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1.
In the present work, we describe the characterisation of the glutathione transferase (GST) gene family from Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58. A genome survey revealed the presence of eight GST-like proteins in A. tumefaciens (AtuGSTs). Comparison by multiple sequence alignment generated a dendrogram revealing the phylogenetic relationships of AtuGSTs-like proteins. The beta and theta classes identified in other bacterial species are represented by five members in A. tumefaciens C58. In addition, there are three “orphan” sequences that do not fit into any previously recognised GST classes. The eight GST-like genes were cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli and their substrate specificity was determined towards 17 different substrates. The results showed that AtuGSTs catalyse a broad range of reactions, with different members of the family exhibiting quite varied substrate specificity. The 3D structures of AtuGSTs were predicted using molecular modelling. The use of comparative sequence and structural analysis of the AtuGST isoenzymes allowed us to identify local sequence and structural characteristics between different GST isoenzymes and classes. Gene expression profiling was conducted under normal culture conditions as well as under abiotic stress conditions (addition of xenobiotics, osmotic stress and cold and heat shock) to induce and monitor early stress-response mechanisms. The results reveal the constitutive expression of GSTs in A. tumefaciens and a modulation of GST activity after treatments, indicating that AtuGSTs presumably participate in a wide range of functions, many of which are important in counteracting stress conditions. These functions may be relevant to maintaining cellular homeostasis as well as in the direct detoxification of toxic compounds.  相似文献   

2.
Using computer methods for multiple alignment, sequence motif search, and tertiary structure modeling, we show that eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1γ (EF1γ) contains an N-terminal domain related to class θ glutathione S-transferases (GST). GST-like proteins related to class θ comprise a large group including, in addition to typical GSTs and EF1γ, stress-induced proteins from bacteria and plants, bacterial reductive dehalogenases and β-etherases, and several uncharacterized proteins. These proteins share 2 conserved sequence motifs with GSTs of other classes (α, μ, and π). Tertiary structure modeling showed that in spite of the relatively low sequence similarity, the GST-related domain of EF1γ is likely to form a fold very similar to that in the known structures of class α, μ, and π GSTs. One of the conserved motifs is implicated in glutathione binding, whereas the other motif probably is involved in maintaining the proper conformation of the GST domain. We predict that the GST-like domain in EF1γ is enzymatically active and that to exhibit GST activity, EF1γ has to form homodimers. The GST activity may be involved in the regulation of the assembly of multisubunit complexes containing EF1 and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases by shifting the balance between glutathione, disulfide glutathione, thiol groups of cysteines, and protein disulfide bonds. The GST domain is a widespread, conserved enzymatic module that may be covalently or noncovalently complexed with other proteins. Regulation of protein assembly and folding may be 1 of the functions of GST.  相似文献   

3.
Mutations in the Ganglioside-induced differentiation-associated protein-1 (GDAP1) gene cause autosomal recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4A. The protein encoded by GDAP1 shows clear similarity to glutathione transferases (also known as glutathione S-transferases or GSTs). The human genome contains a paralog of GDAP1 called GDAP1L1. Using comparative genomics, we show that orthologs of GDAP1 and GDAP1L1 are found in mammals, birds, amphibians, and fishes. Likely orthologs of those genes in invertebrates and a low but consistent similarity with some plant and eubacterial genes have also been found. We demonstrate that GDAP1 and GDAP1L1 do not belong to any of the known classes of GST genes. In addition to having distinctive sequences, GDAP1 and its relatives are also characterized by an extended region in GST domain II, absent in most other GSTs, and by a C-terminal end predicted to contain transmembrane domains. Mutations affecting any of those characteristic domains are known to cause Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. These features define the GDAP1 class of GST-like proteins.  相似文献   

4.
L Bousset  H Belrhali  R Melki  S Morera 《Biochemistry》2001,40(45):13564-13573
The [URE3] phenotype in yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is due to an altered prion form of Ure2p, a protein involved in nitrogen catabolism. To understand possible conformational changes at the origin of prion propagation, we previously solved the crystal structure of the Ure2p functional region [Bousset et al. (2001) Structure 9, 39-46]. We showed the protein to have a fold similar to that of the beta class of glutathione S-transferases (GSTs). Here we report crystal structures of the Ure2p functional region (extending from residues 95-354) in complex with glutathione (GSH), the substrate of all GSTs, and two widely used GST inhibitors, namely, S-hexylglutathione and S-p-nitrobenzylglutathione. In a manner similar to what is observed in many GSTs, ligand binding is not accompanied by a significant change in the conformation of the protein. We identify one GSH and one hydrophobic electrophile binding site per monomer as observed in all other GSTs. The sulfur group of GSH, that conjugates electrophiles, is located near the amide group of Asn124, allowing a hydrogen bond to be formed. Biochemical data indicate that GSH binds to Ure2p with high affinity. Its binding affects Ure2p oligomerization but has no effect on the assembly of the protein into amyloid fibrils. Despite results indicating that Ure2p lacks GST activity, we propose that Ure2p is a member of the GST superfamily that may describe a novel GST class. Our data bring new insights into the function of the Ure2p active region.  相似文献   

5.
We provide a comprehensive analysis of the current enzymes with alpha-amylase activity (AAMYs) that belong to family 13 glycoside hydrolase (GH-13; 144 Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukaryota sequences from 87 different species). This study aims to further knowledge of the evolutionary molecular relationships among the sequences of their A and B domains with special emphasis on the correlation between what is observed in the structures and protein evolution. Multialignments for the A domain distinguish two clusters for sequences from Archaea organisms, eight for sequences from Bacteria organisms, and three for sequences from Eukaryota organisms. The clusters for Bacteria do not follow any strict taxonomic pathway; in fact, they are rather scattered. When we compared the A domains of sequences belonging to different kingdoms, we found that various pairs of clusters were significantly similar. Using either sequence similarity with crystallized structures or secondary-structure prediction methods, we identified in all AAMYs the eight putative beta-strands that constitute the beta-sheet in the TIM barrel of the A domain and studied the packing in its interior. We also discovered a "hidden homology" in the TIM barrel, an invariant Gly located upstream in the sequence before the conserved Asp in beta-strand 3. This Gly precedes an alpha-helix and is actively involved in capping its N-terminal end with a capping box. In all cases, a Schellman motif caps the C-terminal end of this helix.  相似文献   

6.
By BLAST searching a large expressed sequence tag database for glutathione S-transferase (GST) sequences we have identified 25 soybean (Glycine max) and 42 maize (Zea mays) clones and obtained accurate full-length GST sequences. These clones probably represent the majority of members of the GST multigene family in these species. Plant GSTs are divided according to sequence similarity into three categories: types I, II, and III. Among these GSTs only the active site serine, as well as another serine and arginine in or near the "G-site" are conserved throughout. Type III GSTs have four conserved sequence patches mapping to distinct structural features. Expression analysis reveals the distribution of GSTs in different tissues and treatments: Maize GSTI is overall the most highly expressed in maize, whereas the previously unknown GmGST 8 is most abundant in soybean. Using DNA microarray analysis we observed increased expression among the type III GSTs after inducer treatment of maize shoots, with different genes responding to different treatments. Protein activity for a subset of GSTs varied widely with seven substrates, and any GST exhibiting greater than marginal activity with chloro-2,4 dinitrobenzene activity also exhibited significant activity with all other substrates, suggesting broad individual enzyme substrate specificity.  相似文献   

7.
The TEF4 gene of the non-saccharomyces yeast Yarrowia lipolytica encodes an EF1Bgamma protein with structural similarity to the glutathione transferases (GSTs). This 1203bp gene was cloned, over-expressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein characterized. DNA sequencing of the cloned gene agreed with the recently completed Y. lipolytica genome and showed 100% identity to a previously reported 30-residue N-terminal sequence for a 110kDa Y. lipolytica GST, except that it encoded two additional N-terminal residues (N-Met-Ser-). The recombinant protein (subunit M(r) 52kDa) was found not to possess GST activity with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. Partial tryptic digestion released two fragments of M(r) 22 and 18kDa, which we interpret as N- and C-terminal domains. Homology modeling confirmed that the N-terminal domain of Y. lipolytica TEF4 encodes a GST-like protein.  相似文献   

8.
Ure2 is the protein determinant of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae prion [URE3]. Ure2 has structural similarity to glutathione transferases, protects cells against heavy metal and oxidant toxicity in vivo, and shows glutathione-dependent peroxidase activity in vitro. Here we report that Ure2 (which has no cysteine residues) also shows thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase activity similar to that of glutaredoxin enzymes. This demonstrates that disulfide reductase activity can be independent of the classical glutaredoxin CXXC/CXXS motif or indeed an intrinsic catalytic cysteine residue. The kinetics of the glutaredoxin activity of Ure2 showed positive cooperativity for the substrate glutathione in both the soluble native state and in amyloid-like fibrils, indicating native-like dimeric structure within Ure2 fibrils. Characterization of the glutaredoxin activity of Ure2 sheds light on its ability to protect yeast from heavy metal ion and oxidant toxicity and suggests a role in reversible protein glutathionylation signal transduction. Observation of allosteric enzyme behavior within amyloid-like Ure2 fibrils not only provides insight into the molecular structure of the fibrils but also has implications for the mechanism of [URE3] prion formation.The tripeptide glutathione (GSH)2 is abundant in the cell. It plays an important role as a reducing agent in vivo, such as in endogenous free radical scavenging, reversible protein S-glutathionylation, and the reduction of the active sites of enzymes. One major class of enzyme that uses GSH as a reductant is glutaredoxin (GRX), which is a small protein involved in reduction of ribonucleotide reductase for the formation of deoxyribonucleotides for DNA synthesis (1), reduction of 3′-phosphoadenylylsulfate reductase (2) for generation of sulfite, signal transduction, and protection against oxidative stress (3). GRXs are ubiquitous thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases that belong to the thioredoxin superfamily (4). GRXs also show dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) reductase (DHAR) activity (5). Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has at least seven GRXs, which can be divided into two classes according to the number of cysteines in their active site motif: dithiol GRXs with the active site motif CXXC and monothiol GRXs with the motif CXXS (69). The dithiol GRXs catalyze protein disulfide reduction using a dithiol mechanism for which both the active site cysteines are essential. On the other hand, both the dithiol and monothiol GRXs can catalyze the reduction of GSH-protein mixed disulfides using a monothiol mechanism that only requires the N-terminal active site cysteine. This reaction and mechanism is important for reversible protein glutathionylation in redox signaling and oxidative stress (10).Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) are a large versatile family of enzymes with multiple functions, particularly associated with cellular detoxification (11). In terms of overall structure, they belong to the thioredoxin superfamily, like GRX (4). In general, GSTs catalyze the conjugation of reduced GSH to hydrophobic substrates containing an electrophilic atom. In addition, GSTs bind a broad spectrum of ligands and show many other functions. For example, some GSTs show overlapping functions with glutathione-dependent peroxidases (GPxs), which use GSH to reduce hydrogen peroxide and/or organic hydroperoxides and thus are responsible for protection against both endogenous and exogenous oxidant toxicity (11). Interestingly Omega class and Beta class GSTs (such as Escherichia coli GST (EGST)) possess typical GRX activity toward widely used substrates, such as 2-hydroxyethyl disulfide (HEDS) (1216). These GSTs have an active site cysteine, which is indispensable for GRX activity but not GST activity.The yeast prion protein Ure2 is composed of a disordered protease-sensitive N-terminal prion domain and a compact globular C-terminal domain, which shows high structural similarity to EGST (17). The C-terminal domain of Ure2 can be further structurally divided into two subdomains, the all-α-helix subdomain and the thioredoxin fold subdomain, which shows high structural homology to GRX. Ure2 is involved in the regulation of nitrogen metabolism and resistance to heavy metal ion toxicity (especially cadmium) and oxidative stress in S. cerevisiae (18, 19). In addition, Ure2 shows GPx activity toward both hydrogen peroxide and organic hydroperoxides such as cumene hydroperoxide and tert-butyl hydroperoxide (20). The discovery of the GPx activity of Ure2 (20) provides an explanation for its ability to protect yeast cells from oxidant toxicity (18). However, the reason that ure2Δ yeast cells are hypersensitive to cadmium remains unclear. In general, cadmium ions have a drastic effect on yeast cell growth, and the reasons are complicated. One possible reason for cadmium ion toxicity is that thioltransferases or GRXs can be inhibited by direct binding of cadmium to the two essential cysteine residues present in the thioltransferase active site (21). The inhibition of GRXs leads to complex effects on cell growth. Therefore, we used an in vitro assay to provide a system that allows detailed analysis of the activity of Ure2 and its relationship to that of GRX enzymes. Characterization of the allosteric behavior of the GRX activity of Ure2 revealed that Ure2 forms an active dimer within fibrils. In addition to providing information about the molecular structure of Ure2 fibrils, this also has implications for the molecular mechanism of Ure2 prion formation.  相似文献   

9.
The yeast inheritable [URE3] element corresponds to a prion form of the nitrogen catabolism regulator Ure2p. We have isolated several orthologous URE2 genes in different yeast species: Saccharomyces paradoxus, S. uvarum, Kluyveromyces lactis, Candida albicans, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We show here by in silico analysis that the GST-like functional domain and the prion domain of the Ure2 proteins have diverged separately, the functional domain being more conserved through the evolution. The more extreme situation is found in the two S. pombe genes, in which the prion domain is absent. The functional analysis demonstrates that all the homologous genes except for the two S. pombe genes are able to complement the URE2 gene deletion in a S. cerevisiae strain. We show that in the two most closely related yeast species to S. cerevisiae, i.e., S. paradoxus and S. uvarum, the prion domains of the proteins have retained the capability to induce [URE3] in a S. cerevisiae strain. However, only the S. uvarum full-length Ure2p is able to behave as a prion. We also show that the prion inactivation mechanisms can be cross-transmitted between the S. cerevisiae and S. uvarum prions.  相似文献   

10.
Glutaredoxin 2 (Grx2) from Escherichia coli is distinguished from other glutaredoxins by its larger size, low overall sequence identity and lack of electron donor activity with ribonucleotide reductase. However, catalysis of glutathione (GSH)-dependent general disulfide reduction by Grx2 is extremely efficient. The high-resolution solution structure of E. coli Grx2 shows a two-domain protein, with residues 1 to 72 forming a classical "thioredoxin-fold" glutaredoxin domain, connected by an 11 residue linker to the highly helical C-terminal domain, residues 84 to 215. The active site, Cys9-Pro10-Tyr11-Cys12, is buried in the interface between the two domains, but Cys9 is solvent-accessible, consistent with its role in catalysis. The structures reveal the hither to unknown fact that Grx2 is structurally similar to glutathione-S-transferases (GST), although there is no obvious sequence homology. The similarity of these structures gives important insights into the functional significance of a new class of mammalian GST-like proteins, the single-cysteine omega class, which have glutaredoxin oxidoreductase activity rather than GSH-S-transferase conjugating activity. E. coli Grx 2 is structurally and functionally a member of this new expanding family of large glutaredoxins. The primary function of Grx2 as a GST-like glutaredoxin is to catalyze reversible glutathionylation of proteins with GSH in cellular redox regulation including stress responses.  相似文献   

11.
A total of 48 full-length protein sequences of pectin lyases from different source organisms available in NCBI were subjected to multiple sequence alignment, domain analysis, and phylogenetic tree construction. A phylogenetic tree constructed on the basis of the protein sequences revealed two distinct clusters representing pectin lyases from bacterial and fungal sources. Similarly, the multiple accessions of different source organisms representing bacterial and fungal pectin lyases also formed distinct clusters, showing sequence level homology. The sequence level similarities among different groups of pectinase enzymes, viz. pectin lyase, pectate lyase, polygalacturonase, and pectin esterase, were also analyzed by subjecting a single protein sequence from each group with common source organism to tree construction. Four distinct clusters representing different groups of pectinases with common source organisms were observed, indicating the existing sequence level similarity among them. Multiple sequence alignment of pectin lyase protein sequence of different source organisms along with pectinases with common source organisms revealed a conserved region, indicating homology at sequence level. A conserved domain Pec_Lyase_C was frequently observed in the protein sequences of pectin lyases and pectate lyases, while Glyco_hydro_28 domains and Pectate lyase-like β-helix clan domain are frequently observed in polygalacturonases and pectin esterases, respectively. The signature amino acid sequence of 41 amino acids, i.e. TYDNAGVLPITVN-SNKSLIGEGSKGVIKGKGLRIVSGAKNI, related with the Pec_Lyase_C is frequently observed in pectin lyase protein sequences and might be related with the structure and enzymatic function.  相似文献   

12.
The Ure2 protein from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has prion properties. In vitro and at neutral pH, soluble Ure2p spontaneously forms long, straight, insoluble protein fibrils. Two models have been proposed to account for the assembly of Ure2p into protein fibrils. The "amyloid backbone" model postulates that a segment ranging from 40 to 70 amino acids in the flexible N-terminal domain from different Ure2p molecules forms a parallel superpleated beta-structure running along the fibrils. The second model hypothesizes that assembly of full-length Ure2p is driven by limited conformational rearrangements and non-native inter- and/or intramolecular interactions between Ure2p monomers. Here, we performed a cysteine scan on residues located in the N- and C-terminal parts of Ure2p to determine whether these domains interact. Amino acid sequences centered around residue 6 in the N-terminal domain of Ure2p and residue 137 in the C-terminal moiety interacted at least transiently via intramolecular interactions. We documented the assembly properties of a Ure2p variant in which a disulfide bond was established between the N- and C-terminal domains and showed that it possesses assembly properties indistinguishable from those of wild-type Ure2p. We probed the structure of Ure2pC6C137 within the fibrils and demonstrate that the polypeptide is in a conformation similar to that of its soluble assembly-competent state. Our results constitute the first structural characterization of the N-terminal domain of Ure2p in both its soluble assembly-competent and fibrillar forms. Our data indicate that the flexibility of the N-terminal domain and conformational changes within this domain are essential for fibril formation and provide new insight into the conformational rearrangements that lead to the assembly of Ure2p into fibrils and the propagation of the [URE3] phenotype in yeast.  相似文献   

13.

Background

The function of a protein can be deciphered with higher accuracy from its structure than from its amino acid sequence. Due to the huge gap in the available protein sequence and structural space, tools that can generate functionally homogeneous clusters using only the sequence information, hold great importance. For this, traditional alignment-based tools work well in most cases and clustering is performed on the basis of sequence similarity. But, in the case of multi-domain proteins, the alignment quality might be poor due to varied lengths of the proteins, domain shuffling or circular permutations. Multi-domain proteins are ubiquitous in nature, hence alignment-free tools, which overcome the shortcomings of alignment-based protein comparison methods, are required. Further, existing tools classify proteins using only domain-level information and hence miss out on the information encoded in the tethered regions or accessory domains. Our method, on the other hand, takes into account the full-length sequence of a protein, consolidating the complete sequence information to understand a given protein better.

Results

Our web-server, CLAP (Classification of Proteins), is one such alignment-free software for automatic classification of protein sequences. It utilizes a pattern-matching algorithm that assigns local matching scores (LMS) to residues that are a part of the matched patterns between two sequences being compared. CLAP works on full-length sequences and does not require prior domain definitions.Pilot studies undertaken previously on protein kinases and immunoglobulins have shown that CLAP yields clusters, which have high functional and domain architectural similarity. Moreover, parsing at a statistically determined cut-off resulted in clusters that corroborated with the sub-family level classification of that particular domain family.

Conclusions

CLAP is a useful protein-clustering tool, independent of domain assignment, domain order, sequence length and domain diversity. Our method can be used for any set of protein sequences, yielding functionally relevant clusters with high domain architectural homogeneity. The CLAP web server is freely available for academic use at http://nslab.mbu.iisc.ernet.in/clap/.  相似文献   

14.
Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are ubiquitous, multifunctional proteins encoded by large gene families. In different plant species this gene family is comprised of 25–60 members, that can be grouped into six classes on the basis of sequence identity, gene organization and active site residues in the protein. The Phi and Tau classes are the most represented and are plant specific, while Zeta and Theta GSTs are found also in animals. Despite pronounced sequence and functional diversification, GSTs have maintained a highly conserved three-dimensional structure through evolution. Most GSTs are cytosolic and active as dimers, performing diverse catalytic as well as non-catalytic roles in detoxification of xenobiotics, prevention of oxidative damage and endogenous metabolism. Among their catalytic activities are the conjugation of electrophilic substrates to glutathione, glutathione-dependent isomerizations and reductions of toxic organic hydroperoxides. Their main non-catalytic role is as hormone and flavonoid ligandins. GST genes are predominantly organized in clusters non-randomly distributed in the genome. Phylogenetic studies indicate that plant GSTs have mainly evolved after the divergence of plants, the two prevalent Phi and Tau classes being the result of recent, multiple duplication events.  相似文献   

15.
Amyloid fibril formation is associated with a range of neurodegenerative diseases in humans, including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and prion diseases. In yeast, amyloid underlies several non-Mendelian phenotypes referred to as yeast prions. Mechanism of amyloid formation is critical for a complete understanding of the yeast prion phenomenon and human amyloid-related diseases. Ure2 protein is the basis of yeast prion [URE3]. The Ure2p prion domain is largely disordered. Residual structures, if any, in the disordered region may play an important role in the aggregation process. Studies of Ure2p prion domain are complicated by its high aggregation propensity, which results in a mixture of monomer and aggregates in solution. Previously we have developed a solid-support electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) approach to address this problem and have identified a structured state for the Alzheimer’s amyloid-β monomer. Here we use solid-support EPR to study the structure of Ure2p prion domain. EPR spectra of Ure2p prion domain with spin labels at every fifth residue from position 10 to position 75 show similar residue mobility profile for denaturing and native buffers after accounting for the effect of solution viscosity. These results suggest that Ure2p prion domain adopts a completely disordered structure in the native buffer. A completely disordered Ure2p prion domain implies that the amyloid formation of Ure2p, and likely other Q/N-rich yeast prion proteins, is primarily driven by inter-molecular interactions.  相似文献   

16.
The lipid-storing tissues of plants contain many small (0.2-1 microns) lipid (normally triacylglycerol) droplets which are surrounded and stabilized by a mixed phospholipid and protein annulus. The proteinaceous components of the lipid storage bodies are termed oleosins and are not associated with any other cellular structures. The major oleosins of rapeseed and radish have been isolated by preparative SDS-PAGE and are respectively classes of 19 kDa and 20 kDa proteins. Both protein classes were N-terminally blocked for direct sequencing, but were partially sequenced following limited proteolytic digestion. The major rapeseed oleosin was made up of at least two 19 kDa polypeptides, termed nap-I and nap-II, which have closely related but different amino acid sequences. A single 20 kDa oleosin, termed rad-I, was found in radish. A near full length cDNA clone for a major rapeseed oleosin was sequenced and found to correspond almost exactly to the sequence of nap-II. The sequences of nap-I and rad-I show very close similarity to one another, as do the sequences of nap-II and the previously determined sequence for the major oleosin from maize. All four oleosins have a large central hydrophobic domain flanked by polar N- and C-terminal domains. Secondary structure predictions for the four oleosins are similar and a novel model is proposed based on a central hydrophobic beta-strand region flanked by an N-terminal polar alpha-helix and a C-terminal amphipathic alpha-helix. The possibility that oleosins exhibit structural and functional similarities with some animal apolipoproteins is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are a family of enzymes that play important roles in stress tolerance and detoxification in plants. The plant GSTs are divided into four classes (phi, tau, zeta and theta), among which tau is the most numerously represented. To date, studies on GSTs in plants have focused largely on crop species. There is extremely little information on the molecular characteristics of GSTs in gymnosperms. Generalization on GST characteristics unique to gymnosperms and the patterns of GST evolution in plants cannot be made before more members of the gene family in conifers are described. In this study we report three new GSTs from Pinus tabulaeformis, Pinus densata and Pinus yunnanensis. Structural and phylogenetic analyses placed these three GSTs in tau class. The tau GST class is subdivided into three clades and this subdivision seems an ancient event that may have pre-dated the gymnosperm and angiosperm split. Sequence analysis revealed a highly conserved N-terminal domain in contrast to a highly variable C-terminal domain. Mutations even outside the critical glutathione-binding site in N-terminal domain can have pronounced effect on GST catalytic property. Thus, sequence similarity does not parallel functional specificity. The high diversity in C-terminal domain determines a wide range of substrate selectivity and specificity among tau GSTs. Thus the a few conserved residues in C-terminal domain seem essential to maintain the structure of the domain and the protein dimer. More extensive data on GST family organization and a thorough gene-by-gene analysis in conifers are needed to advance our understanding of the true diversity and evolution of GST in structure and function in plants.  相似文献   

18.
Previously, we characterized glutathione S-transferase (GST) B1-1 from Escherichia coli enzymologically and structurally. Besides GST B1-1, E. coli has seven genes that encode GST-like proteins, for which, except SspA, neither biological roles nor biochemical properties are known. Here we show that the GST-like YfcF and YfcG proteins have low but significant GSH-conjugating activity toward 1-chloro-2,4-dinitorobenzene and GSH-dependent peroxidase activity toward cumene hydroperoxide. Analysis involving site-directed mutagenesis suggested that Ser16 and Asn11 were important for the activities of YfcF and YfcG, respectively. On the contrary, no residue around the catalytic site of GST B1-1 has been demonstrated to be essential for catalytic activity. Deletions of the gst, yfcF, and yfcG genes each decreased the resistibility of the bacteria to hydrogen peroxide, which was recovered by transformation with the expression plasmid for the deleted enzyme. The inactive YfcF(S16G) and YfcG(N11A) mutants, however, could not rescue the knockout bacteria. Thus, E. coli has at least three GSTs of distinct classes, all of which are important for defense against oxidative stress in spite of the structural diversity. This seems consistent with the hypothesis that GSTs constitute a protein superfamily that has evolved from a thioredoxin-like ancestor in response to the development of oxidative stress.  相似文献   

19.
A new tandemly repetitive sequence family, having the 170 bp basic repeat characteristic of alphoid sequences, has been identified in the human genome. Its organization in the whole genome and on chromosome 21 is different from that of any of the previously described alphoid families. Members of this new family are unusually heterogeneous in sequence, and there are a number of variant sequence classes. Some of the variant classes exist in separate genomic domains, and even on a single chromosome the members of such a class are not significantly intermixed with members of another class.  相似文献   

20.
The protein Ure2 from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has prion properties. It assembles in vitro into long, straight, insoluble fibrils that are similar to amyloids in that they bind Congo Red and show green-yellow birefringence and have an increased resistance to proteolysis. We recently showed that Ure2p fibrils assembled under physiologically relevant conditions are devoid of a cross-beta-core. A model for fibril formation, where assembly is driven by non-native inter- and/or intramolecular interaction between Ure2p monomers following subtle conformational changes was proposed [Bousset et al. (2002) EMBO J. 21, 2903-2911]. An alternative model for the assembly of Ure2p into fibrils where assembly is driven by the stacking of 40-70 N-terminal amino acid residues of Ure2p into a central beta-core running along the fibrils from which the C-terminal domains protrude was proposed [Baxa et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 43717-43727]. We show here that Ure2p fibril congophilia and the associated yellow-green birefringence in polarized light are not indicative that the fibrils are of amyloid nature. We map the structures of the fibrillar and soluble forms of Ure2p using limited proteolysis and identify the reaction products by microsequencing and mass spectrometry. Finally, we demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of Ure2p is tightly involved in the fibrillar scaffold using a sedimentation assay and a variant Ure2p where a highly specific cleavage site between the N- and C-terminal domains of the protein was engineered. Our results are inconsistent with the cross-beta-core model and support the model for Ure2p assembly driven by subtle conformational changes and underline the influence of the natural context of the N-terminal domain on the assembly of Ure2p.  相似文献   

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