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1.
Bacterial cells sense external nutrient availability to regulate macromolecular synthesis and consequently their growth. In the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis, the starvation-inducible nucleotide (p)ppGpp negatively regulates GTP levels, both to resist nutritional stress and to maintain GTP homeostasis during growth. Here, we quantitatively investigated the relationship between GTP level, survival of amino acid starvation, and growth rate when GTP synthesis is uncoupled from its major homeostatic regulator, (p)ppGpp. We analyzed growth and nucleotide levels in cells that lack (p)ppGpp and found that their survival of treatment with a nonfunctional amino acid analog negatively correlates with both growth rate and GTP level. Manipulation of GTP levels modulates the exponential growth rate of these cells in a positive dose-dependent manner, such that increasing the GTP level increases growth rate. However, accumulation of GTP levels above a threshold inhibits growth, suggesting a toxic effect. Strikingly, adenine counteracts GTP stress by preventing GTP accumulation in cells lacking (p)ppGpp. Our results emphasize the importance of maintaining appropriate levels of GTP to maximize growth: cells can survive amino acid starvation by decreasing GTP level, which comes at a cost to growth, while (p)ppGpp enables rapid adjustment to nutritional stress by adjusting GTP level, thus maximizing fitness.  相似文献   

2.
In bacteria, guanosine (penta)tetra-phosphate ([p]ppGpp) is essential for controlling intracellular metabolism that is needed to adapt to environmental changes, such as amino acid starvation. The (p)ppGpp0 strain of Bacillus subtilis, which lacks (p)ppGpp synthetase, is unable to form colonies on minimal medium. Here, we found suppressor mutations in the (p)ppGpp0 strain, in the purine nucleotide biosynthesis genes, prs, purF and rpoB/C, which encode RNA polymerase core enzymes. In comparing our work with prior studies of ppGpp0 suppressors, we discovered that methionine addition masks the suppression on minimal medium, especially of rpoB/C mutations. Furthermore, methionine addition increases intracellular GTP in rpoB suppressor and this effect is decreased by inhibiting GTP biosynthesis, indicating that methionine addition activated GTP biosynthesis and inhibited growth under amino acid starvation conditions in (p)ppGpp0 backgrounds. Furthermore, we propose that the increase in intracellular GTP levels induced by methionine is due to methionine derivatives that increase the activity of the de novo GTP biosynthesis enzyme, GuaB. Our study sheds light on the potential relationship between GTP homeostasis and methionine metabolism, which may be the key to adapting to environmental changes.  相似文献   

3.
Bacterial alarmone (p)ppGpp, is a global regulator responsible for the stringent control. Two homologous (p)ppGpp synthetases, RelA and SpoT, have been identified and characterized in Escherichia coli, whereas Gram-positive bacteria such as Bacillus subtilis have been thought to possess only a single RelA-SpoT enzyme. We have now identified two genes, yjbM and ywaC, in B. subtilis that encode a novel type of alarmone synthetase. The predicted products of these genes are relatively small proteins ( approximately 25 kDa) that correspond to the (p)ppGpp synthetase domain of RelA-SpoT family members. A database survey revealed that genes homologous to yjbM and ywaC are conserved in certain bacteria belonging to Firmicutes or Actinobacteria phyla but not in other phyla such as Proteobacteria. We designated the proteins as small alarmone synthetases (SASs) to distinguish them from RelA-SpoT proteins. The (p)ppGpp synthetase function of YjbM and YwaC was confirmed by genetic complementation analysis and by in vitro assay of enzyme activity. Molecular genetic analysis also revealed that ywaC is induced by alkaline shock, resulting in the transient accumulation of ppGpp. The SAS proteins thus likely function in the biosynthesis of alarmone with a mode of action distinct from that of RelA-SpoT homologues.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract Sodium chloride treatment triggered the accumulation of (p)ppGpp in the Bacillus subtilis relA + strain IS58 as well as in its relaxed counterpart IS56 . Besides this relA -independent (p)ppGpp induction the GTP and ATP pools decreased dramatically.
In previous papers we found a direct correlation between (p)ppGpp accumulation and stress protein induction. In B. subtilis relA the (p)ppGpp accumulation was accompanied by the induction of general stress proteins whose synthesis rates were also enhanced by heat stress, amino acid limitation or oxygen starvation. Specific heat shock proteins were not induced by salt stress.
We suggest that these general stress proteins are induced under non-growing conditions in general.  相似文献   

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10.
Lipoic acid is an essential cofactor required for the function of key metabolic pathways in most organisms. We report the characterization of a Bacillus subtilis mutant obtained by disruption of the lipA (yutB) gene, which encodes lipoyl synthase (LipA), the enzyme that catalyzes the final step in the de novo biosynthesis of this cofactor. The function of lipA was inferred from the results of genetic and physiological experiments, and this study investigated its role in B. subtilis fatty acid metabolism. Interrupting lipoate-dependent reactions strongly inhibits growth in minimal medium, impairing the generation of branched-chain fatty acids and leading to accumulation of copious amounts of straight-chain saturated fatty acids in B. subtilis membranes. Although depletion of LipA induces the expression of the Δ5 desaturase, controlled by a two-component system that senses changes in membrane properties, the synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids is insufficient to support growth in the absence of precursors for branched-chain fatty acids. However, unsaturated fatty acids generated by deregulated overexpression of the Δ5 desaturase functionally replaces lipoic acid-dependent synthesis of branched-chain fatty acids. Furthermore, we show that the cold-sensitive phenotype of a B. subtilis strain deficient in Δ5 desaturase is suppressed by isoleucine only if LipA is present.Lipoic acid (LA; 6,8-thioctic acid or 1,2-dithiolane-3-pentanoic acid) is a sulfur-containing cofactor required for the function of several key enzymes involved in oxidative and single-carbon metabolism, including pyruvate dehydrogenase, 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, branched-chain 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase (BCKADH), acetoin dehydrogenase, and the glycine cleavage system (10). Lipoate-requiring complexes typically contain three protein subunits, E1, E2, and E3. LA is linked through an amide bond to lysine residues in the E2 subunits (42) and acts as a swinging arm, transferring covalently attached reaction intermediates among the active sites of the enzyme complexes (40).Although the general role of LA as a bound cofactor has been known for decades, the mechanisms by which LA is synthesized and becomes linked to its cognate proteins in different organisms continue to be elucidated. The reactions whereby LA-modified proteins are produced are best understood in Escherichia coli. In this organism, lipoylation is mediated by two separate enzymes, lipoyl protein ligase A (LplA) and octanoyl-acyl carrier protein-protein transferase (LipB) (30, 31). While LplA uses exogenous LA, LipB transfers endogenous octanoic acid to the target proteins (19). These octanoylated domains are then converted into lipoylated derivatives by the S-adenosyl-l-methionine-dependent enzyme lipoyl synthase (LipA), which catalyzes the insertion of sulfur atoms into the carbon-6 and -8 positions of the corresponding fatty acids (29). This process bypasses the requirement for an exogenous supply of LA.In contrast to the wealth of knowledge available on LA synthesis and utilization in E. coli, the existing information about these pathways in gram-positive bacteria is scarce. It has been found that Listeria monocytogenes mutants defective in proteins homologous to the E. coli LplA enzymes are unable to scavenge exogenous LA for modification of lipoyl domains (22, 23, 38). However, L. monocytogenes is a natural lipoate auxotroph since it does not encode the enzymes necessary for lipoate biosynthesis (15, 55). Bacillus subtilis synthesizes LA, but the biosynthesis, attachment, and function of this essential nutrient in this model gram-positive organism have not yet been studied in detail (50). Analysis of the genome sequence of B. subtilis (25) revealed that it contains an open reading frame, yutB, encoding a protein with a high degree of homology to E. coli LipA and two open reading frames encoding proteins slightly similar to LplA, while no LipB homolog was detected.LA is a critical cofactor of BCKADH, the enzyme involved in the formation of the primer carbons for the initiation of branched-chain fatty acid (BCFA) synthesis (21). Early work indicated that a bfmB mutant of B. subtilis, defective in both BCKADH and pyruvate dehydrogenase, requires short-branched-chain carboxilic acids for growth (56). However, in our hands, this mutant presented a high percentage of reversion, precluding its use in the study of lipid metabolism. Since BCFAs are the dominant acyl chains found in membrane phospholipids of B. subtilis, the goal of this study was to employ a genetic approach to investigate the role of yutB in the physiology of this organism, in particular in fatty acid metabolism. In addition, we provide compelling evidence showing that Δ5 unsaturated fatty acids (UFA), the products of the B. subtilis desaturase, can fully replace the function of BCFAs. Furthermore, we demonstrate that UFA are essential to provide cryoprotective properties in strains depleted of LipA. This work reports the first characterization of a gram-positive mutant deficient in LA synthesis and its use to study the interplay between BCFAs and UFA metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Over the past several decades, much attention has been focused on ruthenium complexes in antitumor therapy. Ruthenium is a transition metal that possesses several advantages for rational antitumor drug design and biological applications. In the present study, five ruthenium complexes containing amino acids were studied in vitro to determine their biological activity against sarcoma-180 tumor cells. The cytotoxicity of the complexes was evaluated by an MTT assay, and their mechanism of action was investigated. The results demonstrated that the five complexes inhibited the growth of the S180 tumor cell line, with IC50 values ranging from 22.53 µM to 50.18 µM, and showed low cytotoxicity against normal L929 fibroblast cells. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that the [Ru(gly)(bipy)(dppb)]PF6 complex (2) inhibited the growth of the tumor cells by inducing apoptosis, as evidenced by an increased number of Annexin V-positive cells and G0/G1 phase cell cycle arrest. Further investigation showed that complex 2 caused a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential; activated caspases 3, caspase-8, and caspase-9 and caused a change in the mRNA expression levels of caspase 3, caspase-9 as well as the bax genes. The levels of the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bak were increased. Thus, we demonstrated that ruthenium amino acid complexes are promising drugs against S180 tumor cells, and we recommend further investigations of their role as chemotherapeutic agents for sarcomas.  相似文献   

12.
Entomopoxviruses and baculoviruses are pathogens of insects which replicate in the cytoplasm and nuclei of their host cells, respectively. During the late stages of infection, both groups of viruses produce occlusion bodies which serve to protect virions from the external environment. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy studies have shown that large bundles of filaments are associated with these occlusion bodies. Entomopoxviruses produce cytoplasmic fibrils which appear to be composed of the filament-associated late protein of entomopoxviruses (FALPE). Baculoviruses, on the other hand, yield filaments in the nuclei and cytoplasm of the infected cell which are composed of a protein called p10. Despite significant differences in their sequences, FALPE and p10 have similar hydrophilicity profiles, and each has a proline-rich stretch of amino acids at its carboxyl terminus. Evidence that FALPE and p10 could produce filaments in the absence of other viral proteins is presented. When FALPE was expressed in insect cells from a recombinant baculovirus, filaments similar to those produced by the wild-type Amsacta moorei entomopoxvirus were observed. In addition, when expression plasmids containing FALPE or p10 genes were transfected into Vero monkey kidney cells, filament structures similar to those found in infected insect cells were produced. The manner in which FALPE and p10 subunits interact to form polymers was investigated through deletion and site-specific mutagenesis in conjunction with immunofluorescence microscopy, yeast two-hybrid protein interaction analysis, and chemical cross-linking of adjacent molecules. These studies indicated that the amino termini of FALPE and p10 were essential for subunit interaction. Although deletion of the carboxy termini did not affect this interaction, it did inhibit filament formation. In addition, modification of several potential sites for phosphorylation also abolished filament assembly. We concluded that although the sequences of FALPE and p10 were different, the structural and functional properties of the two polypeptides appeared to be similar.Cytoskeletal elements have previously been demonstrated to be involved in several aspects of virus assembly (39, 66). For example, vaccinia virus has been shown to associate with actin during its release from the plasma membrane (15), while adenovirus is transported through the cytoplasm to the nucleus through its interaction with microtubules (17, 38). Actin has been implicated in the transport of baculovirus nucleocapsids to the nucleus (10). Other viruses contain actin in their envelopes along with viral surface glycoproteins, implying some role in the budding process (34, 54, 58). In addition, cytochalasin D, a disruptor of microfilaments, has been shown to impair the assembly of a number of different viruses (18, 42, 45). Most viruses use preexisting microtubule or microfilament proteins derived from host cells in these processes. However, we have recently demonstrated that insect poxviruses establish their own filament network during the later stages of infection, using a protein encoded by the viral genome (2).Entomopoxviruses (EPVs) are insect pathogens which replicate in the cytoplasm of infected cells and are members of the poxvirus family (reviewed in references 3 to 5 and 22). The genomes of these viruses consist of linear double-stranded DNA molecules which are 130 to 300 kb in length. Amsacta moorei EPV (AmEPV) can be grown in cultured insect cells and is the most studied member of this group of viruses (2225, 27, 40, 50). AmEPV derives its name from the Indian red army worm, a larva from the Lepidoptera family and the host from which the virus was originally isolated (23, 25, 50). Baculoviruses also infect Lepidoptera larvae but instead replicate in the nuclei of their host cells (44). A number of baculoviruses have been studied, but knowledge of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcNPV), which infects a wide variety of larvae including that of the alfalfa leaf hopper, is most extensive (44). This virus is used routinely to produce recombinant proteins in insect virus expression systems (36, 44, 46, 49).A common property of EPVs and baculoviruses is the formation of large intracellular structures known as occlusion bodies which assemble during the late stages of viral infection. Virions are embedded within these occlusion bodies, and the process serves to protect the virus from the external environment. In the case of baculoviruses, the occlusion bodies are called polyhedra and are composed predominantly of a 31-kDa protein called polyhedrin (52). The occlusion bodies of EPVs are known as spheroids and consist mainly of a 110-kDa protein known as spheroidin (6, 9, 27, 55). Spheroidin and polyhedrin do not appear to exhibit sequence homology (6, 27, 52). A multilamellar envelope also appears to surround both polyhedra and spheroids and may help to stabilize these structures during assembly (2, 53).During the late phases of AmEPV and baculovirus infections, large bundles of filaments also appear to accumulate in the infected insect cells. In the case of AmEPV, these structures are present in the cytoplasm (2, 22, 23, 40), while those found in cells infected with baculoviruses reside both in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus (1, 14, 57). Baculovirus fibrils are composed primarily of a 10-kDa protein called p10 (47, 59). The p10 gene sequences from AcNPV, Orgyia pseudotsugata nuclear polyhedrosis virus (OpNPV), Bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus, Perina nuda nuclear polyhedrosis virus, Spodoptera exigua nuclear polyhedrosis virus (SeNPV), and Choristoneura fumiferana nuclear polyhedrosis virus (CfNPV) have been reported (13, 32, 35, 6668). Although the different p10 protein sequences only exhibit 39 to 51% identity and molecules from different species cannot interact with one another, it is believed that the polypeptides must be structurally and functionally similar (61, 66). Deletion mutagenesis of AcNPV p10 has demonstrated that both the amino- and carboxy-terminal regions of this protein are necessary for the formation of filaments in the infected cell (60). Other studies have assigned an aggregation function to the amino-terminal half of p10 (63, 65), and it has been shown that this region contains a coiled-coil domain which is conserved among the different baculoviruses (66). It is tempting to speculate that p10 aggregation is the result of coiled-coil interaction, but direct evidence for this hypothesis is lacking. The precise role of the carboxy terminus of p10 is still unclear, although it has been proposed to interact with tubulin (11). Deletion of the entire p10 open reading frame (ORF) through homologous recombination produces a mutant virus which is still capable of replication both in vitro and in vivo but produces fragile polyhedra with fragmented polyhedral envelopes (26, 64, 65). The p10 protein has also been implicated in disintegration of the nuclear envelope of the host cell, and this function appears to be associated with the carboxy terminus of this protein (61, 65).Our laboratory (2) recently demonstrated that the cytoplasmic filaments, which characterize the late stages of infection by AmEPV, are composed primarily of a 156-amino-acid protein called FALPE (filament-associated late protein of EPVs). These filaments are closely associated with the spheroids and their membrane envelopes. FALPE is a phosphoprotein which migrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels as a 25/27-kDa doublet. This protein also contains an unusual proline-glutamic acid repeat region spanning 20 residues in the carboxy terminus of the polypeptide. The ultrastructure and close association of this protein with the occlusion bodies of AmEPV suggested that FALPE and p10 played analogous roles during infections by the respective viruses.This article addresses the structural and functional similarities between FALPE and p10. These two viral proteins are known to be major components of filamentous structures, but it is not known whether additional viral or cellular proteins cooperate during the polymerization process. In this report, we provide insight into the mechanisms which produce filaments in cells infected with either baculoviruses or EPVs. We demonstrate that p10 and FALPE can produce filaments in the absence of other viral gene products. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and a chemical cross-linking agent, we obtained evidence for self-association of either FALPE or p10. Finally, the polypeptide regions of FALPE and p10 which are required for self-association and subsequent filament formation are mapped.  相似文献   

13.
Suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) family is an important negative regulator of cytokine signaling and deregulation of SOCS has been involved in many types of cancer. All cervical cancer cell lines tested showed lower expression of SOCS1, SOCS3, and SOCS5 than normal tissue or cell lines. The immunohistochemistry result for SOCS proteins in human cervical tissue also confirmed that normal tissue expressed higher level of SOCS proteins than neighboring tumor. Similar to the regulation of SOCS in other types of cancer, DNA methylation contributed to SOCS1 downregulation in CaSki, ME-180, and HeLa cells. However, the expression of SOCS3 or SOCS5 was not recovered by the inhibition of DNA methylation. Histone deacetylation may be another regulatory mechanism involved in SOCS1 and SOCS3 expression, however, SOCS5 expression was neither affected by DNA methylation nor histone deacetylation. Ectopic expression of SOCS1 or SOCS3 conferred radioresistance to HeLa cells, which implied SOCS signaling regulates the response to radiation in cervical cancer. In this study, we have shown that SOCS expression repressed by, in part, epigenetically and altered SOCS1 and SOCS3 expression could contribute to the radiosensitive phenotype in cervical cancer.  相似文献   

14.
The greatest challenge for the seeding of cancer in metastatic sites is integration into the ectopic microenvironment despite the lack of an orthotopic supportive environment and presence of pro-death signals concomitant with a localized “foreign-body” inflammatory response. In this metastatic location, many carcinoma cells display a reversion of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition that marks dissemination in the primary tumor mass. This mesenchymal to epithelial reverting transition (MErT) is thought to help seeding and colonization by protecting against cell death. We have previously shown that hepatocyte coculture induces the re-expression of E-cadherin via abrogation of autocrine EGFR signaling pathway in prostate cancer (PCa) cells and that this confers a survival advantage. Herein, we show that hepatocytes educate PCa to undergo MErT by modulating the activity of p38 and ERK1/2. Hepatocytes inhibited p38 and ERK1/2 activity in prostate cancer cells, which allowed E-cadherin re-expression. Introduction of constitutively active MEK6 and MEK1 to DU145 cells cocultured with hepatocytes abrogated E-cadherin re-expression. At least a partial phenotypic reversion can be achieved by suppression of p38 and ERK1/2 activation in DU145 cells even in the absence of hepatocytes. Interestingly, these mitogen-activated protein kinase activities were also triggered by re-expressed E-cadherin leading to p38 and ERK1/2 activity in PCa cells; these signals provide protection to PCa cells upon challenge with chemotherapy and cell death-inducing cytokines. We propose that distinct p38/ERK pathways are related to E-cadherin levels and function downstream of E-cadherin allowing, respectively, for hepatocyte-mediated MErT and tumor cell survival in the face of death signals.  相似文献   

15.
The Agrobacterium tumefaciens T-DNA gene iaaM was introduced by leaf-disc transformation into transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants expressing the iaaH gene. Regenerated calli were screened for the presence of indole-3-acetamide (IAM), by gas chromatography-multiple ion monitoring-mass spectrometry, and IAM-containing calli were further analyzed for free and conjugated indoleacetic acid (IAA). It was found that transgenic calli on average contained twice as much free IAA and three times more conjugated IAA than calli from wild-type plants. About 40% of the transformed calli could be regenerated to plants. The distribution of free and conjugated IAA was measured in transformed plants with a normal phenotype and compared with equivalent wild-type plants. The IAA content of transgenic plants was only slightly increased, whereas IAA-conjugate levels were enhanced significantly. These data suggest that conjugation of IAA may serve as a regulatory mechanism, contributing to maintenance of steady-state IAA pool sizes during tobacco growth and development.  相似文献   

16.

Rationale

There is evidence that impairments in nitric oxide (NO) signaling contribute to chronic hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. The L-arginine-NO precursor, L-citrulline, has been shown to ameliorate pulmonary hypertension. Sodium-coupled neutral amino acid transporters (SNATs) are involved in the transport of L-citrulline into pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAECs). The functional link between the SNATs, L-citrulline, and NO signaling has not yet been explored.

Objective

We tested the hypothesis that changes in SNAT1 expression and transport function regulate NO production by modulating eNOS coupling in newborn piglet PAECs.

Methods and Results

A silencing RNA (siRNA) technique was used to assess the contribution of SNAT1 to NO production and eNOS coupling (eNOS dimer-to-monomer ratios) in PAECs from newborn piglets cultured under normoxic and hypoxic conditions in the presence and absence of L-citrulline. SNAT1 siRNA reduced basal NO production in normoxic PAECs and prevented L-citrulline-induced elevations in NO production in both normoxic and hypoxic PAECs. SNAT1 siRNA reduced basal eNOS dimer-to-monomer ratios in normoxic PAECs and prevented L-citrulline-induced increases in eNOS dimer-to-monomer ratios in hypoxic PAECs.

Conclusions

SNAT1 mediated L-citrulline transport modulates eNOS coupling and thus regulates NO production in hypoxic PAECs from newborn piglets. Strategies that increase SNAT1-mediated transport and supply of L-citrulline may serve as novel therapeutic approaches to enhance NO production in patients with pulmonary vascular disease.  相似文献   

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T. Nagai  Y. Itoh 《Applied microbiology》1997,63(10):4087-4089
A generalized transducing phage, (phi)BN100, was isolated from a Bacillus subtilis (natto) strain producing poly-(gamma)-glutamic acid ((gamma)PGA). Transduction frequencies for a given marker ranged from 3.8 x 10(sup-8) to 1.6 x 10(sup-6) per phage particle. The genome size of the phage was approximately 42 kb. (phi)BN100 was used successfully to identify bona fide Tn917-LTV1 transpositional mutants defective in (gamma)PGA production.  相似文献   

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A thermostable glucose dehydrogenase (GlcDH) mutant of Bacillus megaterium IWG3 harboring the Q252L substitution (Y. Makino, S. Negoro, I. Urabe, and H. Okada, J. Biol. Chem. 264:6381-6385, 1989) is stable at pH values above 9, but only in the presence of 2 M NaCl. Another GlcDH mutant exhibiting increased stability at an alkaline pH in the absence of NaCl has been isolated previously (S.-H. Baik, T. Ide, H. Yoshida, O. Kagami, and S. Harayama, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 61:329-335, 2003). This mutant had two amino acid substitutions, Q252L and E170K. In the present study, we characterized three GlcDH mutants harboring the substitutions Q252L, E170K, and Q252L/E170K under low-salt conditions. The GlcDH mutant harboring two substitutions, Q252L/E170K, was stable, but mutants harboring a single substitution, either Q252L or E170K, were unstable at an alkaline pH. Gel filtration chromatography analyses demonstrated that the oligomeric state of the Q252/E170K enzyme was stable, while the tetramers of the enzymes harboring a single substitution (Q252L or E170K) dissociated into dimers at an alkaline pH. These results indicated that the Q252L and E170K substitutions synergistically strengthened the interaction at the dimer-dimer interface. The crystal structure of the E170K/Q252L mutant, determined at 2.0-Å resolution, showed that residues 170 and 252 are located in a hydrophobic cavity at the subunit-subunit interface. We concluded that these residues in the wild-type enzyme have thermodynamically unfavorable effects, while the Q252L and E170K substitutions increase the subunit-subunit interactions by stabilizing the hydrophobic cavity.  相似文献   

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