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1.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the posttranslational conversion of glutamic acid to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid, an amino acid critical to the function of the vitamin K-dependent blood coagulation proteins. Given the functional similarity of mammalian vitamin K-dependent carboxylases and the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase from Conus textile, a marine invertebrate, we hypothesized that structurally conserved regions would identify sequences critical to this common functionality. Furthermore, we examined the diversity of animal species that maintain vitamin K-dependent carboxylation to generate gamma-carboxyglutamic acid. We have cloned carboxylase homologs in full-length or partial form from the beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas), toadfish (Opsanus tau), chicken (Gallus gallus), hagfish (Myxine glutinosa), horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus), and cone snail (Conus textile) to compare these structures to the known bovine, human, rat, and mouse cDNA sequences. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequences identified a nearly perfectly conserved 38-amino acid residue region in all of these putative carboxylases. In addition, this amino acid motif is also present in the Drosophila genome and identified a Drosophila homolog of the gamma-carboxylase. Assay of hagfish liver demonstrated vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity in this hemichordate. These results demonstrate the broad distribution of the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase gene, including a highly conserved motif that is likely critical for enzyme function. The vitamin K-dependent biosynthesis of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid appears to be a highly conserved function in the animal kingdom.  相似文献   

2.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the modification of specific glutamates in a number of proteins required for blood coagulation and associated with bone and calcium homeostasis. All known vitamin K-dependent proteins possess a conserved eighteen-amino acid propeptide sequence that is the primary binding site for the carboxylase. We compared the relative affinities of synthetic propeptides of nine human vitamin K-dependent proteins by determining the inhibition constants (Ki) toward a factor IX propeptide/gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain substrate. The Ki values for six of the propeptides (factor X, matrix Gla protein, factor VII, factor IX, PRGP1, and protein S) were between 2-35 nM, with the factor X propeptide having the tightest affinity. In contrast, the inhibition constants for the propeptides of prothrombin and protein C are approximately 100-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. The propeptide of bone Gla protein demonstrates severely impaired carboxylase binding with an inhibition constant of at least 200,000-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. This study demonstrates that the affinities of the propeptides of the vitamin K-dependent proteins vary over a considerable range; this may have important physiological consequences in the levels of vitamin K-dependent proteins and the biochemical mechanism by which these substrates are modified by the carboxylase.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Gammacarboxyglutamic acid (Gla) is an abnormal amino acid, which occurs in a number of proteins. It was discovered about 10 years ago in the four vitamin K-dependent blood clotting factors and it could be demonstrated that Gla is formed in a post-translational modification step, which requires a carboxylating enzyme system (carboxylase) and vitamin K. Since at the time of this discovery the earlier mentioned clotting factors were the only proteins known to be synthesized in a vitamin K-dependent way, it has been assumed for many years that the blood clotting system was unique in this respect. Recently it has been demonstrated, however, that vitamin K-dependent carboxylase is not restricted to the liver (the place of synthesis of the clotting factors) but that it is also present in other tissues such as lung, kidney, spleen and testis. Moreover, numerous Gla-containing proteins have been detected, although in most cases their function is not wholly understood. It seems that (like for instance the glycosylation) the vitamin K-dependent carboxylation is a normal post-translational. modification, which is required for the correct function of a certain class of Ca2+-binding proteins.  相似文献   

4.
To identify the amino acid sequence of the precursor of the Gla-containing peptide, epsilon-TxIX, from the venom of the marine snail Conus textile, the cDNA encoding this peptide was cloned from a C. textile venom duct library. The cDNA of the precursor form of epsilon-TxIX encodes a 67 amino acid precursor peptide, including an N-terminal prepro-region, the mature peptide, and four residues posttranslationally cleaved from the C-terminus. To determine the role of the propeptide in gamma-carboxylation, peptides were designed and synthesized based on the propeptide sequence of the Gla-containing conotoxin epsilon-TxIX and used in assays with the vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase from C. textile venom ducts. The mature acarboxy peptide epsilon-TxIX was a high K(M) substrate for the gamma-carboxylase. Synthetic peptides based on the precursor epsilon-TxIX were low K(M) substrates (5 microM) if the peptides included at least 12 residues of propeptide sequence, from -12 to -1. Leucine-19, leucine-16, asparagine-13, leucine-12, leucine-8 and leucine-4 contribute to the interaction of the pro-conotoxin with carboxylase since their replacement by aspartic acid increased the K(M) of the substrate peptide. Although the Conus propeptide and the propeptides of the mammalian vitamin K-dependent proteins show no obvious sequence homology, synthetic peptides based upon the structure of pro-epsilon-TxIX were intermediate K(M) substrates for the bovine carboxylase. The propeptide of epsilon-TxIX contains significant alpha-helix, as estimated by measurement of the circular dichroism spectra, but the region of the propeptide that plays the dominant role in directing carboxylation does not contain evidence of helical structure. These results indicate that the gamma-carboxylation recognition site is defined by hydrophobic residues in the propeptide of this conotoxin precursor.  相似文献   

5.
The gamma-carboxyglutamate-containing proteins are a family of secreted vitamin K-dependent proteins in which some glutamyl residues are post-translationally modified to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues. A vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase enzyme catalyses this post-translational modification. The gamma-carboxylase reaction requires vitamin K in its reduced form, vitamin K hydroquinone, and generates gamma-carboxyglutamate and vitamin K 2,3,-epoxide which is then recycled back to the hydroquinone form by a vitamin K reductase system. Warfarin blocks the vitamin K cycle and hence inhibits the gamma-carboxylase reaction, and this property of Warfarin has led to its wide use in anticoagulant therapy. Until recently, interest in vitamin K-dependent proteins was mostly restricted to the field of hematology. However, the discovery that the anti-coagulant factor protein S and its structural homologue Gas6 (growth arrest-specific gene 6), two vitamin K-dependent proteins, are ligands for the Tyro3/Axl/Mer family of related tyrosine kinase receptors has opened up a new area of research. Moreover, the phenotypes associated with the invalidation of genes encoding vitamin K-dependent proteins or their receptors revealed their implication in regulating phagocytosis during many cell differentiation phenomena such as retinogenesis, neurogenesis, osteogenesis, and spermatogenesis. Additionally, protein S was identified as the major factor responsible for serum-stimulated phagocytosis of apoptotic cells. Therefore, the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of vitamin K-dependent proteins in regulating apoptotic cell phagocytosis may lead to a better understanding of the physiopathology of cell differentiation and could form the framework of new therapeutic strategies aiming at a selective targeting of cell phagocytosis associated pathologies.  相似文献   

6.
The marine snail Conus is the sole invertebrate wherein both the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase and its product, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid, have been identified. To examine its biosynthesis of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid, we studied the carboxylase from Conus venom ducts. The carboxylase cDNA from Conus textile has an ORF that encodes a 811-amino-acid protein which exhibits sequence similarity to the vertebrate carboxylases, with 41% identity and approximately 60% sequence similarity to the bovine carboxylase. Expression of this cDNA in COS cells or insect cells yielded vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity and vitamin K-dependent epoxidase activity. The recombinant carboxylase has a molecular mass of approximately 130 kDa. The recombinant Conus carboxylase carboxylated Phe-Leu-Glu-Glu-Leu and the 28-residue peptides based on residues -18 to +10 of human proprothrombin and proFactor IX with Km values of 420 micro m, 1.7 micro m and 6 micro m, respectively; the Km for vitamin K is 52 micro m. The Km values for peptides based on the sequence of the conotoxin epsilon-TxIX and two precursor analogs containing 12 or 29 amino acids of the propeptide region are 565 micro m, 75 micro m and 74 micro m, respectively. The recombinant Conus carboxylase, in the absence of endogenous substrates, is stimulated up to fivefold by vertebrate propeptides but not by Conus propeptides. These results suggest two propeptide-binding sites in the carboxylase, one that binds the Conus and vertebrate propeptides and is required for substrate binding, and the other that binds only the vertebrate propeptide and is required for enzyme stimulation. The marked functional and structural similarities between the Conus carboxylase and vertebrate vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylases argue for conservation of a vitamin K-dependent carboxylase across animal species and the importance of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid synthesis in diverse biological systems.  相似文献   

7.
Stanley TB  Humphries J  High KA  Stafford DW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15681-15687
The binding of the gamma-glutamyl carboxylase to its protein substrates is mediated by a conserved 18 amino acid propeptide sequence found in all vitamin K-dependent proteins. We recently found that the apparent affinities of the naturally occurring propeptides for the carboxylase vary over a 100-fold range and that the propeptide of bone Gla protein has severely impaired affinity for the carboxylase [Stanley, T. B., et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 16940-16944 (1)]. Here we report a consensus propeptide sequence that binds tighter (K(i) = 0.43 nM) to the carboxylase than any known propeptide sequence. Comparing the factor IX propeptide to the propeptides of protein C, bone Gla protein, and prothrombin, the weakest binding propeptides, allowed us to predict which residues might be responsible for these substrates' relatively weak binding to the carboxylase. We then made propeptides with the predicted amino acid changes and determined their binding affinities. The reduced binding affinity of these propeptides relative to that of FIX is due to residues -15 in protein C, -10 and -6 in bone Gla protein, and -9 in prothrombin. A role for the -9 position was not previously recognized but is further shown by our identification of a new, naturally occurring mutation at this position in factor IX which causes a warfarin-sensitive hemophilia B phenotype. In addition, we find that propeptides with mutations found in warfarin-sensitive patients have reduced affinity for the carboxylase, suggesting a physiological relevance of propeptide binding affinity.  相似文献   

8.
B A Bouchard  B Furie  B C Furie 《Biochemistry》1999,38(29):9517-9523
The vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the posttranslational modification of glutamic acid to gamma-carboxyglutamic acid in the vitamin K-dependent proteins of blood and bone. The vitamin K-dependent carboxylase also catalyzes the epoxidation of vitamin K hydroquinone, an obligatory step in gamma-carboxylation. Using recombinant vitamin K-dependent carboxylase, purified in the absence of propeptide and glutamic acid-containing substrate using a FLAG epitope tag, the role of free cysteine residues in these reactions was examined. Incubation of the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase with the sulfhydryl-reactive reagent N-ethylmaleimide inhibited both the carboxylase and epoxidase activities of the enzyme. This inhibition was proportional to the incorporation of radiolabeled N-ethylmaleimide. Stoichiometric analyses using [(3)H]-N-ethylmaleimide indicated that the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase contains two or three free cysteine residues. Incubation with propeptide, glutamic acid-containing substrate, and vitamin K hydroquinone, alone or in combination, indicated that the binding of a glutamic acid-containing substrate to the carboxylase makes accessible a free cysteine residue that is important for interaction with vitamin K hydroquinone. This is consistent with our previous observation that binding of a glutamic acid-containing substrate activates vitamin K epoxidation and supports the hypothesis that binding of the carboxylatable substrate to the enzyme results in a conformational change which renders the enzyme catalytically competent.  相似文献   

9.
Leptospirosis is an emerging infectious disease whose pathology includes a hemorrhagic response, and sequencing of the Leptospira interrogans genome revealed an ortholog of the vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase as one of several hemostatic proteins present in the bacterium. Until now, the VKD carboxylase was known to be present only in the animal kingdom (i.e. metazoans that include mammals, fish, snails, and insects), and this restricted distribution and high sequence similarity between metazoan and Leptospira orthologs strongly suggests that Leptospira acquired the VKD carboxylase by horizontal gene transfer. In metazoans, the VKD carboxylase is bifunctional, acting as an epoxidase that oxygenates vitamin K to a strong base and a carboxylase that uses the base to carboxylate Glu residues in VKD proteins, rendering them active in hemostasis and other physiologies. In contrast, the Leptospira ortholog showed epoxidase but not detectable carboxylase activity and divergence in a region of identity in all known metazoan VKD carboxylases that is important to Glu interaction. Furthermore, although the mammalian carboxylase is regulated so that vitamin K epoxidation does not occur unless Glu substrate is present, the Leptospira VKD epoxidase showed unfettered epoxidation in the absence of Glu substrate. Finally, human VKD protein orthologs were not detected in the L. interrogans genome. The combined data, then, suggest that Leptospira exapted the metazoan VKD carboxylase for some use other than VKD protein carboxylation, such as using the strong vitamin K base to drive a new reaction or to promote oxidative damage or depleting vitamin K to indirectly inhibit host VKD protein carboxylation.  相似文献   

10.
During embryonic development of the chick, the onset of calcium transport by the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) is concomitant with the appearance of a calcium-binding protein (CaBP). The development-specific expression of the CaBP in the CAM is inhibited by vitamin K antagonism in ovo with the anticoagulant, warfarin. However, the CaBP remains immunologically detectable in the CAM of warfarin-treated embryos, suggesting the presence of a precursor form of the CaBP. Previously, we have demonstrated that CaBP expression in CAM organ cultures is inducible by vitamin K. Furthermore, the CaBP contains several residues of the modified amino acid, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gamma-CGlu), which has been shown to be formed by vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of glutamic acid in several plasma clotting proteins. This study reports the presence of a post-translational, vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase activity in the CAM. Our results show that explants of CAM incorporate H14CO3 in an age-specific and vitamin K-dependent manner. Incorporation of H14CO3 by the CAM is further potentiated by warfarin treatment of the embryos, presumably owing to an elevation of the amount of endogenous uncarboxylated protein precursor(s). Among the subcellular (nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal, and soluble) fractions of the CAM, only microsomes exhibit specific incorporation of of H14CO3 into gamma-CGlu. The CAM microsomal carboxylation activity is post-translational, vitamin K-dependent, specific for prenylated homologs of vitamin K, sensitive to warfarin, and appears to be unrelated to the activities of biotin-dependent carboxylases or phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Optimal carboxylation activity occurs after incubation of the microsomes with H14CO3 for 60 min at 37 degrees C in the presence of over 100 microgram of vitamin K1/ml.  相似文献   

11.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation of glutamate to gamma-carboxyglutamate was originally well characterized in the mammalian blood clotting cascade. gamma-Carboxyglutamate has also been found in a number of other mammalian proteins and in neuropeptides from the venoms of marine snails belonging to the genus Conus, suggesting wider prevalence of gamma-carboxylation. We demonstrate that an open reading frame from a Drosophila melanogaster cDNA clone encodes a protein with vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylase activity. The open reading frame, 670 amino acids in length, is truncated at the C-terminal end compared with mammalian gamma-carboxylase, which is 758 amino acids. The mammalian gene has 14 introns; in Drosophila there are two much shorter introns but in positions precisely homologous to two of the mammalian introns. In addition, a deletion of 6 nucleotides is observed when cDNA and genomic sequences are compared. In situ hybridization to fixed embryos indicated ubiquitous presence of carboxylase mRNA throughout embryogenesis. Northern blot analysis revealed increased mRNA levels in 12-24-h embryos. The continued presence of carboxylase mRNA suggests that it plays an important role during embryogenesis. Although the model substrate FLEEL is carboxylated by the enzyme, a substrate containing the propeptide of a Conus carboxylase substrate, conantokin G, is poorly carboxylated. Its occurrence in vertebrates, molluscan systems (i.e. Conus), and Drosophila and the apparently strong homology between the three systems suggest that this is a highly conserved and widely distributed post-translational modification in biological systems.  相似文献   

12.
The vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase converts clusters of Glu residues to gamma-carboxylated Glu residues (Glas) in VKD proteins, which is required for their activity. VKD precursors are targeted to the carboxylase by their carboxylase recognition site, which in most cases is a propeptide. We have identified a second tethering site for carboxylase and VKD proteins that is required for carboxylase activity, called the vitamin K-dependent protein site of interaction (VKS). Several VKD proteins specifically bound an immobilized peptide comprising amino acids 343-355 of the human carboxylase (CVYKRSRGKSGQK) but not a scrambled peptide containing the same residues in a different order. Association with the 343-355 peptide was independent of propeptide binding, because the VKD proteins lacked the propeptide and because the 343-355 peptide did not disrupt association of a propeptide factor IX-carboxylase complex. Analysis with peptides that overlapped amino acids 343-355 indicated that the 343-345 CVY residues were necessary but not sufficient for prothrombin binding. Ionic interactions were also suggested because peptide-VKD protein binding could be disrupted by changes in ionic strength or pH. Mutagenesis of Cys(343) to Ser and Tyr(345) to Phe resulted in 7-11-fold decreases in vitamin K epoxidation and peptide (EEL) substrate and carboxylase carboxylation, and kinetic analysis showed 5-6-fold increases in K(m) values for the Glu substrate. These results suggest that Cys(343) and Tyr(345) are near the catalytic center and affect the active site conformation required for correct positioning of the Glu substrate. The 343-355 VKS peptide had a higher affinity for carboxylated prothrombin (K(d) = 5 microm) than uncarboxylated prothrombin (K(d) = 60 microm), and the basic VKS region may also facilitate exiting of the Gla product from the catalytic center by ionic attraction. Tethering of VKD proteins to the carboxylase via the propeptide-binding site and the VKS region has important implications for the mechanism of VKD protein carboxylation, and a model is proposed for how the carboxylase VKS region may be required for efficient and processive VKD protein carboxylation.  相似文献   

13.
Four proteins active in blood coagulation have long been known to require vitamin K for their proper biosynthesis: factors II, VII, IX, and X. This paper describes the purification of a hitherto unrecognized vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein from bovine plasma. The biosynthesis of this protein is interfered with by the vitamin K antagonist Dicoumarol. The molecular weight of the protein is approximately 56,000 and, like factor X, it has two polypeptide chains. The light chain binds Ca2+. Its NH2-terminal amino acid sequence is homologous to the NH2-terminal sequences of the other vitamin K-dependent proteins and it contains vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues. The biological function of this protein is unknown.  相似文献   

14.
Planar-tubular two-dimensional (2D) crystals of human vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase grow in the presence of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC). Surprisingly, these crystals form below the phase transition temperature of DMPC and at the unusually low molar lipid-to-protein (LPR) ratio of 1, while 2D crystals are conventionally grown above the phase transition temperature of the reconstituting lipid and significantly higher LPRs. The crystals are up to 0.75 microm in the shorter dimension of the planar tubes and at least 1 microm in length. Due to the planar-tubular nature of the crystals, two lattices are present. These are rotated by nearly 90 degrees in respect to each other. The ordered arrays exhibit p12(1) plane group symmetry with unit cell dimensions of a=83.7 A, b=76.6 A, gamma=91 degrees. Projection maps calculated from images of negatively stained and electron cryo-microscopy samples reveal the human vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase to be a monomer.  相似文献   

15.
R Wallin  F Rossi  R Loeser    L L Key  Jr 《The Biochemical journal》1990,269(2):459-464
An osteoblast-like human osteosarcoma cell line (U2-OS) has been shown to possess a vitamin K-dependent carboxylation system which is similar to the system in human HepG2 cells and in liver and lung from the rat. In an 'in vitro' system prepared from these cells, vitamin K1 was shown to overcome warfarin inhibition of gamma-carboxylation carried out by the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. The data suggest that osteoblasts, the cells involved in synthesis of vitamin K-dependent proteins in bone, can use vitamin K1 as an antidote to warfarin poisoning if enough vitamin K1 can accumulate in the tissue. Five precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins were identified in osteosarcoma and HepG2 cells respectively. In microsomes (microsomal fractions) from the osteosarcoma cells these precursors revealed apparent molecular masses of 85, 78, 56, 35 and 31 kDa. When osteosarcoma cells were cultured in the presence of warfarin, vitamin K-dependent 14C-labelling of the 78 kDa precursor was enhanced. Selective 14C-labelling of one precursor was also demonstrated in microsomes from HepG2 cells and from rat lung after warfarin treatment. In HepG2 cells this precursor was identified as the precursor of (clotting) Factor X. This unique 14C-labelling pattern of precursors of vitamin K-dependent proteins in microsomes from different cells and tissues reflects a new mechanism underlying the action of warfarin.  相似文献   

16.
Activity of the rat liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase has been studied at various concentrations of detergent. The activity which could be solubilized by 0.25% Triton X-100 was low but could be greatly increased if vitamin K-deficient rats were given vitamin K a few minutes before they were killed. At higher concentrations of Triton, more activity was solubilized and this effect was not seen. In vitro carboxylation of endogenous microsomal proteins was decreased by 80-90% if vitamin K was administered 1 min before rats were killed, but the amount of assayable prothrombin precursor was decreased by only 20%. Decarboxylated vitamin K-dependent rat plasma proteins were not substrates for the carboxylase and did not influence peptide carboxylase activity significantly. Purified microsomal prothrombin precursors did, however, stimulate carboxylation of peptide substrate and were used as a substrate for the carboxylase in a preparation from precursor depleted vitamin K-deficient rats.  相似文献   

17.
The amino acid gamma-carboxyglutamate is the product of post-translational vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of peptide bound glutamic acid residues. Activity of the microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase which catalyzes gamma-carboxyglutamate formation has been studied in numerous tissues, including liver and lung. Catabolism of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins leads to gamma-carboxyglutamate excretion into the urine, thus quantitation of urinary gamma-carboxyglutamate can be used to assess vitamin K status, as well as the turnover of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins. Since fetal urine is a major component of amniotic fluid, samples were obtained during late gestation in the rat (days 18-20) and analyzed for gamma-carboxyglutamate by reversed phase liquid chromatography to better define gestational changes in fetal vitamin K-dependent carboxylation. Relative to gestational age 18 days, amniotic fluid gamma-carboxyglutamate concentrations increased by 25% at 19 days (P less than 0.02) and by 105% at 20 days (P less than 0.001). When expressed per unit creatinine to correct for change in body mass and/or amniotic fluid volume, these differences are 15% (NS) at 19 days and 70% (P less than 0.02) at 20 days. These increases are prevented by maternal treatment with sodium warfarin. Amniotic fluid gamma-carboxyglutamate concentrations are 7-12 times greater than those in adult rat urine. During the same developmental interval (18-20 days), both lung and liver carboxylase activities increase by more than two-fold. These studies suggest that gestational age associated increases in carboxylase activity measured in vitro are associated with increased turnover of gamma-carboxyglutamate containing proteins in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Nanosecond laser flash photolysis has been used to produce and identify the vitamin K semiquinone (radical) from vitamin K dihydroquinone and to observe its formation and decay in the presence of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase (epoxidase). The activity of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase is not decreased by exposure to the laser. Absorbance of the semiquinone is proportional to enzyme concentration and is stimulated by a synthetic substrate, PheLeuGluGluIle. Stabilization of the semiquinone is observed in the presence of the enzyme. The semiquinone is rapidly destroyed in the presence of inhibitors of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase and vitamin K epoxidase.  相似文献   

19.
Vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the conversion of glutamyl residues to gamma-carboxyglutamate. Its substrates include vertebrate proteins involved in blood coagulation, bone mineralization, and signal transduction and invertebrate ion channel blockers known as conotoxins. Substrate recognition involves a recognition element, the gamma-carboxylation recognition site, typically located within a cleavable propeptide preceding the targeted glutamyl residues. We have purified two novel gamma-carboxyglutamate-containing conotoxins, Gla-TxX and Gla-TxXI, from the venom of Conus textile. Their cDNA-deduced precursors have a signal peptide but no apparent propeptide. Instead, they contain a C-terminal extension that directs gamma-carboxylation but is not found on the mature conotoxin. A synthetic 13-residue "postpeptide" from the Gla-TxXI precursor reduced the K(m) for the reaction of the Conus gamma-carboxylase with peptide substrates, including FLEEL and conantokin-G, by up to 440-fold, regardless of whether it was positioned at the N- or C-terminal end of the mature toxin. Comparison of the postpeptides to propeptides from other conotoxins suggested some common elements, and amino acid substitutions of these residues perturbed gamma-carboxylation of the Gla-TxXI peptide. The demonstration of a functional and transferable C-terminal postpeptide in these conotoxins indicates the presence of the gamma-carboxylation recognition site within the postpeptide and defines a novel precursor structure for vitamin K-dependent polypeptides. It also provides the first formal evidence to prove that gamma-carboxylation occurs as a post-translational rather than a cotranslational process.  相似文献   

20.
We have shown previously that the in vitro activity of the renal vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase toward synthetic oligopeptide substrates is stimulated by administration of either parathyroid hormone (PTH) or 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol [1,25(OH)2D3] to rats [(1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12783-12786]. Here we report that administration of 1,25(OH)2D3 to rats increases their levels of endogenous carboxylase substrate as well. Rats fed a vitamin D-deficient diet had highly elevated serum PTH levels while vitamin D-replete animals had undetectable levels. Furthermore, since PTH increases 1,25(OH)2D3 levels by stimulating renal 25-hydroxyvitamin D-1 alpha-hydroxylase, it is very likely that the stimulatory effects of PTH on the renal vitamin K-dependent carboxylating system are mediated by 1,25(OH)2D3.  相似文献   

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