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1.
We have purified homoserine dehydrogenase to homogeneity and subjected polypeptide fragments derived from digests of the protein to amino acid sequencing. The amino acid sequence of homoserine dehydrogenase from carrot (Daucus carota) indicates that in carrot both aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activities reside on the same protein. Additional evidence that aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase reside on a bifunctional protein is provided by coelution of activities during purification steps and by enzyme-specific gel staining techniques. Highly purified fractions containing aspartokinase activity were stained for aspartokinase activity, homoserine dehydrogenase activity, and protein. These gels confirmed that aspartokinase activity and homoserine dehydrogenase activity were present on the same protein. This arrangement of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activities residing on the same protein is also found in Escherichia coli, which has two bifunctional enzymes, aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I and aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II. The amino acid sequence of the major form of homoserine dehydrogenase from carrot cell suspension cultures most closely resembles that of the E. coli ThrA gene product aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

2.
Metabolism of aspartate in Mycobacterium smegmatis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mycobacterium smegmatis grows best on L-asparagine as a sole nitrogen source; this was confirmed. [14C]Aspartate was taken up rapidly (46 nmol.mg dry cells-1.h-1 from 1 mM L-asparagine) and metabolised to CO2 as well as to amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway. Proportionately more radioactivity appeared in the amino acids in bacteria grown in medium containing low nitrogen. Activities of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase, the initial enzymes of the aspartate pathway, were carried by separate proteins. Aspartokinase was purified as three isoenzymes and represented up to 8% of the soluble protein of M. smegmatis. All three isoenzymes contained molecular mass subunits of 50 kDa and 11 kDa which showed no activity individually; full enzyme activity was recovered on pooling the subunits. Km values for aspartate were: aspartokinases I and III, 2.4 mM; aspartokinase II, 6.4 mM. Aspartokinase I was inhibited by threonine and homoserine and aspartokinase III by lysine, but aspartokinase II was not inhibited by any amino acids. Aspartokinase activity was repressed by methionine and lysine with a small residue of activity attributable to unrepressed aspartokinase I. Homoserine dehydrogenase activity was 96% inhibited by 2 mM threonine; isoleucine, cysteine and valine had lesser effects and in combination gave additive inhibition. Homoserine dehydrogenase was repressed by threonine and leucine. Only amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway were tested for inhibition and repression. Of these, only one, meso-diaminopimilate, had no discernable effect on either enzyme activity.  相似文献   

3.
A library of Bacillus subtilis DNA in lambda Charon 4A (Ferrari, E., Henner, D.J., and Hoch, J.A. (1981) J. Bacteriol. 146, 430-432) was screened by an immunological procedure for DNA sequences encoding aspartokinase II of B. subtilis, an enzyme composed of two nonidentical subunits arranged in an alpha 2 beta 2 structure (Moir, D., and Paulus, H. (1977a) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 4648-4654). A recombinant bacteriophage was identified that harbored an 18-kilobase B. subtilis DNA fragment containing the coding sequences for both aspartokinase subunits. The coding sequence for aspartokinase II was subcloned into bacterial plasmids. In response to transformation with the recombinant plasmids, Escherichia coli produced two polypeptides immunologically related to B. subtilis aspartokinase II with molecular weights (43,000 and 17,000) indistinguishable from those found in enzyme produced in B. subtilis. Peptide mapping by partial proteolysis confirmed the identity of the polypeptides produced by the transformed E. coli cells with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II subunits. The size of the cloned B. subtilis DNA fragment could be reduced to 2.9 kilobases by cleavage with PstI restriction endonuclease without affecting its ability to direct the synthesis of complete aspartokinase II subunits, irrespective of its orientation in the plasmid vector. Further subdivision by cleavage with BamHI restriction endonuclease resulted in the production of truncated aspartokinase subunits, each shortened by the same extent. This suggested that a single DNA sequence encoded both aspartokinase subunits and provided an explanation for the earlier observation that the smaller beta subunit of aspartokinase II was highly homologous or identical with the carboxyl-terminal portion of the alpha subunit (Moir, D., and Paulus, H. (1977b) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 4655-4661). A map of the gene for B. subtilis aspartokinase II is proposed in which the coding sequence for the smaller beta subunit overlaps in the same reading frame the promoter-distal portion of the coding sequence for the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

4.
The enzymes aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase catalyze the reaction at key branching points in the aspartate pathway of amino acid biosynthesis. Enterococcus faecium has been found to contain two distinct aspartokinases and a single homoserine dehydrogenase. Aspartokinase isozymes eluted on gel filtration chromatography at molecular weights greater than 250,000 and about 125,000. The molecular weight of homoserine dehydrogenase was determined to be 220,000. One aspartokinase isozyme was slightly inhibited by meso-diaminopimelic acid. Another aspartokinase was repressed and inhibited by lysine. Although the level of diaminopimelate-sensitive (DAPs) enzyme was not much affected by growth conditions, the activity of lysine-sensitive (Lyss) aspartokinase disappeared rapidly during the stationary phase and was depressed in rich media. The synthesis of homoserine dehydrogenase was controlled by threonine and methionine. Threonine also inhibited the specific activity of this enzyme. The regulatory properties of aspartokinase isozymes and homoserine dehydrogenase from E. faecium are discussed and compared with those from Bacillus subtilis.  相似文献   

5.
The dimeric bifunctional enzyme aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II (Mr = 2 X 88,000) of Escherichia coli K12 can be cleaved into two nonoverlapping fragments by limited proteolysis with subtilisin. These two fragments can be separated under nondenaturing conditions as dimeric species, which indicates that each fragment has retained some of the association areas involved in the conformation of the native protein. The smaller fragment (Mr = 2 X 24,000) is devoid of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The larger fragment (Mr = 2 X 37,000) is endowed with full homoserine dehydrogenase activity. These results show that the polypeptide chains of the native enzyme are organized in two different domains, that both domains participate in building up the native dimeric structure, and that one of these domains only is responsible for homoserine dehydrogenase activity. A model of aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II is proposed, which accounts for the present results.  相似文献   

6.
The aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli K12, composed of four identical subunits of molecular weight 86,000, was carboxy-methylated, fragmented by cyanogen bromide treatment and citraconylated. Using gel filtration, ion exchange chromatography and preparative paper electrophoresis and chromatography, 15 of 21 cyanogen bromide peptides were isolated in pure form and characterized by their composition, their N-terminal amino acid, and by their content of known cysteinyl or tryptophanyl tryptic peptides.  相似文献   

7.
The gene coding for the subunits of aspartokinase II from Bacillus subtilis has been identified in a B. subtilis DNA library and cloned in a bacterial plasmid (Bondaryk, R. P., and Paulus, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 585-591). The introduction of a plasmid carrying the aspartokinase II gene into an auxotrophic Escherichia coli strain lacking all three aspartokinases restored its ability to grow in the absence of L-lysine, L-threonine, and L-methionine. The B. subtilis aspartokinase gene could thus be functionally expressed in E. coli and substitute for the E. coli aspartokinases. Measurement of aspartokinase levels in extracts of aspartokinaseless E. coli transformed with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II gene revealed an enzyme level comparable to that in a genetically derepressed B. subtilis strain. In spite of the high level of aspartokinase, the growth of the transformed E. coli strain was severely inhibited by the addition of L-lysine but could be restored by also adding L-homoserine. This apparently paradoxical sensitivity to lysine was due to the allosteric inhibition of B. subtilis aspartokinase II by that amino acid, a property which was also observed in extracts of the transformed E. coli strain. The synthesis and degradation of the aspartokinase II subunits were measured by labeling experiments in E. coli transformed with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II gene. In contrast to exponentially growing cells of B. subtilis which contained equimolar amounts of the aspartokinase alpha and beta subunits, the transformed E. coli strain contained a 3-fold molar excess of beta subunit. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the disproportionate level of beta subunit was not due to more rapid turnover of alpha subunit, both subunits being quite stable, but presumably to a more rapid rate of synthesis. After the addition of rifampicin, the synthesis of alpha subunit declined much more rapidly than that of beta subunit, indicating that the two subunits were translated independently from mRNA species that differ in functional stability. In conjunction with the results described in the preceding paper which demonstrated that the aspartokinase subunits are encoded by a single DNA sequence, these observations imply that the alpha and beta subunits of B. subtilis aspartokinase II are the products of in-phase overlapping genes.  相似文献   

8.
Two aspartokinase (ATP:L-aspartate 4-phosphotrasferase, EC 2.7.2.4) enzyme activities have been identified and partially purified from Bacillus brevis. Aspartokinase I is subject to both inhibition and repression by lysine, and has a molecular weight in the region of 110 000. Aspartokinase II is a lysine-stabilised enzyme, inhibited multivalently by lysine plus theonine and has a molecular weight in the region of 95 000. This attern of aspartokinase activity has not been described previously and is unusual in that one end product (lysine) regulates two isoenzymes catalysing the first reaction of a branced biosynthetic pathway. In the absence of lysine, aspartokinase II changes to a more unstable non-inhibitable enzyme. Both enzymes are stabilised by sulphydryl reducing agents and have similar affinities for ATP, aspartate and lysine. However, there is no evidence for a view that they are products of a common gene. Problem concerned with the regulation of aspartokinase activities in Bacillus species are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The threonine sensitive aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase devoid of aspartokinase activity has been extracted from a missense mutant of E. coli K12 and some of its properties have been investigated. The genetic localization of the corresponding mutation indicated that the amino acid replacement lies in the kinase region of the molecule. The cooperativity of threonine inhibition of the homoserine dehydrogenase activity is lowered. The measurement of the molecular weight of the enzyme in presence or absence of threonine indicates that the molecule dissociates more easily than the wild type enzyme. These results are discussed in view of the recent structural model proposed for aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

10.
The lysC gene encoding the lysine-sensitive aspartokinase III of Escherichia coli K12 has been cloned and its nucleotide sequence determined. Analysis of the deduced protein sequence (449 amino acid residues) reveals that the entire sequence of aspartokinase III is homologous to the N-terminal part of the two iso- and bifunctional aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenases I and II of E. coli. An evolutionary pathway leading to the three molecular species present in the same organism is proposed, and the possible involvement of a highly conserved region in subunit interactions is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We report here a comparison between immunochemical properties of the bifunctional enzyme aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II of E.coli K12 and of its two isolated proteolytic fragments. Both fragments, one inactive and one endowed with homoserine dehydrogenase activity, react with antibodies raised against the native enzyme. Some of the antibodies elicited against the dehydrogenase fragment can recognize regions of this fragment which are not exposed in the entire enzyme.The immunochemical results are used to discuss a simple model in which this bifunctional enzyme is folded up in two domains. The organization of aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II is compared to that of another bifunctional enzyme aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I with which it shares some sequence homology.  相似文献   

13.
Mutants requiring threonine plus methionine (or homoserine), or threonine plus methionine plus diaminopimelate (or homoserine plus diaminopimelate) have been isolated from strains possessing only one of the three isofunctional aspartokinases. They have been classified in several groups according to their enzymatic defects. Their mapping is described. Several regions of the chromosome are concerned: thrA (aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I) is mapped in the same region as thrB and thrC (0 min). lysC (aspartokinase III) is mapped at 80 min, far from the other genes coding for diaminopimelate synthesis. metLM (aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II) lies at 78 min closely linked to metB, metJ, and metF.  相似文献   

14.
In the presence of l-threonine, the allosteric effector, most of the antigenic determinants situated in the aspartokinase region of the wild-type enzyme become unavailable to the antibodies raised against a fragment of the enzyme containing this region and devoid of homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The cross-reactivities of the antibodies raised against this fragment (extracted from a nonsense mutant) and a fragment endowed with homoserine dehydrogenase activity but devoid of aspartokinase activity (obtained by limited proteolysis) with the corresponding antigens were studied. The conclusion is drawn that the two fragments, which share an overlapping sequence of molecular weight about 17,000, share at least two antigenic determinants.  相似文献   

15.
Dimers of aspartokinase I/homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli K 12 have been isolated under very mild conditions. The dimers which cannot be distinguished from the tetramers by their kinetic properties, reassociate in the presence of potassium ions or L-aspartate. The selective sensitivity of aspartokinase I/homoserine dehydrogenase I to mild proteolytic digestion of dimers has been used to probe the reassociation reaction under the conditions of aspartokinase assay. We demonstrate that rapid reassociation occurs and that the protein species present in the assay when dimers are used to test the activity is tetrameric. These results confirm the previously proposed model for the subunit association of aspartokinase I/homoserine dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

16.
A NAD+-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase, the activity of which induces at the same time as luceriferase, has been purified from the bioluminescent bacterium Beneckea harveyi, and its chemical and physical properties have been investigated. The purification is accomplished in three steps resulting in an enzyme preparation that gives a single protein band on three different gel electrophoresis systems. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 120,000 by gel filtration. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis gave a molecular weight of 59,000 indicating that aldehyde dehydrogenase has a dimeric structure with subunits of similar molecular weight. The purified enzyme has a high specificity for long chain aliphatic aldehydes; the Michaelis constants for aldehydes decrease with increasing chain length as also observed for bacterial aldehyde dehydrogenases involved in the metabolism of hydrocarbons. The aldehyde specificity of the aldehyde dehydrogenase is similar to that of luciferase indicating that the functional role of the enzyme may be linked with the bioluminescent system.  相似文献   

17.
Limited proteolysis of aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli by type VI protease from Streptomyces griseus yields five proteolytic fragments, three of which are dimeric, the other two being monomeric. One of the monomeric fragments (27 kilodaltons) exhibits residual aspartokinase activity, while the second one (33 kilodaltons) possesses residual homoserine dehydrogenase activity. The smallest of the dimeric species (2 X 25 kilodaltons) is inactive; the two other dimers exhibit either only homoserine dehydrogenase activity (2 X 59 kilodaltons) or both activities (hybrid fragment, 89 + 59 kilodaltons). This characterization of the proteolytic species in terms of molecular weight, subunit structure, and activity leads to the proposal of a triglobular model for the native enzyme. In addition, the time course of the formation of the various fragments was followed by measuring enzymatic activity and performing gel electrophoretic analysis of the protein mixture at defined time intervals during proteolysis. On the basis of the results of these studies, a reaction scheme describing the succession of events during proteolysis is given.  相似文献   

18.
The inactivation of the aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I by iodoacetic acid and the effect on the sensitivity to its inhibitor, L-threonine, were examined. Both aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase inactivation, as well as the dehydrogenase desensitization toward L-threonine occur as a pseudo-first order process. During its inactivation, the aspartokinase remains sensitive to L-threonine. At 50% inactivation, the inhibition curve of the aspartokinase by L-threonine displays homotropic cooperative effects. This alkylated protein retains eight binding sites for L-threonine. During the carboxymethylation, the protein remains in the tetrameric form until half of the kinase activity is lost. At the end of the inactivation aggregate forms and dimers appear.  相似文献   

19.
Aspartokinase (EC 2.7.2.4) and homoserine dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.3) catalyze steps in the pathway for the synthesis of lysine, threonine, and methionine from aspartate. Homoserine dehydrogenase was purified from carrot (Daucus carota L.) cell cultures and portions of it were subjected to amino acid sequencing. Oligonucleotides deduced from the amino acid sequences were used as primers in a polymerase chain reaction to amplify a DNA fragment using DNA derived from carrot cell culture mRNA as template. The amplification product was radiolabelled and used as a probe to identify cDNA clones from libraries derived from carrot cell culture and root RNA. Two overlapping clones were isolated. Together the cDNA clones delineate a 3089 bp long sequence encompassing an open reading frame encoding 921 amino acids, including the mature protein and a long chloroplast transit peptide. The deduced amino acid sequence has high homology with the Escherichia coli proteins aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I and aspartokinase II-homoserine dehydrogenase II. Like the E. coli genes the isolated carrot cDNA appears to encode a bifunctional aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase enzyme.Abbreviations AK aspartokinase - HSDH homoserine dehydrogenase - PCR polymerase chain reaction - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate The mention of vendor or product does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture over vendors of similar products not mentioned.  相似文献   

20.
To construct a threonine-hyperproducing strain of Serratia marcescens Sr41, the six regulatory mutations for three aspartokinases and two homoserine dehydrogenases were combined in a single strain by three transductional crosses. The constructed strain, T-1026, carried the lysC1 mutation leading to lack of feedback inhibition and repression of aspartokinase III, the thrA1(1) mutation desensitizing aspartokinase I to feedback inhibition, the thrA2(1) mutation releasing feedback inhibition of homoserine dehydrogenase I, the two hnr mutations derepressing aspartokinase I and homoserine dehydrogenase I, and the etr-1 mutation derepressing aspartokinase II and homoserine dehydrogenase II. The strain produced ca. 40 mg of threonine per ml of medium containing sucrose and urea. Furthermore, the productivity of strain T-1026 was compared with those of strains devoid of more than one of the six regulatory mutations.  相似文献   

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