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1.
Nearly all of the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) in the circulation is bound in a heterotrimeric complex composed of IGF, IGF-binding protein-3, and the acid-labile subunit (ALS). Full-length clones encoding ALS have been isolated from human liver cDNA libraries by using probes based on amino acid sequence data from the purified protein. These clones encode a mature protein of 578 amino acids preceded by a 27-amino acid hydrophobic sequence indicative of a secretion signal. Expression of the cDNA clones in mammalian tissue culture cells results in the secretion into the culture medium of ALS activity that can form the expected complex with IGF-I and IGF-binding protein-3. The amino acid sequence of ALS is largely composed of 18-20 leucine-rich repeats of 24 amino acids. These repeats are found in a number of diverse proteins that, like ALS, participate in protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

2.
Chitin-binding proteins are present in a wide range of plant species, including both monocots and dicots, even though these plants contain no chitin. To investigate the relationship between in vitro antifungal and insecticidal activities of chitin-binding proteins and their unknown endogenous functions, the stinging nettle lectin (Urtica dioica agglutinin, UDA) cDNA was cloned using a synthetic gene as the probe. The nettle lectin cDNA clone contained an open reading frame encoding 374 amino acids. Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence revealed a 21-amino acid putative signal sequence and the 86 amino acids encoding the two chitin-binding domains of nettle lectin. These domains were fused to a 19-amino acid "spacer" domain and a 244-amino acid carboxyl extension with partial identity to a chitinase catalytic domain. The authenticity of the cDNA clone was confirmed by deduced amino acid sequence identity with sequence data obtained from tryptic digests, RNA gel blot, and polymerase chain reaction analyses. RNA gel blot analysis also showed the nettle lectin message was present primarily in rhizomes and inflorescence (with immature seeds) but not in leaves or stems. Chitinase enzymatic activity was found when the chitinase-like domain alone or the chitinase-like domain with the chitin-binding domains were expressed in Escherichia coli. This is the first example of a chitin-binding protein with both a duplication of the 43-amino acid chitin-binding domain and a fusion of the chitin-binding domains to a structurally unrelated domain, the chitinase domain.  相似文献   

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4.
Protein and cDNA sequence analysis have revealed that the insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) has been highly conserved among several mammalian species. Using the combined techniques of polymerase chain reaction and molecular cloning, we have now obtained the cDNA sequence encoding preproIGF-I from a teleost species, Oncorhynchus kisutch (coho salmon). The 2020 nucleotide (nt) cloned cDNA sequence contains a 528 nt open reading frame encoding 176 amino acids in preproIGF-I and 175 nt and 1317 nt of flanking 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions, respectively. The deduced amino acid sequence of salmon IGF-I is highly conserved relative to its mammalian homologues and there are only 14 amino acid differences out of 70 between salmon and human IGF-I. Interestingly, the C-terminal E domain of salmon proIGF-I, which is presumed to be proteolytically cleaved during biosynthesis, also shows striking amino acid sequence homology with its mammalian counterpart, except for an internal 27 residue segment that is unique to salmon proIGF-I. Northern analysis revealed that salmon preproIGF-I mRNA consists predominantly of a single 3900 nt sized band although minor bands were also observed after prolonged autoradiographic exposure. The RNA analysis also revealed that the level of preproIGF-I mRNA is increased 6-fold in liver RNA isolated from salmon injected with bovine GH, as compared to untreated controls. These results demonstrate that the primary structure and regulated expression of IGF-I by GH have been conserved in teleosts.  相似文献   

5.
Phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) is a protein with multiple functions. To infer its structure changes and evolution in vertebrates, we cloned cDNAs encoding PGI genes from hagfish (Paramyxine yangi), gray mullet (Mugil cephalus), zebrafish (Danio rerio), toad (Bufo melanosticus), and snake (Boiga kraepelini). Only one PGI gene was cloned in each of hagfish, toad, and snake, but two PGI genes were found in zebrafish and gray mullet, respectively. The PGI of hagfish encodes 554 amino acids, in contrast to the PGIs of bonyfishes, toad, and snake which encode 553 amino acids and the PGIs of mammals which encode 558 amino acids. Among 558 aligned amino acid sites, there are 314 sites (56.27%) totally conserved. To see if diversifying selection acts on PGI amino acids of vertebrates, we calculated the pairwise ratio of nonsynonymous versus synonymous substitution per site (Ka/Ks) and the ratio of radical amino acid changes versus conservative amino acid changes per sites (dR/dC) between PGI sequences. The average pairwise ratio between nonsynonymous substitutions per nucleotide (Ka) and synonymous substitutions per nucleotide (Ks) among vertebrate PGI sequences equals 0.047 +/- 0.019. The average pairwise ratio between radical amino acid changes and conservative amino acid changes (dR/dC) among the vertebrate PGIs equal 0.938 +/- 0.158 for charge changes, 0.558 +/- 0.085 for polarity changes, and 0.465 +/- 0.0714 when both polarity and volume are considered. There is no amino acid within the vertebrate PGIs under diversifying selection as analyzed by the method of Yang et al. (2000b). The results suggest that the present vertebrate PGIs are at evolutionary stasis and are being subjected to intense purifying selection. The purifying selection is to maintain polarity and volume of the protein but not the charge groups of amino acids. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that vertebrate PGIs can be classified into three major groups: the mammalian, amphibian-reptilian, and teleostean PGIs. The gene tree suggests that the gene duplication event of PGI in bonyfishes occurred before diversification of Acanthopterygii but after the split of bonyfishes and tetrapods. The evolution of multiple functions of PGI is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), we have amplified and characterized partial nucleotide sequences of two distinct insulin-like growth factor-I genes (designated IGF-I' and IGF-I") from the amphibian, Xenopus laevis. The amplified fragments encoded much of the coding region of the mature peptide (exon III in mammalian IGF-I genes), and exhibited 93% similarity to each other, and 68-82% similarity to mammalian IGF-I amino acid sequences. Southern blot analysis using genomic DNA from a homozygous frog revealed that these two genes are nonallelic in a single organism, like the two nonallelic genes encoding Xenopus insulins that we have characterized previously. Furthermore, both IGF-I mRNAs are expressed in similar quantities in adult liver.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is a 70 amino acid growth-promoting polypeptide whose sequence and functions have been highly conserved among mammals. As an initial step in defining the role of IGF-I in other vertebrate species, we have isolated and characterized an IGF-I cDNA from the chicken. This cDNA encodes a 153 amino acid primary translation product which resembles in structure and sequence the IGF-IA protein of mammals. There is strong amino acid conservation between chicken and mammalian IGF-I throughout the entire protein. Sixty of 70 amino acids are identical in mature IGF-I among the chicken, rat, and human peptides, with five differences being localized to the C domain, and two to the D region. A comparable degree of amino acid identity is found in the COOH-terminal extension peptide (28/35 residues). At the NH2-terminus, where there is more amino acid divergence (32/48 identities), the most 5'-AUG codon is the only methionine residue conserved among all three species, suggesting that it functions as the authentic translation initiation site, an observation supported by cell-free studies of biosynthesis and cotranslational proteolytic processing. The pattern of IGF-I gene expression appears to be simpler in chickens than in mammals, since a single predominant mRNA of 2.6 kilobases can be detected in liver polyadenylated RNA on Northern blots. In the chicken, as in rats and humans, IGF-I mRNA is synthesized in multiple tissues, including liver, brain, skeletal muscle, and heart.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The cDNA sequences of chicken and hagfish prothrombin have been determined. The sequences predict that prothrombin from both species is synthesized as a prepro-protein consisting of a putative Gla domain, two kringle domains, and a two-chain protease domain. Chicken and hagfish prothrombin share 51.6% amino acid sequence identity (313/627 residues). Both chicken and hagfish prothrombin are structurally very similar to human, bovine, rat, and mouse prothrombin and all six species share 41% amino acid sequence identity. Amino acid sequence alignments of human, bovine, rat, mouse, chicken, and hagfish prothrombin suggest that the thrombin B-chain and the propeptide-Gla domain are the regions most constrained for the common function(s) of vertebrate prothrombins.The nucleotide sequences reported in this paper have been submitted to the EMBL/Genbank database under the following secession numbers: M 81391 for Gallus gallus, M 81393 for Eptatretus stouti.Correspondence to: R.T.A. MacGillivray  相似文献   

9.
A cDNA encoding a 5'-nucleotidase was identified by screening a lambda gt10 cDNA library from the electric lobe of Discopyge ommata using a cDNA probe containing the complete open reading frame coding for the rat liver enzyme. Nucleotide sequence analysis defines an open reading frame of 577 amino acids, corresponding to a calculated molecular mass of 63,833 Da. The N-terminus of the mature protein, as determined by direct protein sequencing, is preceded by 29 amino acid residues comprising a signal peptide. The C-terminus contains a stretch of hydrophobic amino acids, considered to be cleaved on post-translational modification and exchanged for glycosylphosphatidylinositol as a membrane anchor. The predicted protein contains four potential N-linked glycosylation sites. Electric ray 5'-nucleotidase shares 61% amino acid identity with the enzymes from rat liver and human placenta, and about 23% with bacterial proteins possessing 5'-nucleotidase activity and also additional enzyme activities like UDP-glucose hydrolase. Polyclonal antibodies raised against 5'-nucleotidase from mammalian sources or the electric ray electric organ reveal mutual cross-reactivity. Interestingly, there are 5-7 domains highly conserved in procaryotes and vertebrates in enzymes exhibiting 5'-nucleotidase, 3'-nucleotidase or phosphodiesterase activity. 5'-nucleotidase isolated from Torpedo electric organ hydrolyzes UDP-glucose at 8% of the rate of AMP hydrolysis. The possible phylogenetic origin of vertebrate 5'-nucleotidase from multifunctional nucleotide hydrolases is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Using a cDNA probe encoding the nucleolar protein N038 of Xenopus laevis, we have isolated clones that code for the corresponding mammalian protein from cDNA libraries of mouse embryonal carcinoma and fetal liver cells. The murine cDNA-derived amino acid sequence defines a polypeptide of 292 amino acids (including the initial methionine) of a total molecular weight of 32560 and identifies a single 1.5 kb mRNA on Northern blot hybridization. This polypeptide, which is highly homologous to the Xenopus protein N038, displays an organization in three major domains: (1) an aminoterminal portion of 119 amino acids, which shows a striking homology to nucleoplasmin of Xenopus; (2) a central portion of 68 amino acids that contains two extended acidic domains, a shorter of 13 residues and a longer of 29 residues, separated by an interval enriched in positively charged amino acids; (3) a carboxyterminal portion of 105 amino acids, which is almost identical to the reported partial amino acid sequence of human and rat nucleolar protein termed B23. The sequence comparisons show that the murine protein is the mammalian counterpart to the nucleolar protein N038 of Xenopus and is compatible with the idea that both proteins N038 represent the amphibian and murine equivalents to the human and rat nucleolar phosphoprotein B23. Special sequence features and predicted conformations of this protein are discussed in relation to the specific localization and the possible functions of this major nucleolar protein.  相似文献   

11.
We report here the isolation and DNA sequence of a cDNA clone encoding a 252-amino acid non-muscle or cytoskeletal tropomyosin (cTm) isoform from Drosophila. The Drosophila cTm shows considerable homology with vertebrate cTm throughout the middle portion of the molecule. The amino-terminal end of the molecule, however, shows less homology and contains five more amino acids than the equine platelet and human tropomyosins. There is also a proline at position 6 in the Drosophila protein. The carboxyl-terminal 27 amino acids also show little homology with vertebrate non-muscle tropomyosins. This is a region of the molecule that shows considerably diversity among other Drosophila tropomyosins and vertebrate tropomyosins. A comparison of the DNA sequence of the cTm cDNA and a previously reported muscle tropomyosin II cDNA sequence shows regions of identical DNA sequence alternating with regions of nonidentical sequence, suggesting that both mRNAs are produced by alternate splicing of the same gene.  相似文献   

12.
Vitamin D binding protein (DBP) is an abundant serum glycoprotein secreted by the liver which transports vitamin D sterols, binds to actin, and is found on the surface of B-lymphocytes and subpopulations of T-lymphocytes. In the current study, a cDNA to rat DBP mRNA was cloned from a bacteriophage lambda gt 11 rat liver expression library. This DBP cDNA clone was identified by immunoblotting and its identity was confirmed by immunoprecipitation of a 54-kDa protein after hybrid-assisted translation. Northern analysis and primer extension mapping of rat liver mRNA indicated that the full-length DBP mRNA contains 1700 bases. By DNA sequence analysis this 1655-base pair clone contains a single open reading frame encoding the 476-amino acid containing full-length DBP and includes its 16-amino acid signal sequence. Analysis of the sequence reveals about 40% nucleotide and 23% amino acid homology to both albumin and alpha-fetoprotein. The encoded DBP contains a characteristic placement of cysteine residues, identical to that in albumin, suggesting a similar secondary folding structure. Albumin and alpha-fetoprotein are composed of three internally homologous domains. DBP mRNA terminates 122 amino acids before the larger albumin mRNA in the third internal domain, but retains the characteristic homology among the first two domains and the truncated portion of the third domain. These data support the conclusion that DBP is a member of a multigene family which includes albumin and alpha-fetoprotein.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The IGFs (IGF-I and IGF-II) are essential for normal mammalian growth and development. Their actions are mediated primarily by their interactions with the type I IGF receptor (IGF-I receptor), a transmembrane tyrosine kinase. The ligands and the IGF-I receptor are structurally related to insulin and to the insulin receptor, respectively. Analysis of evolutionary conservation has often provided insights into essential regions of molecules such as hormones and their receptors. The genes for insulin and IGFs have been partially characterized in a number of vertebrate species extending evolutionarily from humans as far back as fish. The sequences of the exons encoding the mature insulin and IGF peptides are highly conserved among vertebrate species, and IGF-I-Iike molecules are found in species whose origins extend back as much as 550 million years. The insulin receptor is also highly conserved in vertebrate species, and an insulinreceptor-like molecule has been characterized in Drosophila. In contrast, IGF-I receptors have only been characterized in mammalian species and partially studied in Xenopus, in which the tyrosine kinase domain is highly conserved. Studies are presently being undertaken to analyze in more detail the regulation of the genes encoding this important family of growth factors and the structure/function relationships in the gene products themselves. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
The insulin-like growth factors (IGFs), IGF-I and IGF-II, occur in plasma and tissue fluids complexed to specific binding proteins. Although the role of the binding proteins is not completely defined, they are capable of modulating the biological activity of the IGFs. In order to better understand the function of these proteins, we have isolated a clone from the BRL-3A rat liver cell line that encodes a protein corresponding to the IGF binding protein in fetal rat serum. The cDNA clone encodes a precursor protein of 304 amino acids (32,886 daltons), comprised of a 34-residue hydrophobic prepeptide and a 270-residue mature protein (29,564 daltons). The deduced amino acid sequence agrees with the sequence of 173 amino acid residues determined by Edman degradation. The mature protein contains 18 cysteines and no N-glycosylation sites. It contains an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence near the carboxyl terminus. A similar sequence is present on many extracellular matrix proteins and contributes to their recognition by cellular adhesion receptors. The cloned cDNA has been transcribed in vitro and the resulting RNA expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Injected oocytes secrete a 33-kDa protein that is immunoprecipitated by polyclonal antibodies to the BRL-3A binding protein and binds IGF-I and IGF-II with the same affinity and specificity as does purified BRL-3A binding protein. The binding protein cDNA probe hybridizes to an approximately 2-kilobase mRNA in BRL-3A cells and in multiple fetal rat tissues including liver, kidney, intestine, and lung. Levels of this mRNA are greatly reduced in the corresponding adult tissues. The rat IGF binding protein is closely related to the partial amino acid sequences reported for a bovine IGF binding protein and more distantly related to a human IGF binding protein that recently has been cloned. No significant homologies were identified to other proteins. Thus, the rat IGF binding protein that we have cloned appears to be a distinct member of a family of related IGF binding proteins. We postulate that the structurally distinct IGF binding proteins may have different biological functions.  相似文献   

16.
The sequence of the mu opioid receptor is highly conserved among human, rat, and mouse. In order to gain insights into the evolution of the mu opioid receptor, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to screen genomic DNA from a number of different species using degenerate oligonucleotides which recognize a highly conserved region. DNA was assayed from representative species of both the protostome and deuterostome branches of the metazoan phylogenetic tree. Mu opioid receptor-like sequences were found in all vertebrate species that were analyzed. These species included bovine, chicken, bullfrog, striped bass, thresher shark, and Pacific hagfish. However, no mu opioid receptor-like sequences were detected from protostomes or from any invertebrates. The PCR results demonstrate that the region of the mu opioid receptor gene between the first intracellular loop and the third transmembrane domain (TM3) has been highly conserved during evolution and that mu opioid receptor-like sequences are present in the earliest stages of vertebrate evolution. Additional opioid receptor-like sequence was obtained from mRNA isolated from Pacific hagfish brain using rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE). The sequence of the Pacific hagfish was most homologous with the human mu opioid receptor (72% at the amino acid level between intracellular loop 1 and transmembrane domain 6) although over the same region high homology was also observed with the delta opioid receptor (69%), the kappa receptor (63%), and opioid receptor-like (ORL1) (59%). The hagfish sequence showed low conservation with the mammalian opioid receptors in the first and second extracellular loops but high conservation in the transmembrane and intracellular domains. Received: 5 January 1996 / Accepted: 7 March 1996  相似文献   

17.
By means of a cloning strategy employing the polymerase chain reaction, we have isolated and characterized cDNAs for Xenopus laevis insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). These cDNAs encode a primary IGF-I translation product of 153 residues that demonstrates considerable amino acid sequence similarity with IGF-IA peptides from other species. Fifty-seven of 70 residues of the mature protein are identical among human, rat, chicken, and Xenopus IGF-I, while less amino acid conservation is found at the COOH-terminus (25/35 identities) or at the NH2-terminus (24/48 identities) of the precursor protein. Despite the lower degree of structural similarity at the NH2-terminus, in vitro studies of IGF-I biosynthesis and proteolytic processing support a conserved function for the atypically long 48 residue NH2-terminal signal sequence in directing the nascent IGF-I peptide through the secretory pathway. The 5'-untranslated region of Xenopus IGF-I mRNA matches the human, rat, and chicken sequences in greater than 90% of 279 nucleotides. IGF-I mRNAs from all four species encode a conserved upstream open reading frame of 14 amino acids starting 240-250 nucleotides 5' to the translation start site, suggesting a possible role for this region in modulating IGF-I gene expression. The X. laevis IGF-I gene is transcribed and processed into three mRNAs of 1.6, 2.1, and 3.0 kilobases in liver, and IGF-I mRNAs can be detected in liver, lung, heart, kidney, and peritoneal fat of adult animals. These studies demonstrate that both the IGF-I protein precursor and potential regulatory regions of IGF-I mRNA have been conserved during vertebrate evolution, and indicate that like several other polypeptide growth factors, IGF-I may be of fundamental importance in regulating specific aspects of growth and development in all vertebrates.  相似文献   

18.
Mouse, chicken and Xenopus laevis homologues to rig (rat insulinoma gene) cDNA were isolated and their nucleotide sequences were determined. Each homologue encoded a 145-amino acid protein; the amino acid sequence remained invariant in the murine and avian genes, and there were only 6 amino acid substitutions in the salientian gene. The evolutionary rate calculated for rig mRNA was sufficiently low to be viewed as evidence that rig is vital to vertebrate species. Southern blot analysis indicated that haploid sets of the mammalian genomes contain several copies of rig or rig-related sequences, whereas there appeared to be only one copy in the amphibian and bird genomes. The possibility that rig belongs to the class of housekeeping genes is discussed.  相似文献   

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Using the chicken protamine gene as a probe, we have isolated and sequenced several positive clones from a quail testis cDNA library which reveal the complete sequence for the quail protamine cDNA. The predicted amino acid sequence for the quail protamine contains the N-terminal tetrapeptide ARYR present in the N-terminal region of the mammalian protamines as well as several conserved motifs and arginine clusters. In addition the size of the quail protamine (56 amino acids) is closer to that of mammals (50 amino acids) than that of the chicken (61 amino acids). Altogether this data strongly suggests the existence of an avian-mammalian protamine gene line during evolution. Southern blot analysis suggests a small number of copies (2) per haploid genome (similar to that of chicken). The reported quail protamine cDNA sequence is the second avian protamine for which the amino acid sequence is available so far and provides new insights into vertebrate protamine function and evolution.  相似文献   

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