dynamic cellular organelle. LBs play a crucial role in maintaining the cellular levels of cholesterol by regulating the interplay between lipid storage, hydrolysis and trafficking. Studies of caveolins, caveolar membrane proteins linked to lipid regulation, are providing new insights into the role of LBs in regulating cholesterol balance.  相似文献   

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