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1.
We have investigated the possible role of chaperonins groEL and groES in the folding and assembly of heterotetramers (alpha 2 beta 2) of mammalian mitochondrial branched-chain alpha-keto acid decarboxylase (E1) in Escherichia coli. The mature E1 alpha subunit fused to maltose-binding protein (MBP) was coexpressed with mature E1 beta on the same vector in ES- and EL- mutant strains. Only small or trace amounts of active E1 component were obtained. Cotransformation of the ES- mutant host with a second vector overexpressing groEL and groES resulted in a greater than 500-fold increase in E1-specific activity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the content of both MBP-E1 alpha and E1 beta polypeptides was markedly increased in the presence of overexpressed chaperonin proteins. The time course studies showed that the increase in E1-specific activity and subunit levels correlated with the increase in groEL and groES until the concentration of the chaperonins reached a saturating level in the cell. The functional MBP-E1 fusion protein from ES- double transformants were purified by amylose resin affinity chromatography. The MBP moiety was removed by subsequent digestion with Factor Xa endoprotease, followed by Sephacryl S-300HR chromatography. It was found that E1 alpha and E1 beta assembled into an active 160-kDa species, which was consistent with the alpha 2 beta 2 structure of E1. The present results demonstrate that chaperonins groEL and groES promote folding and assembly of heterotetrameric proteins of mammalian mitochondrial origin.  相似文献   

2.
Our understanding of mechanisms for GroEL/GroES-assisted protein folding to date has been derived mostly from studies with small proteins. Little is known concerning the interaction of these chaperonins with large multidomain polypeptides during folding. In the present study, we investigated chaperonin-dependent folding of a large 86-kDa fusion polypeptide, in which the mature maltose-binding protein (MBP) sequence was linked to the N terminus of the alpha subunit of the decarboxylase (E1) component of the human mitochondrial branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex. The fusion polypeptide, MBP-alpha, when co-expressed with the beta subunit of E1, produced a chimeric protein MBP-E1 with an (MBP-alpha)2beta2 structure, similar to the alpha2 beta2 structure in native E1. Reactivation of MBP-E1 denatured in 8 M urea was absolutely dependent on GroEL/GroES and Mg2+-ATP, and exhibited strikingly slow kinetics with a rate constant of 376 M-1 s-1, analogous to denatured untagged E1. Chaperonin-mediated refolding of the MBP-alpha fusion polypeptide showed that the folding of the MBP moiety was about 7-fold faster than that of the alpha moiety on the same chain with rate constants of 1.9 x 10(-3) s-1 and 2.95 x 10(-4) s-1, respectively. This explained the occurrence of an MBP-alpha. GroEL binary complex that was isolated with amylose resin from the refolding mixture and transformed Escherichia coli lysates. The data support the thesis that distinct functional sequences in a large polypeptide exhibit different folding characteristics on the same GroEL scaffold. Moreover, we show that when the alpha.GroEL complex (molar ratio 1:1) was incubated with GroES, the latter was capable of capping either the very ring that harbored the 48-kDa (His)6-alpha polypeptide (in cis) or the opposite unoccupied cavity (in trans). In contrast, the MBP-alpha.GroEL (1:1) complex was capped by GroES exclusively in the trans configuration. These findings suggest that the productive folding of a large multidomain polypeptide can only occur in the GroEL cavity that is not sequestered by GroES.  相似文献   

3.
E J Cho  J B Bae  J G Kang    J H Roe 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(22):4565-4571
The rpoA gene, encoding the alpha subunit of RNA polymerase, was cloned from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). It is preceded by rpsK and followed by rplQ, encoding ribosomal proteins S11 and L17, respectively, similar to the gene order in Bacillus subtilis. The rpoA gene specifies a protein of 339 amino acids with deduced molecular mass of 36,510 Da, exhibiting 64.3 and 70.7% similarity over its entire length to Escherichia coli and B. subtilis alpha subunits, respectively. Using T7 expression system, we overexpressed the S. coelicolor alpha protein in E. coli. A small fraction of this protein was found to be assembled into E. coli RNA polymerase. Antibody against S. coelicolor alpha protein crossreacted with that of B. subtilis more than with the E. coli alpha subunit. The ability of recombinant alpha protein to assemble beta and beta' subunits into core enzyme in vitro was examined by measuring the core enzyme activity. Maximal reconstitution was obtained at alpha2:beta+beta' ratio of 1:2.3, indicating that the recombinant alpha protein is fully functional for subunit assembly. Similar results were also obtained for natural alpha protein. Limited proteolysis with endoproteinase Glu-C revealed that S. coelicolor alpha contains a tightly folded N-terminal domain and the C-terminal region is more protease-sensitive than that of E. coli alpha.  相似文献   

4.
The decarboxylase component (E1) of the human mitochondrial branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase multienzyme complex (approximately 4-5 x 10(3) kDa) is a thiamine pyrophosphate-dependent enzyme, comprising two 45.5-kDa alpha subunits and two 37.8-kDa beta subunits. In the present study, His6-tagged E1 alpha2 beta2 tetramers (171 kDa) denatured in 8 M urea were competently reconstituted in vitro at 23 degrees C with an absolute requirement for chaperonins GroEL/GroES and Mg-ATP. Unexpectedly, the kinetics for the recovery of E1 activity was very slow with a rate constant of 290 M-1 s-1. Renaturation of E1 with a similarly slow kinetics was also achieved using individual GroEL-alpha and GroEL-beta complexes as combined substrates. However, the beta subunit was markedly more prone to misfolding than the alpha in the absence of GroEL. The alpha subunit was released as soluble monomers from the GroEL-alpha complex alone in the presence of GroES and Mg-ATP. In contrast, the beta subunit discharged from the GroEL-beta complex readily rebound to GroEL when the alpha subunit was absent. Analysis of the assembly state showed that the His6-alpha and beta subunits released from corresponding GroEL-polypeptide complexes assembled into a highly structured but inactive 85.5-kDa alpha beta dimeric intermediate, which subsequently dimerized to produce the active alpha2 beta2 tetrameter. The purified alpha beta dimer isolated from Escherichia coli lysates was capable of binding to GroEL to produce a stable GroEL-alpha beta ternary complex. Incubation of this novel ternary complex with GroES and Mg-ATP resulted in recovery of E1 activity, which also followed slow kinetics with a rate constant of 138 M-1 s-1. Dimers were regenerated from the GroEL-alpha beta complex, but they needed to interact with GroEL/GroES again, thereby perpetuating the cycle until the conversion from dimers to tetramers was complete. Our study describes an obligatory role of chaperonins in priming the dimeric intermediate for subsequent tetrameric assembly, which is a slow step in the reconstitution of E1 alpha2 beta2 tetramers.  相似文献   

5.
Amino acid sequence comparison of 8 alpha and 6 beta subunits of the alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase (E1) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex form multiple species was performed by computer analysis. In addition to 2 previously recognized regions of homology in the alpha subunit, a 3rd region of extensive homology was identified in E1 alpha, and may be one of the sites involved in subunit interaction. E1 beta contains 4 regions of extensive homology. Region 1 contains 10 amino acids that are homologous to a 10-amino acid stretch in Escherichia coli E1. Regions 2 and 3 have sequence homologies with other dehydrogenases suggesting that these regions may be involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
K Prasad  J H Keen 《Biochemistry》1991,30(22):5590-5597
The clathrin assembly protein complex AP-2 is a multimeric subunit complex consisting of two 100-115-kDa subunits known as alpha and beta and 50- and 16-kDa subunits. The subunits have been dissociated and separated by ion-exchange chromatography in 7.5 M urea. Fractions highly enriched in either the alpha or beta subunit were obtained. The alpha fraction interacted with clathrin as evidenced by its ability to bind to preassembled clathrin cages. It also reacted with dissociated clathrin trimers under conditions that favor assembly of coat structures, but did not yield discrete clathrin polygonal lattices. The enriched beta fraction (containing small amounts of alpha) reacted with clathrin to yield intact coats with the incorporation of approximately equivalent amounts of alpha and beta subunits into the polymerized species; excess free beta subunit was unreactive. The AP-2 complex was also completely dissociated in a highly denaturing solvent, 6 M Gdn.HCl, and the constituent subunits of 100-115, 50, and 16 kDa were separated by gel filtration. In a coassembly assay with clathrin, the clathrin polymerizing activity was exclusively associated with the 100-kDa subunit fraction with stoichiometric incorporation of both alpha and beta subunits of 100 kDa into the polymerized coats, and with no requirement for 50- or 16-kDa subunits. These observations demonstrate that the assembly activity of the complex is associated with the alpha and beta subunits and suggest that both subunits, through independent interactions with clathrin, are required for expression of complete lattice assembly activity.  相似文献   

7.
We report characterization of the component proteins and molecular cloning of the genes encoding the two subunits of the carboxyltransferase component of the Escherichia coli acetyl-CoA carboxylase. Peptide mapping of the purified enzyme component indicates that the carboxyltransferase component is a complex of two nonidentical subunits, a 35-kDa alpha subunit and a 33-kDa beta subunit. The alpha subunit gene encodes a protein of 319 residues and is located immediately downstream of the polC gene (min 4.3 of the E. coli genetic map). The deduced amino acid composition, molecular mass, and amino acid sequence match those determined for the purified alpha subunit. Six sequenced internal peptides also match the deduced sequence. The amino-terminal sequence of the beta subunit was found within a previously identified open reading frame of unknown function called dedB and usg (min 50 of the E. coli genetic map) which encodes a protein of 304 residues. Comparative peptide mapping also indicates that the dedB/usg gene encodes the beta subunit. Moreover, the deduced molecular mass and amino acid composition of the dedB/usg-encoded protein closely match those determined for the beta subunit. The deduced amino acid sequences of alpha and beta subunits show marked sequence similarities to the COOH-terminal half and the NH2-terminal halves, respectively, of the rat propionyl-CoA carboxylase, a biotin-dependent carboxylase that catalyzes a similar carboxyltransferase reaction reaction. Several conserved regions which may function as CoA-binding sites are noted.  相似文献   

8.
A cDNA encoding the mature E1 beta subunit of the bovine branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex was isolated from a lambda ZAP expression library. The bovine E1 beta cDNA is 1,393 base pairs in length. It encodes the entire mature E1 beta subunit consisting of 342 amino acid residues and a partial mitochondrial targeting presequence of 26 residues. The calculated molecular mass of the mature bovine E1 beta subunit is 37,776 daltons, and the calculated isoelectric point is pI 5.04. The mature bovine E1 beta subunit was expressed in Escherichia coli via the pKK233-2 vector in the presence of isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). When expression was induced by IPTG at 37 degrees C, the soluble recombinant E1 beta subunit existed as a single high molecular weight form (Mr congruent to 3.5 x 10(5)), which sedimented during sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation at 2 x 10(5) x g. However, lowering the induction temperature to 25 degrees C resulted in the occurrence of both high and low molecular weight forms of the recombinant E1 beta protein. The low molecular weight form (Mr congruent to 9.1 x 10(4)) remained soluble after sucrose gradient centrifugation and was utilized in binding studies with a series of truncated recombinant E2 proteins. The results showed that the E1 beta subunit bound to the region between Ala-115 and Lys-150 of the E2 chain, which lay within the putative E3-binding domain. In contrast, the recombinant E1 alpha subunit did not bind the E2 component. The data suggest an apparent binding order of E2-E1 beta-E1 alpha, which supports and extends the model of E2 inner core deduced previously from the data of scanning transmission electron microscopy (Hackert, M.L., Xu, W.-X., Oliver, R.M., Wall, J.S., Hainfeld, J.F., Mullinax, T.R., and Reed, L.J. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6816-6821). The relatively inaccessible topology of E1 beta may explain the lack of antigenicity and resistance to limited proteolysis of this subunit as it exists in the complex.  相似文献   

9.
cDNA encoding the casein kinase II (CKII) subunits alpha and beta of human origin were expressed in Escherichia coli using expression vector pT7-7. Significant expression was obtained with E. coli BL21(DE3). The CKII subunits accounted for approximately 30% of the bacterial protein; however, most of the expressed proteins were produced in an insoluble form. The recombinant CKII alpha subunit was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, followed by phosphocellulose and heparin-agarose chromatography. The recombinant CKII beta subunit was extracted from the insoluble pellet and purified in a single step on phosphocellulose. From 10 g bacterial cells, the yield of soluble protein was 12 mg alpha subunit and 5 mg beta subunit. SDS/PAGE analysis of the purified recombinant proteins indicated molecular masses of 42 kDa and 26 kDa for the alpha and beta subunits, respectively, in agreement with the molecular masses determined for the subunits of the native enzyme. The recombinant alpha subunit exhibited protein kinase activity which was greatest in the absence of monovalent ions. With increasing amounts of salt, alpha subunit kinase activity declined rapidly. Addition of the beta subunit led to maximum stimulation at a 1:1 ratio of both subunits. Using a synthetic peptide (RRRDDDSDDD) as a substrate, the maximum protein kinase stimulation observed was fourfold under the conditions used. The Km of the reconstituted enzyme for the synthetic peptide (80 microM) was comparable to the mammalian enzyme (40-60 microM), whereas the alpha subunit alone had a Km of 240 microM. After sucrose density gradient analysis, the reconstituted holoenzyme sedimented at the same position as the mammalian CKII holoenzyme.  相似文献   

10.
We showed previously that the interaction of an alphabeta heterodimeric intermediate with GroEL/GroES is essential for efficient alpha(2)beta(2) assembly of human mitochondrial branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase. In the present study, we further characterized the mode of interaction between the chaperonins and the native-like alphabeta heterodimer. The alphabeta heterodimer, as an intact entity, was found to bind to GroEL at a 1:1 stoichiometry with a K(D) of 1.1 x 10(-)(7) m. The 1:1 molar ratio of the GroEL-alphabeta complex was confirmed by the ability of the complex to bind a stoichiometric amount of denatured lysozyme in the trans cavity. Surprisingly, in the presence of Mg-ADP, GroES was able to cap the GroEL-alphabeta complex in cis, despite the size of 86 kDa of the heterodimer (with a His(6) tag and a linker). Incubation of the GroEL-alphabeta complex with Mg-ATP, but not AMP-PNP, resulted in the release of alpha monomers. In the presence of Mg-ATP, the beta subunit was also released but was unable to assemble with the alpha subunit, and rebound to GroEL. The apparent differential subunit release from GroEL is explained, in part, by the significantly higher binding affinity of the beta subunit (K(D) < 4.15 x 10(-9)m) than the alpha (K(D) = 1.6 x 10(-8)m) for GroEL. Incubation of the GroEL-alphabeta complex with Mg-ATP and GroES resulted in dissociation and discharge of both the alpha and beta subunits from GroEL. The beta subunit upon binding to GroEL underwent further folding in the cis cavity sequestered by GroES. This step rendered the beta subunit competent for reassociation with the soluble alpha subunit to produce a new heterodimer. We propose that this mechanism is responsible for the iterative annealing of the kinetically trapped heterodimeric intermediate, leading to an efficient alpha(2)beta(2) assembly of human branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

11.
To understand how the alpha and beta 2 subunits of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli interact to form an alpha 2 beta 2 complex and undergo mutual activation, we have investigated alpha subunits with single amino acid replacements at conserved proline residues. Although the activities of alpha 2 beta 2 complexes that contain wild type alpha subunit or alpha subunits substituted at positions 28, 62, 96, and 207 are similar, the activities of alpha 2 beta 2 complexes that contain alpha subunits substituted at positions 57 and 132 are remarkably altered. Whereas the latter enzymes have greatly reduced activities in the individual half-reactions, they have considerably higher activities in the overall reaction. These remarkable activity results are explained by a decrease in the affinity of these mutant alpha subunits for the beta 2 subunit and by an increase in the affinity in the combined presence of ligands of both the alpha subunit and the beta 2 subunit. Isothermal calorimetric titrations of wild type beta 2 subunit with wild type alpha subunit and a mutant alpha subunit containing a substitution of glycine for proline at position 132 show that both the affinity and the exothermic association enthalpy are greatly reduced in the mutant alpha subunit although the stoichiometry of association is unchanged. The affinity of the mutant alpha subunit for the beta 2 subunits is greatly increased in the presence of an alpha subunit ligand, alpha-glycerol phosphate. We conclude that proline 132 plays a critical role in subunit interaction and in mutual subunit activation.  相似文献   

12.
The three most widely expressed subunits of the GABAA receptor are alpha(1), beta(2), and gamma(2) subunits, and the major isoform in the human brain is a pentameric receptor composed of 2alpha(1)2beta(2)1gamma(2). Previously, we overexpressed the extracellular domain Q28-R248 of GABAA receptor alpha(1) subunit. In the present study, the homologous extracellular domains Q25-G243 of GABAA receptor beta(2) subunit and Q40-G273 of gamma(2) subunit were also obtained through overexpression in Escherichia coli. Successful production of recombinant beta(2) and gamma(2) subunit receptor protein domains facilitates the comparison of structural and functional properties of the three subunits. To this end, the secondary structures of the three fragments were measured using CD spectroscopy and the beta-strand contents calculated to be >30%, indicating a beta-rich structure for all three fragments. In addition, the benzodiazepine (BZ)-binding affinity of the recombinant fragments were measured using fluorescence polarization to be 2.16 microM, 3.63 microM, and 1.34 microM for the alpha(1), beta(2), and gamma(2) subunit fragments, respectively, indicating that all three homomeric assemblies, including that of the beta(2) subunit, generally not associated with BZ binding, can bind BZ in the micromolar range. The finding that the BZ binding affinity of these recombinant domains was highest for the gamma(2) subunit and lowest for the beta(2) subunit is consistent with results from previous binding studies using hetero-oligomeric receptors. The present results exemplify the effective approach to characterize and compare the three major subunits of the GABAA receptor, for two of which the overexpression in E. coli is reported for the first time.  相似文献   

13.
Inhibitory glycine receptors (GlyRs) regulate motor coordination and sensory signal processing in spinal cord and other brain regions. GlyRs are pentameric proteins composed of membrane-spanning alpha and beta subunits. Here, site-directed mutagenesis combined with homology modeling based on the crystal structure of the acetylcholine binding protein identified key ligand binding residues of recombinant homooligomeric alpha1 and heterooligomeric alpha1beta GlyRs. This disclosed two highly conserved, oppositely charged residues located on adjacent subunit interfaces as being crucial for agonist binding. In addition, the beta subunit was found to determine the ligand binding properties of heterooligomeric GlyRs. Expression of an alpha1beta tandem construct and affinity purification of metabolically labeled GlyRs confirmed a subunit stoichiometry of 2alpha3beta. Because the beta subunit anchors GlyRs at synaptic sites, our results have important implications for the biosynthesis, clustering, and pharmacology of synaptic GlyRs.  相似文献   

14.
Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) consist of a nucleotide-binding alpha subunit and a high-affinity complex of beta and gamma subunits. There is molecular heterogeneity of beta and gamma, but the significance of this diversity is poorly understood. Different G protein beta and gamma subunits have been expressed both singly and in combinations in Sf9 cells. Although expression of individual subunits is achieved in all cases, beta gamma subunit activity (support of pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of rGi alpha 1) is detected only when beta and gamma are expressed concurrently. Of the six combinations of beta gamma tested (beta 1 or beta 2 with gamma 1, gamma 2, or gamma 3), only one, beta 2 gamma 1, failed to generate a functional complex. Each of the other five complexes has been purified by subunit exchange chromatography using Go alpha-agarose as the chromatographic matrix. We have detected differences in the abilities of the purified proteins to support ADP-ribosylation of Gi alpha 1; these differences are attributable to the gamma component of the complex. When assayed for their ability to inhibit calmodulin-stimulated type-I adenylylcyclase activity or to potentiate Gs alpha-stimulated type-II adenylylcyclase, recombinant beta 1 gamma 1 and transducin beta gamma are approximately 10 and 20 times less potent, respectively, than the other complexes examined. Prenylation and/or further carboxyl-terminal processing of gamma are not required for assembly of the beta gamma subunit complex but are indispensable for high affinity interactions of beta gamma with either G protein alpha subunits or adenylylcyclases.  相似文献   

15.
Functionally equivalent subunits of RNA polymerase from Micrococcus luteus and Escherichia coli differ from each other in many molecular and antigenic properties. In spite of these differences, subunit alpha from E. coli and subunit beta from M. luteus form a complex alpha2beta, when incubated together. This complex binds rifampicin tightly, which the isolated subunits do not. The hybrid complex is very similar in its properties to the complex alpha2beta formed only from E. coli or M. luteus subunits. Since the sub-assembly alpha2beta from E. coli is reported to be an obligatory intermediate in the assembly process of complete RNA polymerase, the newly described hybrid sub-assembly may function similarly as an intermediate in the formation of the hybrid form of RNA polymerase described earlier.  相似文献   

16.
Two genes in the rice genome were identified as those encoding the gamma subunits, gamma1 and gamma2, of heterotrimeric G proteins. Using antibodies against the recombinant proteins for the alpha, beta, gamma1, and gamma2 subunits of the G protein complexes, all of the subunits were proven to be localized in the plasma membrane in rice. Gel filtration of solubilized plasma membrane proteins showed that all of the alpha subunits were present in large protein complexes (about 400 kDa) containing the other subunits, beta, gamma1, and gamma2, and probably also some other proteins, whereas large amounts of the beta and gamma (gamma1 and gamma2) subunits were freed from the large complexes and took a 60-kDa form. A yeast two-hybrid assay and co-immunoprecipitation experiments showed that the beta subunit interacted tightly with the gamma1 and gamma2 subunits, and so the beta and gamma subunits appeared to form dimers in rice cells. Some dimers were associated with the alpha subunit, because few beta, gamma1, and gamma2 subunits were present in the 400-kDa complexes in a rice mutant, d1, which was lacking in the alpha subunit. When a constitutively active form of the alpha subunit was prepared by the exchange of one amino acid residue and introduced into d1, the mutagenized subunit was localized in the plasma membrane of the transformants and took a free, and not the 400-kDa, form.  相似文献   

17.
M V Rojiani  B B Finlay  V Gray  S Dedhar 《Biochemistry》1991,30(41):9859-9866
We endeavored to identify proteins interacting with KLGFFKR, a highly conserved motif in the cytoplasmic domain adjacent to the transmembrane domain of the alpha subunit of integrins. We found that affinity chromatography of cell extracts with this peptide followed by elution with EDTA resulted in the isolation of a 60-kDa protein (p60). The N-terminal amino acid sequence of this 60-kDa polypeptide was found to be highly homologous to the Ro/SS-A antigen, a 60-kDa protein homologous to calreticulin and Aplysia "memory molecule". The binding of p60 was found to be specific for the KLGFFKR sequence since this polypeptide did not bind to a peptide with a scrambled amino acid sequence (KLRFGFK), and it was also specifically eluted from the KLGFFKR affinity matrix ith soluble KLGFFKR peptide but not with the scrambled peptide. Solid phase in vitro binding assays demonstrated specific interaction of p60 with integrin alpha 3 and alpha 5 subunits but not with the beta 1 subunit. Furthermore, p60 could be copurified with alpha 3 beta 1 following coincubation in vitro. These interactions could be inhibited by KLGFFKR peptide and also by EDTA, indicating sequence-specific and divalent cation dependent binding. Despite the fact that calreticulin is thought to be localized in the endoplasmic reticulum, a pool of Ro/SS A antigen homologous 60-kDa polypeptide was found to be present in the soluble cytoplasm, indicating the feasibility of an interaction of p60 with the integrin alpha subunits. Our data suggest that p60 (Ro/SS-A Ag) can specifically bind to integrin alpha subunits via the highly conserved KLGFFKR amino acid sequence.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A 4175-bp EcoRI fragment of DNA that encodes the alpha and beta chains of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (lipoamide) component (E1) of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus has been cloned in Escherichia coli. Its nucleotide sequence was determined. Open reading frames (pdhA, pdhB) corresponding to the E1 alpha subunit (368 amino acids, Mr 41,312, without the initiating methionine residue) and E1 beta subunit (324 amino acids, Mr 35,306, without the initiating methionine residue) were identified and confirmed with the aid of amino acid sequences determined directly from the purified polypeptide chains. The E1 beta gene begins just 3 bp downstream from the E1 alpha stop codon. It is followed, after a longer gap of 73 bp, by the start of another but incomplete open reading frame that, on the basis of its known amino acid sequence, encodes the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2) component of the complex. All three genes are preceded by potential ribosome-binding sites and the gene cluster is located immediately downstream from a region of DNA showing numerous possible promoter sequences. The E1 alpha and E1 beta subunits of the B. stearothermophilus pyruvate dehydrogenase complex exhibit substantial sequence similarity with the E1 alpha and E1 beta subunits of pyruvate and branched-chain 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase complexes from mammalian mitochondria and Pseudomonas putida. In particular, the E1 alpha chain contains the highly conserved sequence motif that has been found in all enzymes utilizing thiamin diphosphate as cofactor.  相似文献   

20.
Pea (Pisum sativum) mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) was produced by coexpression of the mature alpha and beta subunits in the cytoplasm of the yeast Pichia pastoris. Size-exclusion chromatography of recombinant E1, using a Superose 12 column, yielded a peak at M(r) 160,000 that contained both alpha and beta subunits as well as E1 activity. This corresponds to the size of native alpha(2)beta(2) E1. Recombinant E1 alpha (His(6))-E1 beta was purified by affinity chromatography using immobilized Ni(+), with a yield of 2.8 mg L(-1). The pyruvate-decarboxylating activity of recombinant E1 was dependent upon added Mg(2+) and thiamin-pyrophosphate and was enhanced by the oxidant potassium ferricyanide. Native pea mitochondrial E1-kinase catalyzed phosphorylation of Ser residues in the alpha-subunit of recombinant E1, with concomitant loss of enzymatic activity. Thus, mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase can be assembled in the cytoplasm of P. pastoris into an alpha(2)beta(2) heterotetramer that is both catalytically active and competent for regulatory phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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