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1.
Cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) are 132-residue cytosolic proteins which have 56% amino acid sequence identity and bind all-trans-retinol as their endogenous ligand. They belong to a family of cytoplasmic proteins which have evolved to bind distinct hydrophobic ligands. Their patterns of tissue-specific and developmental regulation are distinct. We have compared the ligand binding properties of rat apo-CRBP and apo-CRBP II that have been expressed in Escherichia coli. Several observations indicate that the E. coli-derived apoproteins are structurally similar to the native rat proteins: they co-migrate on isoelectric focusing gels; and when complexed with all-trans-retinol, their absorption and excitation/emission spectra are nearly identical to those of the authentic rat holoproteins. Comparative lifetime and acrylamide quenching studies suggest that there are differences in the conformations of apo-CRBP and apo-CRBP II. The interaction of E. coli-derived apo-CRBP and apo-CRBP II with a variety of retinoids was analyzed using spectroscopic techniques. Both apoproteins formed high affinity complexes with all-trans-retinol (K'd approximately 10 nM). In direct binding assays, all-trans-retinal bound to both apoproteins (K'd approximately 50 nM for CRBP; K'd approximately 90 nM for CRBP II). However, all-trans-retinal could displace all-trans-retinol bound to CRBP II but not to CRBP. These observations suggests that there is a specific yet distinct interaction between these two proteins and all-trans-retinal. Apo-CRBP and apo-CRBP II did not demonstrate significant binding to either retinoic acid or methyl retinoate, an uncharged derivative of all-trans-retinoic acid. This indicates that the carboxymethyl group of methyl retinoate cannot be sterically accommodated in their binding pockets and that failure to bind retinoic acid probably is not simply due to the negative charge of its C-15 carboxylate group. Finally, neither all-trans-retinol nor retinoic acid bound to E. coli-derived rat intestinal fatty acid-binding protein, a homologous protein whose tertiary structure is known. Together, the data suggest that these three family members have acquired unique functional capabilities.  相似文献   

2.
Rat cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) is an abundant 134-residue intestinal protein that binds all-trans-retinol and all-trans-retinal. It belongs to a family of homologous, 15-kDa cytoplasmic proteins that bind hydrophobic ligands in a noncovalent fashion. These binding proteins include a number of proteins that bind long chain fatty acids. X-ray analyses of the structure of two family members, rat intestinal fatty acid-binding protein and bovine myelin P2 protein, indicate that they have a high degree of conformational similarity and that the carboxylate group of their bound fatty acid interacts with a delta-guanidium group of at least 1 of 2 "buried" arginine residues. These 2 Arg residues are conserved in other family members that bind long chain fatty acids and in cellular retinoic acid-binding protein, but are replaced by Gln109 and Gln129 in CRBP II. We have genetically engineered two amino acid substitutions in CRBP II: 1) Gln109 to Arg and 2) Gln129 to Arg. The purified Escherichia coli-derived CRBP II mutant proteins were analyzed by fluorescence and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Both mutants exhibit markedly decreased binding of all-trans-retinol and all-trans-retinaldehyde, but no increased binding of all-trans-retinoic acid. Arg substitution for Gln109 but not for Gln129 produces a dramatic increase in palmitate binding activity. Analysis of the endogenous fatty acids associated with the purified E. coli-derived proteins revealed that E. coli-derived intestinal fatty acid binding protein and the Arg109 CRBP II mutant are complexed with endogenous fatty acids in a qualitatively and quantitatively similar manner. These results provide evidence that this internal Arg may play an important role in the binding of long chain fatty acids by members of this protein family.  相似文献   

3.
Rat intestinal fatty acid-binding protein (I-FABP) is an abundant, 15,124-Da polypeptide found in the cytosol of small intestinal epithelial cells (enterocytes). It is homologous to rat liver fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP), a 14,273-Da cytosolic protein which is found in enterocytes as well as hepatocytes. It is unclear why the small intestinal epithelium contains two abundant fatty acid-binding proteins. A systematic comparative analysis of the ligand binding characteristics of the two FABPs has not been reported. To undertake such a study we expressed the coding region of a full length I-FABP cDNA in Escherichia coli and purified large quantities of the protein. We also purified rat L-FABP from a similar, previously described expression system (Lowe, J. B., Strauss, A. W., and Gordon, J. I. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12696-12704). Analysis of fatty acids associated with each of the homogeneous E. coli-derived FABPs suggested that the two proteins differed in their ligand binding specificity and capacity. All of the fatty acids associated with I-FABP were saturated while 30% of the E. coli fatty acids bound to L-FABP were unsaturated (16:1, 18:1, 18:2). We directly analyzed the ability of I- and L-FABP to bind fatty acids of different chain length and degree of saturation using a hydroxyalkoxypropyl dextran-based assay. Scatchard analysis revealed that each mole of L-FABP can bind up to 2 mol of long chain fatty acid while each mole of I-FABP can bind only 1 mole of fatty acid. L-FABP exhibited a relatively higher affinity for unsaturated fatty acids (oleate, arachidonate) than for saturated fatty acid (palmitate). By contrast, we were not able to detect a significant difference in the affinity of I-FABP for palmitate, oleate, and arachidonate. Neither protein exhibited any appreciable affinity for fatty acids whose chain length was less than C16. The observed differences in ligand affinities and capacities suggest that these proteins may have distinct roles in metabolism and/or compartmentalization of fatty acids within enterocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) are two highly homologous cytoplasmic proteins that bind all-trans-retinol. We have recently demonstrated that the mouse genes encoding CRBP and CRBP II are closely linked on chromosome 9 and that both human genes are located on chromosome 3 (Demmer, L.A., Birkenmeier, E.H., Sweetser, D.A., Levin, M.S., Zollman, S., Sparkes, R.S., Mohandas, T., Lusis, A.J., and Gordon, J.I. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2458-2467). We have now used RNA blot hybridization analysis to assess the degree to which these genes are coordinately expressed in fetal, suckling, weaning, and adult rat tissues. Both genes exhibit different developmental patterns of expression in liver, intestine, lung, kidney, testes, and placenta. In the intestine, CRBP mRNA was detected during the 16th day of gestation--prior to the development of a well-differentiated absorptive epithelium--and remained essentially unchanged throughout the peri- and postpartum periods. By contrast, the pattern of intestinal CRBP II mRNA accumulation closely parallels the times of first appearance, and subsequent proliferation, of the intestinal absorptive columnar epithelium, supporting the hypothesis that CRBP II is involved in the intestinal uptake or intracellular trafficking of this hydrophobic vitamin. In the fetal liver, both genes were expressed by gestational day 16. Whereas the concentration of hepatic CRBP mRNA increased markedly during the suckling and early weaning periods, CRBP II mRNA levels fell abruptly immediately after birth. These peripartum changes were not paralleled by remarkable alterations in the steady state levels of hepatic retinol. Marked changes in the expression of CRBP in the liver and of CRBP II in the intestine were also documented in pregnant and lactating female rats. These differences in CRBP/CRBP II gene expression strongly suggest that their proteins serve different physiological functions. The peripartum liver may provide a useful model for dissecting the relative roles played by these homologous proteins in retinoid metabolism as well as the factors which modulate activation and repression their genes.  相似文献   

5.
Rat cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) is a small (15.6 kDa) intracellular protein that binds all-trans-retinol. In the adult rat, expression of the CRBP II gene is essentially limited to the small intestinal lining cells (enterocytes), suggesting that CRBP II may be uniquely adapted for intestinal metabolism of newly absorbed retinol. Functional and structural analysis of this protein has been hampered by difficulties in freeing rat intestinal CRBP II from its ligand without denaturation. To circumvent this problem, we have obtained efficient expression of rat apoCRBP II in Escherichia coli. The purified E. coli-derived apoprotein, when complexed with all-trans-retinol, demonstrates fluorescence excitation-emission spectra and absorption spectra indistinguishable from that of CRBP II-retinol isolated from rat intestine. Quantitative ligand binding studies were performed by monitoring either the fluorescence of bound retinol or the quenching of protein fluorescence. They revealed that E. coli-derived CRBP II binds retinol tightly (the apparent dissociation constant is estimated to be 10(-7)-10(-8) M), with a stoichiometry of 1:1. Fluorescence quenching studies used acrylamide as a probe for the exposure of the 4 tryptophan residues to solvent. The results indicate that although there is heterogeneity in the exposure of these 4 tryptophan residues to solvent, they are situated in a relatively nonpolar environment. These studies suggest that E. coli-derived apoCRBP II will serve as a useful model for studying retinol-protein interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Rat cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) is a 15.6-kDa intestinal protein which binds all-trans-retinol and all-trans-retinal but not all-trans-retinoic acid. We have previously analyzed the interaction of Escherichia coli-derived rat apoCRBP II with several retinoids using fluorescence spectroscopic techniques. Interpretation of these experiments is complicated, because the protein has 4 tryptophan residues. To further investigate ligand-protein interactions, we have utilized 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of CRBP II labeled at its 4 tryptophan residues with 6-fluorotryptophan. Efficient incorporation of 6-fluorotryptophan (93%) was achieved by growing a tryptophan auxotroph of E. coli harboring a prokaryotic expression vector with a full-length rat CRBP II cDNA on defined medium supplemented with the analog. Comparison of the 19F NMR spectra of 6-fluorotryptophan-substituted CRBP II with and without bound all-trans-retinol revealed that resonances corresponding to 2 tryptophan residues (designated WA and WB) undergo large downfield changes in chemical shifts (2.0 and 0.5 ppm, respectively) associated with ligand binding. In contrast, 19F resonances corresponding to two other tryptophan residues (WC and WD) undergo only minor perturbations in chemical shifts. The 19F NMR spectra of 6-fluorotryptophan-substituted CRBP II complexed with all-trans-retinal and all-trans-retinol were very similar, suggesting that the interactions of these two ligands with the protein are similar. Molecular model building, based on the crystalline structures of two homologous proteins was used to predict the positions of the 4 tryptophan residues of CRBP II and to make tentative resonance assignments. The fact that ligand binding produced residue-specific changes in the chemical shifts of resonances in CRBP II suggests that NMR analysis of isotopically labeled retinoid-binding proteins expressed in E. coli will provide an alternate, albeit it complementary, approach to fluorescence spectroscopy for examining the structural consequences of their association with ligand.  相似文献   

7.
Rat intestinal cellular retinol binding protein II (CRBP II) is an abundant 134-residue protein that binds all-trans-retinol which contains 4 tryptophans in positions 9, 89, 107, and 110. Our ability to express CRBP II in Escherichia coli and to construct individual tryptophan substitution mutants by site-directed mutagenesis has provided a useful model system for studying the fluorescence of a multi-tryptophan protein. Each of the four mutant proteins binds all-trans-retinol with high affinity, although their affinities are less than that of the wild-type protein. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence analyses of these proteins indicate that W107 is at the hydrophobic binding site, W110 is in a polar environment, and the remaining two tryptophans are in a hydrophobic environment. Time-resolved fluorescence study indicates that excited-state energy transfer occurs from the hydrophobic tryptophans to W110. The Stern-Volmer analysis with acrylamide of these proteins reveals that static quenching occurs in the W9F mutant protein while others do not. The fluorescence of rat intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP), a related protein of known X-ray structure, was also studied for comparison. The results of these findings, coupled with those derived from NMR studies and molecular graphics, suggest that CRBP II undergoes minor structural changes in all of the mutant proteins. Since these effects may be cumulative on the protein structure and function, any conclusions derived from higher mutants in this family of proteins must be treated with caution.  相似文献   

8.
Cellular retinol-binding protein I (CRBP I) and cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) are closely homologous proteins that play distinct roles in the maintenance of vitamin A homeostasis. The solution structure and dynamics of CRBP I and CRBP II were compared by multidimensional NMR techniques. These studies indicated that differences in the mean backbone structures of CRBP I and CRBP II were localized primarily to the alphaII helix. Intraligand NOE cross-peaks were detected for the hydroxyl proton in the NOESY spectrum of CRBP I-bound retinol, but not for CRBP II-bound retinol, indicating that the conformational dynamics of retinol binding are different for these two proteins. As determined by Lipari-Szabo formalism, both the apo and holo forms of CRBP I and CRBP II are conformationally rigid on the pico- to nanosecond timescale. transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy-Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill -based 15N relaxation dispersion experiments at both 500 MHz and 600 MHz magnetic fields revealed that 84 and 62 residues for apo-CRBP I and II, respectively, showed detectable conformational exchange on a micro- to millisecond timescale, in contrast to three and seven residues for holo-CRBP I and II, respectively. Thus binding of retinol markedly reduced conformational flexibility in both CRBP I and CRBP II on the micro- to millisecond timescale. The 15N relaxation dispersion curves of apo-CRBP I and II were fit to a two-state conformational exchange model by a global iterative fitting process and by an individual (residue) fitting process. In the process of carrying out the global fit, more than half of the residue sites were eliminated. The individual chemical exchange rates k(ex), and chemical shift differences, Deltadelta, were increased in the putative portal region (alphaII helix and betaC-betaD turn) of apo-CRBP II compared to apo-CRBP I. These differences in conformational flexibility likely contribute to differences in how CRBP I and CRBP II interact with ligands, membranes and retinoid metabolizing enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
Rat intestinal fatty-acid-binding protein (I-FABP) is a small (15,124 Mr) cytoplasmic polypeptide that binds long-chain fatty acids in a non-covalent fashion. I-FABP is a member of a family of intracellular binding proteins that are thought to participate in the uptake, transport and/or metabolic targeting of hydrophobic ligands. The crystal structure of Escherichia coli-derived rat I-FABP with a single molecule of bound palmitate has been refined to 2 A resolution using a combination of least-squares methods, energy refinement and molecular dynamics. The combined methods resulted in a model with a crystallographic R-factor of 17.8% (7775 reflections, sigma greater than 2.0), root-mean-square bond length deviation of 0.009 A and root-mean-square bond angle deviation of 2.85 degrees. I-FABP contains ten antiparallel beta-strands organized into two approximately orthogonal, beta-sheets. The hydrocarbon tail of its single C16:0 ligand is present in a well-ordered, distinctively bent conformation. The carboxylate group of the fatty acid is located in the interior of I-FABP and forms a unique "quintet" of electrostatic interactions involving Arg106; Gln 115, and two solvent molecules. The hydrocarbon tail is bent with a slight left-handed helical twist from the carboxylate group to C-16. The bent methylene chain resides in a "cradle" formed by the side-chains of hydrophobic, mainly aromatic, amino acid residues. The refined molecular model of holo-I-FABP suggests several potential locations for entry and exiting of the fatty acid.  相似文献   

10.
Cellular retinol-binding protein type II (CRBP(II)) is a major protein in the small intestine, accounting for more than 1% of the soluble protein recovered from rat jejunal mucosa. Two forms of the protein, called CRBP(II)A and CRBP(II)B, were purified from rat small intestine using a three-column procedure. The two forms were present in equal abundance. The primary structures of CRBP(II)A and CRBP(II)B were determined using a combination of techniques including amino acid composition and sequence analyses, and fast atom bombardment and gas chromatography-electron impact mass spectrometry. The primary structures of both proteins were found to be identical, but they differed in their NH2-terminal processing. CRBP(II)B was acetylated at its NH2 terminus, while CRBP(II)A was not. The results also confirmed the amino acid sequence of CRBP(II)A that was deduced from the cDNA sequence by Li et al. (Li, E., Demmer, L. A., Sweetser, D. A., Ong, D. E., and Gordon, J. I. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 5770-5783). Antibodies capable of distinguishing between the two forms of CRBP(II) were used for immunohistochemical studies which indicated that the organ and cellular distributions of the two forms were identical. The 50% acetylation observed here in vivo fits the pattern predicted by recent in vitro studies which described the effect of NH2-terminal sequence on cotranslational NH2-terminal processing of cytosolic proteins (Boissel, J. P., Kasper, T. J., and Bunn, H. F. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8443-8449). Our results provide a basis for investigating the possibility of different roles of CRBP(II)A and CRBP(II)B within cells, as well as the importance of acetylation of the amino terminus for these biological functions.  相似文献   

11.
Cellular retinol-binding protein, type II (CRBP (II], an abundant protein of the rat small intestine, has recently been shown to be able to bind retinaldehyde in addition to retinol (MacDonald, P.N., and Ong, D. E. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 10550-10556). Retinaldehyde is produced in the intestine by oxidative cleavage of beta-carotene. The next step in the intestinal metabolism of vitamin A is the reduction of retinaldehyde to retinol which is then esterified for incorporation into chylomicrons. In the present study retinaldehyde bound to CRBP(II) was found to be available for reduction by microsomal preparations from rat small intestinal mucosa. The microsomal activity was about 8 times greater than the activity observed for an equal amount of cytosolic protein. Retinaldehyde reduction utilized either NADH or NADPH as cofactor, with NADH being slightly more effective. The apparent Km for retinaldehyde-CRBP(II) was 0.5 microM, and the Vmax was approximately 300 pmol/min/mg protein, a rate more than sufficient for the needs of the animal. The product retinol remained complexed to CRBP(II). The microsomal enzyme activity reduced free and bound retinaldehyde to approximately the same extent, although the aldehyde function of retinaldehyde bound to CRBP(II) was less accessible to chemical reducing agents than that of free retinaldehyde. Retinol bound to CRBP(II) could not be oxidized by the microsomal activity in the presence of NAD+, while free retinol or retinol bound to bovine serum albumin was oxidized to retinaldehyde. The more favorable reduction versus oxidation of retinoid bound to CRBP(II) consequently favored the reaction known to be required for the ultimate conversion of beta-carotene to retinyl esters for export from the gut.  相似文献   

12.
The primary structure of rat liver cellular retinol-binding protein   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The complete amino acid sequence of a cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) has been determined for the first time. The primary structure of rat liver CRBP was elucidated by analyses of cyanogen bromide fragments and peptides obtained by tryptic and thermolytic digestions. The single polypeptide chain of rat CRBP consists of 134 amino acid residues. Under reducing conditions, CRBP exists as a monomer, but, in the absence of reducing agents, dimers and multimers of the protein emerge. This is explained by the observation that CRBP contains 3 cysteines, one of which seems to be highly reactive. Whether CRBP contains a disulfide bond is not yet established. The present data extend the previously described homology between CRBP and a family of low molecular weight proteins, all members of which may bind hydrophobic ligands. Since some of these proteins apparently display intracellular transport functions, a similar role for CRBP is envisaged.  相似文献   

13.
Cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinol-binding protein, type ii (CRBP(II] are cytoplasmic proteins that bind trans-retinol as an endogenous ligand. These proteins are structurally similar having greater than 50% sequence homology. Employing fluorescence, absorbance, and competition studies, the ability of pure preparations of CRBP(II) and CRBP to bind various members of the vitamin A family has been examined. In addition to trans-retinol, CRBP(II) was able to form high affinity complexes (K'd less than 5 X 10(-8) M) with 13-cis-retinol, 3-dehydroretinol, and all-trans-retinaldehyde. CRBP bound those retinol isomers with similar affinities, but did not bind trans-retinaldehyde. Neither protein bound retinoic acid nor 9-cis- and 11-cis-retinol. The spectra of 13-cis-retinol and 3-dehydroretinol, when bound, were shifted and displayed fine structure compared to their spectra in organic solution. However, the lambda max and fluorescent yield of a particular ligand were different when bound to CRBP(II) versus CRBP. It appears that CRBP(II) and CRBP bind trans-retinol, 13-cis-retinol, and 3-dehydroretinol in a planar configuration. However, the binding sites of CRBP(II) and CRBP are clearly distinct based on the observed spectral differences of the bound ligands and the observations that only CRBP(II) could bind trans-retinaldehyde. The ability of CRBP(II) to bind trans-retinaldehyde suggests a physiological role for the protein in accepting retinaldehyde generated from the cleavage of beta-carotene in the absorptive cell.  相似文献   

14.
Heterologous cDNA clones were used as hybridization probes to define the temporal expression of intestinal functions during fetal and postnatal development in the pig. Northern hybridization analysis revealed the presence of the mRNAs for the cellular retinol binding protein CRBP II, for the digestive enzyme aminopeptidase N, and for the microvillar proteins villin and ezrin in the small intestine of both weaned and 40-day fetal pigs. The presence of these mRNAs suggests that at the end of the first third of gestation the pig fetal intestine is already exhibiting some characteristics of a differentiated epithelium. The mRNAs for the two fatty acid-binding proteins I-FABP and L-FAPB, both involved in the metabolism of long chain fatty acids, were detected only in the intestinal mRNA extracted from weaned animals, while that for the cellular retinol-binding protein CRBP I was expressed only in the fetal tissue. The temporal limits of expression of intestinal genes in the pig epithelium seem therefore more easily defined than in other experimental animals with shorter times of fetal development. To isolate pig genes expressed at different developmental stages during intestinal epithelial cell differentiation, a cDNA library was constructed from poly(A) + RNA extracted from mature pig intestine. This library was employed in the isolation of clones encoding CRBP II and L-FABP. The nucleotide sequence of the two pig cDNA clones was determined, and the sequences of the deduced proteins compared with their homologues from other species. The results of this analysis showed that the two pig clones share a high level of homology with human and rat homologues both at the DNA and at the protein level.  相似文献   

15.
Cellular retinol-binding protein (type II) (CRBP(II)), a newly described retinol-binding protein, is present in the small intestinal absorptive cell at high levels. Retinol (vitamin A alcohol) presented as a complex with CRBP(II) was found here to be esterified by microsomal preparations from rat small intestinal mucosa. The esterification observed utilized an endogenous acyl donor(s) and produced retinyl esters containing linoleate, oleate, palmitate, and stearate in a proportion quite similar to that previously reported for retinyl esters in lymph and isolated chylomicrons of rat. No dependence on endogenous or exogenous acyl-CoA could be demonstrated. The apparent Km for retinol-CRBP(II) in the reaction with endogenous acyl donor was 2.4 X 10(-7) M. Retinol presented as a complex with CRBP(II) was esterified more than retinol presented as a complex with cellular retinol-binding protein or retinol-binding protein, two other proteins known to bind retinol in vivo, but about the same as retinol presented bound to bovine serum albumin or beta-lactoglobulin. The ability of protein-bound retinol to be esterified was related to accessibility of the hydroxyl group, as judged by the ability of alcohol dehydrogenase to oxidize the bound retinol. However, whereas retinol bound to CRBP(II) was unavailable for esterification in any acyl-CoA-dependent reaction, retinol bound to bovine serum albumin was rapidly esterified in a reaction utilizing exogenous acyl-CoA. The results suggest that one of the functions of CRBP(II) is to accept retinol after it is absorbed or generated from carotenes in the small intestine and present it to the appropriate esterifying enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
We have isolated and sequenced a cDNA clone corresponding to the human cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP). The deduced amino acid sequence, which encompasses 134 amino acid residues, shows significant homology with several low molecular weight proteins which bind hydrophobic ligands. No homology to the plasma retinol-binding protein was observed. Southern and Northern blot analyses suggest that the CRBP gene is present in a single copy in the haploid genome and that it is transcribed in a single mRNA species.  相似文献   

17.
Human small intestine was found to contain a retinol-binding protein similar to the gut-specific cellular retinol-binding protein, type two [CRBP (II)], described in the rat. This newly detected human protein was immunochemically distinct from human cellular retinol binding protein previously described but immunochemically similar to rat CRBP (II). The partially purified protein bound retinol and exhibited fluorescence excitation and emission spectra distinct from those spectra for retinol bound to pure human CRBP but similar to the spectra for retinol bound to rat CRBP (II). Human CRBP (II) could be localized to the villus-associated enterocytes by immunohistochemistry, using antiserum against rat CRBP (II). The protein was abundant representing 0.4% of the total soluble protein in a jejunum mucosal extract. This protein may play an important role in the absorption and necessary intestinal metabolism of vitamin A.  相似文献   

18.
F M Herr  D E Ong 《Biochemistry》1992,31(29):6748-6755
Esterification of retinol (vitamin A alcohol) with long-chain fatty acids by lecithin-retinol acyltransferase (LRAT) is an important step in both the absorption and storage of vitamin A. Retinol in cells is bound by either cellular retinol binding protein (CRBP), present in most tissues including liver, or cellular retinol binding protein type II [CRBP(II)], present in the absorptive cell of the small intestine. Here we investigated whether retinol must dissociate from these carrier proteins in order to serve as a substrate for LRAT by comparing Michaelis constants for esterification of retinol presented either free or bound. Esterification of free retinol by both liver and intestinal LRAT resulted in Km values (0.63 and 0.44 microM, respectively) similar to those obtained for esterification of retinol-CRBP (0.20 and 0.78 microM, respectively) and esterification of retinol-CRBP(II) (0.24 and 0.32 microM, respectively). Because Kd values for retinol-CRBP and retinol-CRBP(II) are 10(-8)-10-(-10) M, these similar Km values indicated prior dissociation is not required and that direct binding protein-enzyme interaction must occur. Evidence for such interaction was obtained when apo-CRBP proved to be a potent competitive inhibitor of LRAT, with a KI (0.21 microM) lower than the Km for CRBP-retinol (0.78 microM). Apo-CRBP(II), in contrast, was a poor competitor for esterification of retinol bound to CRBP(II). Apo-CRBP reacted with 4 mM p-(chloromercuri)benzenesulfonic acid lost retinol binding ability but retained the ability to inhibit LRAT, confirming that the inhibition could not be explained by a reduction in the concentration of free retinol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Three cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) types (CRBP I, II, and III) with distinct tissue distributions and retinoid binding properties have been structurally characterized thus far. A human binding protein, whose mRNA is expressed primarily in kidney, heart, and transverse colon, is shown here to be a CRBP family member (human CRBP IV), according to amino acid sequence, phylogenetic analysis, gene structure organization, and x-ray structural analysis. Retinol binding to CRBP IV leads to an absorption spectrum distinct from a typical holo-CRBP spectrum and is characterized by an affinity (K(d) = approximately 200 nm) lower than those for CRBP I, II, and III, as established in direct and competitive binding assays. As revealed by mutagenic analysis, the presence in CRBP IV of His(108) in place of Gln(108) is not responsible for the unusual holo-CRBP IV spectrum. The 2-A resolution crystal structure of human apo-CRBP IV is very similar to those of other structurally characterized CRBPs. The side chain of Tyr(60) is present within the binding cavity of the apoprotein and might affect the interaction with the retinol molecule. These results indicate that human CRBP IV belongs to a clearly distinct CRBP subfamily and suggest a relatively different mode of retinol binding for this binding protein.  相似文献   

20.
J A Finlay  M Strom  D E Ong  H F DeLuca 《Biochemistry》1990,29(20):4914-4921
Previously we purified and sequenced an 18-kDa chick duodenal protein that was modulated by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. The N-terminus of this protein has striking sequence homology to cellular retinol binding protein type II (CRBP II). Furthermore, this purified chick protein binds retinol. Antibodies have now been generated to the chick protein and used for immunoblot analysis to demonstrate that the chick protein has molecular weight, tissue distribution, and subcellular localization similar to rat CRBP II. These antibodies also cross-reacted with rat CRBP II. Antibodies to rat CRBP II cross-react with the chick protein. Northern analysis using a cDNA probe for rat CRBP II showed a single 860 base pair mRNA in both chick and rat intestinal RNA preparations. These results demonstrate that the 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 modulated protein in chick embryonic organ culture is chick CRBP II. Pulse-chase experiments in chick embryonic duodenal organ culture strongly suggest that 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 markedly decreases the synthesis of CRBP II, while not changing the degradation rate. The concentration of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 required for the decrease in CRBP II synthesis is approximately that required to stimulate calcium uptake into embryonic chick duodenal organ cultures.  相似文献   

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