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1.
Pancreatic ribonuclease from muskrat (Ondatra zibethica) was isolated and its amino acid sequence was determined from tryptic digests of the performic acid-oxidized and the reduced and aminoethylated enzyme. The peptides have been positioned in the sequence by homology with other ribonucleases. This could be done unambiguously for all peptides except Arg-Arg (tentative position 32-33) and Ser-Arg (tentative position 75-76). The amino acid sequences of the peptides were determined by the dansyl-Edman method, with the exception of residues 23-25 and 99-102, which were positioned by homology. The enzyme differs in 38 positions from the enzyme from rat and in 31-42 positions from other mammalian pancreatic ribonucleases, while rat ribonuclease differs at 44-52 positions from the other enzymes. These data point to a common ancestry of the enzymes from muskrat and rat and an increased evolution rate of rat ribonuclease after divergence of the ancestors of both species. Muskrat ribonuclease contains no carbohydrate, although the enzyme possesses a recognition site for carbohydrate attachment in the sequence Asn-Val-Thr (62-64).  相似文献   

2.
Amino acid sequence of the nonsecretory ribonuclease of human urine   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The amino acid sequence of a nonsecretory ribonuclease isolated from human urine was determined except for the identity of the residue at position 7. Sequence information indicates that the ribonucleases of human liver and spleen and an eosinophil-derived neurotoxin are identical or very closely related gene products. The sequence is identical at about 30% of the amino acid positions with those of all of the secreted mammalian ribonucleases for which information is available. Identical residues include active-site residues histidine-12, histidine-119, and lysine-41, other residues known to be important for substrate binding and catalytic activity, and all eight half-cystine residues common to these enzymes. Major differences include a deletion of six residues in the (so-called) S-peptide loop, insertions of two, and nine residues, respectively, in three other external loops of the molecule, and an addition of three residues at the amino terminus. The sequence shows the human nonsecretory ribonuclease to belong to the same ribonuclease superfamily as the mammalian secretory ribonucleases, turtle pancreatic ribonuclease, and human angiogenin. Sequence data suggest that a gene duplication occurred in an ancient vertebrate ancestor; one branch led to the nonsecretory ribonuclease, while the other branch led to a second duplication, with one line leading to the secretory ribonucleases (in mammals) and the second line leading to pancreatic ribonuclease in turtle and an angiogenic factor in mammals (human angiogenin). The nonsecretory ribonuclease has five short carbohydrate chains attached via asparagine residues at the surface of the molecule; these chains may have been shortened by exoglycosidase action.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The folding kinetics of seven different pancreatic ribonucleases are compared both under native conditions and within the unfolding transition. In general, the folding kinetics of these proteins are similar despite numerous amino acid substitutions. Ribonucleases with 4-6 proline residues show 80% slow-folding species. For three ribonucleases with 7 prolines this number increases to 90%. Porcine ribonuclease with a unique Pro 114-Pro 115 sequence folds significantly slower than other ribonucleases which do not show this sequence.  相似文献   

4.
The amino-acid sequence of pancreatic ribonuclease from the chromosomal species of Spalax ehrenbergi with karyotype 2n = 60 was determined. From the comparison of the sequence with other mammalian sequences we found that Spalax diverged from the myomorph rodent branch before the divergence of the Muridae and the Cricetidae. All myomorph rodent sequences evolved faster than those of other mammals, an effect being most pronounced for the rat sequence. Spalax ribonuclease shares several amino-acid residues with other myomorph rodent species. These are not or only rarely observed outside this rodent suborder. However, there are 6 amino-acid replacements not observed earlier in pancreatic ribonucleases, and 2 other replacements and an insertion of one residue in the variable loop 15-24 are only observed in the enzyme from turtle pancreas.  相似文献   

5.
Sequence analysis of a cloned cDNA coding for bovine seminal ribonuclease   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The sequence of a cloned cDNA coding for bovine seminal ribonuclease, an enzyme secreted in the bull seminal vesicles, was determined. The cDNA starts at the amino acid residue 47 and terminates 12 nucleotides beyond the consensus sequence AAUAAA in the 3' non-coding region of the mRNA. Northern blotting analysis shows that the mRNA for bovine seminal ribonuclease consists of about 950 nucleotides, a value that is similar to that of other mRNAs coding for ribonucleases of the pancreatic type.  相似文献   

6.
A ribonuclease was isolated from serum-free supernatants of the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line HT-29. It was purified by cation-exchange and C18 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The protein is basic, has a molecular weight of approximately 16,000, and has an amino acid composition that is significantly different from that of human pancreatic ribonuclease. The amino terminus is blocked, and the carboxyl-terminal residue is glycine. The catalytic properties of this ribonuclease resemble those of the pancreatic ribonucleases in numerous respects. Thus, it exhibits a pH optimum of approximately 6 for dinucleotide cleavage and employs a two-step mechanism in which transphosphorylation to a cyclic 2',3'-phosphate is followed by slower hydrolysis to produce a 3'-phosphate. It does not cleave NpN' substrates in which adenosine or guanosine is at the N position and prefers purines at the N' position. Like bovine ribonuclease A, the HT-29-derived ribonuclease is inactivated by reductive methylation or by treatment with iodoacetate at pH 5.5 and is strongly inhibited by the human placental ribonuclease inhibitor. However, in contrast, the tumor enzyme does not cleave CpN bonds at an appreciable rate and prefers poly(uridylic acid) as substrate 1000-fold over poly(cytidylic acid). It also hydrolyzes cytidine cyclic 2',3'-phosphate at least 100 times more slowly than uridine cyclic 2',3'-phosphate and is inhibited much less strongly by cytidine 2'-monophosphate than by uridine 2'-monophosphate. Other ribonucleases known to prefer poly(uridylic acid) were isolated both from human serum and from liver and were compared with the tumor enzyme. The physical, functional, and chromatographic properties of the serum ribonuclease are essentially identical with those of the tumor enzyme. The liver enzymes, however, differ markedly from the HT-29 ribonuclease. The potential utility of the tumor ribonuclease in the diagnosis of cancer is considered.  相似文献   

7.
The amino acid sequences of the pancreatic ribonuclease from capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) and cuis (Galea musteloides) were determined. Both species belong to the same superfamily of the hystricomorph rodents as the guinea-pig. In guinea-pig pancreas two ribonucleases are present as a result of a recent gene duplication, but in capybara and cuis pancreas only one single ribonuclease has been found. A most parsimonious tree of ribonucleases indicates that the gene duplication leading to both guinea-pig ribonucleases occurred before the divergence of guinea-pig from capybara and cuis. This would mean that changes in expression of the ribonuclease genes have occurred in these taxa. Cuis and capybara ribonuclease have no Asn-X-Ser/Thr sequences and are carbohydrate-free proteins. Capybara ribonuclease has leucine at position 114, a position occupied by proline in the cis-configuration in bovine pancreatic ribonuclease.  相似文献   

8.
The amino acid sequences of the pancreatic ribonucleases from river-breed water buffaloes from Italy and swamp-breed water buffaloes from Indonesia differ at three positions. One of the differences involves a replacement of asparagine-34, with covalently attached carbohydrate on all molecules, in the river-breed enzyme by serine in the swamp-breed enzyme. The ribonuclease content of the pancreas differs considerably between breeds and is lower in river buffaloes. A ribonuclease preparation from two swamp buffaloes contained a minor glycosylated component. Preliminary evidence was obtained that the amino acid sequence of this component has factors in common with the main component of the swamp-breed ribonuclease and with the river-breed enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
J J Beintema 《FEBS letters》1985,185(1):115-120
Parts of the amino acid sequences of horse and dromedary pancreatic ribonuclease were reinvestigated. The sequence of residues 21-25 in horse ribonuclease is Ser-Asn-Pro-Thr-Tyr or Ser-Asn-Ser-Thr-Tyr. The asparagine in the latter sequence is glycosylated. Horse ribonuclease possesses four additional amino acid residues at the C-terminus, like a number of other ribonucleases. Position 39 in horse and dromedary ribonuclease is not deleted but is occupied by tryptophan.  相似文献   

10.
Molecular evolutionary analyses of mammalian ribonucleases have shown that gene duplication events giving rise to three paralogous genes occurred in ruminant ancestors. One of these genes encodes a ribonuclease identified in bovine brain. A peculiar feature of this enzyme and orthologous sequences in other ruminants are C-terminal extensions consisting of 17-27 amino acid residues. Evidence was obtained by Western blot analysis for the presence of brain-type ribonucleases in brain tissue not only of ox, but also of sheep, roe deer and chevrotain (Tragulus javanicus), a member of the earliest diverged taxon of the ruminants. The C-terminal extension of brain-type ribonuclease from giraffe deviates much in sequence from orthologues in other ruminants, due to a change of reading frame. However, the gene encodes a functional enzyme, which could be expressed in heterologous systems. The messenger RNA of bovine brain ribonuclease is not only expressed at a high level in brain tissue but also in lactating mammary gland. The enzyme was isolated and identified from this latter tissue, but was not present in bovine milk, although pancreatic ribonucleases A and B could be isolated from both sources. This suggests different ways of secretion of the two enzyme types, possibly related to structural differences. The sequence of the brain-type RNase from chevrotain suggests that the C-terminal extensions of ruminant brain-type ribonucleases originate from deletions in the ancestral DNA (including a region with stop codons), followed by insertion of a 5-8-fold repeated hexanucleotide sequence, coding for a proline-rich polypeptide.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular evolution of pancreatic-type ribonucleases   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6  
Amino acid sequences of 39 mammalian ribonucleases have been used to construct trees by the maximum parsimony procedure. These trees are in fairly good agreement with the biological classification of the species involved. In the branching order of the six investigated eutherian mammalian orders, the edentates diverge first, followed, probably, by the primates. No definite conclusions can be drawn about the order of divergence of the perissodactyls, the rodents, and the group consisting of artiodactyls plus cetaceans. Nucleic acid sequences of part of the messenger RNAs of rat pancreatic and bovine seminal ribonuclease were compared. Both messengers have a second stop codon at position 129, which is in agreement with the addition of four residues at the C-terminus in several other ribonucleases. Turtle pancreatic ribonuclease and human angiogenin differ from each other and from the mammalian ribonucleases at 55%-70% of the amino acid positions; they share a number of structural features. Mammalian nonsecretory ribonucleases are homologous to the pancreatic ribonucleases in sequence regions where the active-site histidine residues are located.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The primary structures of pancreatic ribonucleases from 26 species (18 artiodactyls, horse, whale, 5 rodents and turtle) are known. Several species contain identical ribonucleases (cow/bison; sheep/goat), other species show polymorphism (arabian camel) or the presence of two structural gene loci (guinea pig pancreas contains two ribonucleases that differ at 31 positions). 26 different sequences (including the ribonuclease from bovine seminal plasma which is paralogous to the pancreatic ribonucleases) were used to construct a most parsimonious tree. A second tree that most closely approximates current biological opinion requires 402 whereas the most parsimonious tree requires 389 nucleotide substitutions. The artiodactyl part of the most parsimonious tree conforms quite well with the biological one of this order, except for the position of the giraffe which is placed with the pronghorn. Other parts of the most parsimonious tree agree less with the biological tree, probably as a result of the occurrence of many parallel and back substitutions. Bovine seminal ribonuclease was found to be the result of a gene duplication which occurred before the divergence of the true ruminants, but after the divergence of this group from the cameloids.The evolutionary rate of ribonuclease was found to be 390, 3.0 and 11 nucleotide substitutions per 109 yrs per ribonuclease gene, codon and covarion respectively. However, there is much variation in evolutionary rate in different taxa. Values ranging from about 100 (in the bovidae) to about 700 (in the rodents) nucleotide substitutions per 109 yrs per gene were found.A method for counting parallel and back mutations is presented. The 389 nucleotide substitutions in the most parsimonious tree occur at 88 codon positions; 154 of them are the result of parallel and back mutations. Parallel evolution to a similar structure, including the presence of 2 sites with carbohydrate, was demonstrated in an extensive region at the surface of pig and guinea pig ribonuclease B. The presence of carbohydrate probably is important in a number of species. A correlation between the presence of heavily glycosidated ribonucleases and coecal digestion was observed. Hypothetical sequences of ancestral ungulate ribonucleases contain many recognition sites for carbohydrate attachment; this suggests that herbivores with coecal digestion might have preceded the true ruminants in mammalian evolution.  相似文献   

13.
The amino acid sequence of golden hamster pancreatic ribonuclease was determined by analysis of tryptic, chymotryptic, thermolytic, and CNBr peptides and by automatic sequence analysis of the intact protein. Like all RNases with an Asn-Met-Thr sequence at positions 34-36, hamster RNase is glycosylated at position 34 with a complex-type carbohydrated chain. Val-17, Ala-18, His-55, His-76 and Ala-90 have never been observed in other pancreatic RNases. Ala-90 replaces Ser-90, which had been invariant in all mammalian RNases studied so far. The amino acid sequence of hamster RNase differs at 15 positions from that of another Cricetidae rodent, the muskrat. The similarity between both ribonucleases was used to confirm a few less certain parts of the muskrat RNase sequence. The replacement rate of the RNases of the Cricetidae appeared to be higher than the average rate in the mammals, but much lower than the rate in another myomorph family, the Muridae (mouse and rat). Possibly, in many respects, the Cricetidae underwent less evolutionary change in recent times than the evolutionarily highly successful Muridae.  相似文献   

14.
The primary structure of pancreatic ribonuclease from langur (Presbytis entellus) has been determined. This sequence differs from that of human pancreatic ribonuclease at 14 (11%) of the amino acid positions. Eight of these 14 differences involve changes of charge, with the langur enzyme having five fewer positive charges than the human enzyme. The difference in charge between human and langur ribonuclease may be an adaptation to the different requirements for a nondigestive and a digestive role, respectively. A number of similarities in expression, gene duplications, and properties between mammalian ribonucleases and lysozymes have been observed, indicating similar adaptations in both enzyme systems.  相似文献   

15.
Primary structure of a non-secretory ribonuclease from bovine kidney   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The primary structure of a non-secretory ribonuclease from bovine kidney (RNase K2) was determined. The sequence determined was VPKGLTKARWFEIQHIQPRLLQCNKAMSGV NNYTQHCKPENTFLHNVFQDVTAVCDMPNIICKNGRHNCHQSPKPVNLTQCNFIAGRYPDC RYHDDAQYKFFIVACDPPQKTDPPYHLVPVHLDKYF. The sequence homology with human non-secretory RNase, bovine pancreatic RNase, and human secretory RNase are 46, 34.6, and 32.3%, respectively. The bovine kidney RNase has two inserted sequences, a tripeptide at the N-terminus and a heptapeptide between the 113th and 114th position of bovine pancreatic RNase; on the other hand, it is deleted of the hexapeptide consisting of the 17th to the 22nd amino acid residue of RNase A. The amino acid residues assumed to be the constituents of the bovine pancreatic RNase active site are all conserved except F120 (L in RNase K2).  相似文献   

16.
There have been many studies on the chemistry of mammalian pancreatic ribonucleases (ribonucleases 1), but the functional biology of this family of homologous proteins is still largely unknown. Many studies have been performed on the molecular evolution and properties of this enzyme from species belonging to a large number of mammalian taxa, including paralogous gene products resulting from recent gene duplications. Novel ribonuclease 1 sequences were determined for three rodent species (gundi, brush-tailed porcupine, and squirrel), rabbit, a fruit bat, elephant, and aardvark, and the new sequences were used for deriving most parsimonious networks of ribonucleases from different mammalian orders, including earlier determined nucleotide sequences and also a larger set of protein sequences. Weak support for interordinal relationships were obtained, except for an Afrotheria clade containing elephant and aardvark. Results of current analyses and also those obtained 20 years ago on amino acid sequences confirm conclusions derived recently from larger data sets of other molecules. Several examples of recent gene duplications in ribonucleases 1 are discussed, with respect to illustrate the concepts of orthology and paralogy. Previously evidence was presented for extensive parallelism between sequence regions with attached carbohydrate (about one quarter of the molecule) of unrelated species with cecal digestion (pig and guinea pig). These features are also present in the sequences of elephant and fruit bat, species with cecal digestion, but with a very low ribonuclease content in their pancreas.  相似文献   

17.
Pancreatic ribonucleases from several species (whitetail deer, roe deer, guinea pig, and arabian camel) exhibit more than one amino acid at particular positions in their amino acid sequences. Since these enzymes were isolated from pooled pancreas, the origin of this heterogeneity is not clear. The pancreatic ribonucleases from 11 individual arabian camels (Camelus dromedarius) have been investigated with respect to the lysine-glutamine heterogeneity at position 103 (Welling et al., 1975). Six ribonucleases showed only one basic band and five showed two bands after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting a gene frequency of about 0.75 for the Lys gene and about 0.25 for the Gln gene. The amino acid sequence of bactrian camel (Camelus bactrianus) ribonuclease isolated from individual pancreatic tissue was determined and compared with that of arabian camel ribonuclease. The only difference was observed at position 103. In the ribonucleases from two unrelated bactrian camels, only glutamine was observed at that position.Part of this work has been carried out under the auspices of the Netherlands Foundation for Chemical Research (S.O.N.) and with financial aid from the Netherlands Organisation for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.).  相似文献   

18.
A hypothesis, proposed 25 years ago, that there is selection against glycosylation in ruminant pancreatic ribonucleases by replacement of methionine to leucine in the ancestral carbohydrate attachment site Asn-Met-Thr at residues 34-36, was experimentally confirmed. The replacement of leucine at position 35 by methionine in bovine ribonuclease resulted in a three-fold relative increase in glycosylation when expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells.  相似文献   

19.
Onconase(ONC) is an amphibian ribonuclease that is in clinical trials as a cancer chemotherapeutic agent. ONC is a homolog of ribonuclease A (RNase A). RNase A can be made toxic to cancer cells by replacing Gly(88) with an arginine residue, thereby enabling the enzyme to evade the endogenous cytosolic ribonuclease inhibitor protein (RI). Unlike ONC, RNase A contains a KFERQ sequence (residues 7-11), which signals for lysosomal degradation. Here, substitution of Arg(10) of the KFERQ sequence has no effect on either the cytotoxicity of G88R RNase A or its affinity for RI. In contrast, K7A/G88R RNase A is nearly 10-fold more cytotoxic than G88R RNase A and has more than 10-fold less affinity for RI. Up-regulation of the KFERQ-mediated lysosomal degradation pathway has no effect on the cytotoxicity of these ribonucleases. Thus, KFERQ-mediated degradation does not limit the cytotoxicity of RNase A variants. Moreover, only two amino acid substitutions (K7A and G88R) are shown to endow RNase A with cytotoxic activity that is nearly equal to that of ONC.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Pancreatic ribonuclease from pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) was isolated and its amino acid sequence was determined from a tryptic digest of the performic acid-oxidized protein. Peptides were positioned by homology with other ribonucleases. Only peptides that differed in amino acid composition from the corresponding peptides of ox or goat ribonucleases were sequenced.In a most parsimonious tree of pancreatic ribonucleases, pronghorn and giraffe were placed together and these two were placed with the bovids, leaving the deer as a taxon separate from the other ruminants. The amino acid replacements that determine this tree topology are three rarely occurring replacements shared by pronghorn and giraffe. Notwithstanding their close phylogenetic relationship, both ribonucleases differ strongly in extent of glycosidation, net charge and antigenic properties.  相似文献   

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