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1.
The degradation of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) (EC 4.1.1.17) by 26 S proteasome, is accelerated by the ODC antizyme (AZ), a trigger protein involved in the specific degradation of eukaryotic ODC. In prokaryotes, AZ has not been found. Previously, we found that in Selenomonas ruminantium, a strictly anaerobic and Gram-negative bacterium, a drastic degradation of lysine decarboxylase (LDC; EC 4.1.1.18), which has decarboxylase activities toward both L-lysine and L-ornithine with similar K(m) values, occurs upon entry into the stationary phase of cell growth by protease together with a protein of 22 kDa (P22). Here, we show that P22 is a direct counterpart of eukaryotic AZ by the following evidence. (i) P22 synthesis is induced by putrescine but not cadaverine. (ii) P22 enhances the degradation of both mouse ODC and S. ruminantium LDC by a 26 S proteasome. (iii) S. ruminantium LDC degradation is also enhanced by mouse AZ replacing P22 in a cell-free extract from S. ruminantium. (iv) Both P22 and mouse AZ bind to S. ruminantium LDC but not to the LDC mutated in its binding site for P22 and AZ. In this report, we also show that P22 is a ribosomal protein of S. ruminantium.  相似文献   

2.
The wild type of Selenomonas ruminantium subsp. lactilytica, which is a strictly anaerobic, Gram-negative bacterium isolated from sheep rumen, requires one of the normal saturated volatile fatty acids with 3 to 10 carbon atoms for its growth in a glucose medium; however, no such obligate requirement of fatty acid is observed when the cells are grown in a lactate medium. This bacterium is characterized by a unique structure of the cell envelope and a novel lysine decarboxylase and its regulatory protein. In the first part of this article, we will refer to the chemical structure of phospholipid and lipopolysaccharide in the cell membranes of this bacterium compared with that from the general Gram-negative bacteria for understanding their biological functions. S. ruminantium has neither free nor bound forms of Braun lipoprotein which plays an important role of the maintenance of the structural integrity of the cell surface in general Gram-negative bacteria. However, S. ruminantium has cadaverine, which links covalently to the peptidoglycan as a pivotal constituent for the cell division. In the second part of this article, we will refer to the chemical structure of the cadaverine-containing peptidoglycan, its biosynthesis, and the biological function. In the third part of this article, we will depict the molecular cloning of the genes encoding S. ruminanitum lysine decarboxylase (LDC) and its regulatory protein of 22-kDa (22-kDa protein; P22) which has similar characteristics to that of antizyme of ornithine decarboxylase in eukaryotic cells, and the molecular dissection of these proteins for understanding the regulation of cadaverine biosynthesis. Finally, we will illustrate a proposed structure of the cell envelope, a processes of biosynthesis of the cadaverine-containing peptidoglycan layer, and the LDC degradation mechanism in S. ruminantium, on the basis of the analyses of the cell envelope components, the results from the in vitro experiments on the biosynthesis of the peptidoglycan layer, and the current status of the knowledge on LDC and P22 in this organism.  相似文献   

3.
Lysine decarboxylase (LDC; EC 4.1.1.18) of Selenomonas ruminantium is a constitutive enzyme and is involved in the synthesis of cadaverine, which is an essential constituent of the peptidoglycan for normal cell growth. We purified the S. ruminantium LDC by an improved method including hydrophobic chromatography and studied the fine characteristics of the enzyme. Kinetic study of LDC showed that S. ruminantium LDC decarboxylated both L-lysine and L-ornithine with similar Km and the decarboxylase activities towards both substrates were competitively and irreversibly inhibited by DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine, which is a specific inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17). We also showed a drastic descent of LDC activity owing to the degradation of LDC at entry into the stationary phase of cell growth.  相似文献   

4.
Lysine decarboxylase (LDC, EC 4.1.1.18) from Selenomonas ruminantium has decarboxylating activities towards both L-lysine and L-ornithine with similar K(m) and Vmax. Here, we identified four amino acid residues that confer substrate specificity upon S. ruminantium LDC and that are located in its catalytic domain. We have succeeded in converting S. ruminantium LDC to an enzyme with a preference in decarboxylating activity for L-ornithine when the four-residue of LDC were replaced by the corresponding residues of mouse ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17).  相似文献   

5.
Selenomonas ruminantium synthesizes cadaverine and putrescine from L-lysine and L-ornithine as the essential constituents of its peptidoglycan by a constitutive lysine/ornithine decarboxylase (LDC/ODC). S. ruminantium grew normally in the presence of the specific inhibitor for LDC/ODC, DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine, when arginine was supplied in the medium. In this study, we discovered the presence of arginine decarboxylase (ADC), the key enzyme in agmatine pathway for putrescine synthesis, in S. ruminantium. We purified and characterized ADC and cloned its gene (adc) from S. ruminantium chromosomal DNA. ADC showed more than 60% identity with those of LDC/ODC/ADCs from Gram-positive bacteria, but no similarity to that from Gram-negative bacteria. In this study, we also cloned the aguA and aguB genes, encoding agmatine deiminase (AguA) and N-carbamoyl-putrescine amidohydrolase (AguB), both of which are involved in conversion from agmatine into putrescine. AguA and AguB were expressed in S. ruminantium. Hence, we concluded that S. ruminantium has both ornithine and agmatine pathways for the synthesis of putrescine.  相似文献   

6.
Antizyme is a polyamine-induced cellular protein that binds to ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), and targets it to rapid ubiquitin-independent degradation by the 26S proteasome. However, the metabolic fate of antizyme is not clear. We have tested the stability of antizyme in mammalian cells. In contrast with previous studies demonstrating stability in vitro in a reticulocyte lysate-based degradation system, in cells antizyme is rapidly degraded and this degradation is inhibited by specific proteasome inhibitors. While the degradation of ODC is stimulated by the presence of cotransfected antizyme, degradation of antizyme seems to be independent of ODC, suggesting that antizyme degradation does not occur while presenting ODC to the 26S proteasome. Interestingly, both species of antizyme, which represent initiation at two in-frame initiation codons, are rapidly degraded. The degradation of both antizyme proteins is inhibited in ts20 cells containing a thermosensitive ubiquitin-activating enzyme, E1. Therefore we conclude that in contrast with ubiquitin-independent degradation of ODC, degradation of antizyme requires a functional ubiquitin system.  相似文献   

7.
Lysine decarboxylase (LDC; EC 4.1.1.18) from Selenomonas ruminantium comprises two identical monomeric subunits of 43 kDa and has decarboxylating activities toward both L-lysine and L-ornithine with similar K(m) and V(max) values (Y. Takatsuka, M. Onoda, T. Sugiyama, K. Muramoto, T. Tomita, and Y. Kamio, Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem. 62:1063-1069, 1999). Here, the LDC-encoding gene (ldc) of this bacterium was cloned and characterized. DNA sequencing analysis revealed that the amino acid sequence of S. ruminantium LDC is 35% identical to those of eukaryotic ornithine decarboxylases (ODCs; EC 4.1.1.17), including the mouse, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Neurospora crassa, Trypanosoma brucei, and Caenorhabditis elegans enzymes. In addition, 26 amino acid residues, K69, D88, E94, D134, R154, K169, H197, D233, G235, G236, G237, F238, E274, G276, R277, Y278, K294, Y323, Y331, D332, C360, D361, D364, G387, Y389, and F397 (mouse ODC numbering), all of which are implicated in the formation of the pyridoxal phosphate-binding domain and the substrate-binding domain and in dimer stabilization with the eukaryotic ODCs, were also conserved in S. ruminantium LDC. Computer analysis of the putative secondary structure of S. ruminantium LDC showed that it is approximately 70% identical to that of mouse ODC. We identified five amino acid residues, A44, G45, V46, P54, and S322, within the LDC catalytic domain that confer decarboxylase activities toward both L-lysine and L-ornithine with a substrate specificity ratio of 0.83 (defined as the k(cat)/K(m) ratio obtained with L-ornithine relative to that obtained with L-lysine). We have succeeded in converting S. ruminantium LDC to form with a substrate specificity ratio of 58 (70 times that of wild-type LDC) by constructing a mutant protein, A44V/G45T/V46P/P54D/S322A. In this study, we also showed that G350 is a crucial residue for stabilization of the dimer in S. ruminantium LDC.  相似文献   

8.
Ornithine decarboxylase antizyme 3 (Oaz3) is expressed in spermatids, makes up the antizyme family of Oaz genes with Oaz1 and Oaz2, and was proposed to encode a 22 kDa antizyme protein involved in polyamine regulation similar to the 22 kDa OAZ1 and OAZ2 proteins. Here we demonstrate however that the major product encoded by Oaz3 is a 12 kDa protein, p12, which lacks the antizyme domain that interacts with ornithine decarboxylase. We show that p12 does not affect ornithine decarboxylase levels, providing an explanation for the surprising observation made in Oaz3 knock-out male mice, which do not display altered testis polyamine metabolism. This suggested a novel activity for Oaz3 p12. Using immuno-electron microscopy we localized p12 to two structures in the mammalian sperm tail, viz. the outer dense fibers and fibrous sheath, as well as to the connecting piece linking head and tail. We identified myosin phosphatase targeting subunit 3 (MYPT3), a regulator of protein phosphatase PP1β, as a major p12-interacting protein, and show that MYPT3 is present in sperm tails and that its ankyrin repeat binds p12. We show that MYPT3 can also bind protein phosphatase PP1γ2, the only protein phosphatase present in sperm tails, and that p12- MYPT3 interaction modulates the activity of both PP1β and PP1γ2. This is, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of a novel activity for an Oaz-encoded protein.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Rapid, polyamine-induced degradation of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (L-ornithine carboxy-lyase, EC 4.1.1.17) (ODC) is though to be controlled by the availability of a small, ODC-binding protein termed antizyme. In this study we have investigated the ability of antizyme to bind ODC protein in various altered physiological states. In particular, cold, NaCl, spermidine and deprivation of coenzyme and substrate enhance enzyme-antizyme complex formation and are all found to promote ODC homodimer dissociation. Conversely, conditions that maintain the active ODC homodimer state prevent antizyme binding and inactivation of ODC. Further, covalent modification of ODC near its active site by difluoromethylornithine or phosphate also increases its sensitivity to antizyme. These results suggest that the initial signal in ODC degradation may actually be a subtle conformational change in the enzyme that enables antizyme to bind to the enzyme and may subsequently facilitate its degradation.  相似文献   

11.
A protein inhibiting a protein inhibitor (antizyme) to ornithine decarboxylase (L-ornithine carboxy-lyase, EC 4.1.1.17) (ODC), antizyme inhibitor, was purified from the liver cytosol of thioacetamide-treated rats by procedures including antizyme affinity chromatography. Overall purification was roughly estimated to be about 17,000,000-fold and recovery was about 2.4%. The purified preparation showed one major protein band and a faint band corresponding in mobility to molecular weights of 51,000 and 53,500, respectively, on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Judging from the ornithine decarboxylase activity of the final preparation, the faint band may be ornithine decarboxylase. The apparent molecular weight of antizyme inhibitor estimated by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200 was approx. 62,000, indicating that antizyme inhibitor may be composed of a single polypeptide chain. In order to examine the question of whether antizyme inhibitor is a protein derived from ornithine decarboxylase, an inactive ornithine decarboxylase, in an immunotitration study and analysis of the binding to antizyme were investigated. The results indicate that antizyme inhibitor may be a protein distinct from ornithine decarboxylase.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is a very unstable protein which is degraded in an ATP-dependent manner by proteasome 26S, after making contact with the regulatory protein antizyme. PEST regions are sequences described as signals for protein degradation. The C-terminal PEST region of mammalian ODC is essential for its degradation by proteasome 26S. Mammalian histidine decarboxylase (HDC) is also a short-lived protein. The full primary sequence of mammalian HDC contains PEST-regions at both the N- and C-termini. Rat ODC and different truncated and full versions of rat HDC were expressed in vitro. In vitro degradation of rat ODC and rat 1-512 HDC were compared. Like ODC, rat 1-512 HDC is degraded mainly by an ATP-dependent mechanism. However, antizyme has no effect on the degradation of 1-512 HDC. The use of the inhibitors MG-132 and lactacystine significantly inhibited the degradation of 1-512 HDC, suggesting that a ubiquitin-dependent, proteasome 26S proteolytic pathway is involved. Results obtained with the different modifications of rat HDC containing all three PEST regions (full version, 1-656 HDC), only the N-terminal PEST region (1-512 HDC), or no PEST region (69-512 HDC), indicate that the N-terminal (1-69) fragment, but not the C-terminal fragment, determines that the HDC protein is a proteasome substrate in vitro.  相似文献   

13.
The antizymes constitute a conserved gene family with at least three mammalian orthologs. As described previously, in a degradation system utilizing rabbit reticulocyte lysate, antizyme 1 (AZ1) accelerates proteasomal ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) degradation, but antizyme 2 (AZ2) does not. To examine the relationship between antizyme structure and function, we further characterized the properties of AZ1 and AZ2 and protein chimeras composed of elements of the two. AZ1 binds to ODC with about a 3-fold higher potency than AZ2, but this cannot account for their distinct degradative activities. The dissimilar degradative capacity of AZ1 and AZ2 is also observed using purified proteasomes. A series of reciprocal AZ1/AZ2 chimeras was used to determine the sequence elements needed to direct ODC degradation. An element contained within amino acids 130-145 of AZ1 is essential for this function. Constructs in which amino acids 130-145 were exchanged between the antizymes confirmed the critical nature of this region. Within this region, amino acids 131 and 145 proved responsible for the functional difference between the two forms of AZ.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Previously, a Drosophila melanogaster sequence with high homology to the sequence for mammalian antizyme (ornithine decarboxylase antizyme) was reported. The present study shows that homology of this coding sequence to its mammalian antizyme counterpart also extends to a 5′ open reading frame (ORF) which encodes the amino-terminal part of antizyme and overlaps the +1 frame (ORF2) that encodes the carboxy-terminal three-quarters of the protein. Ribosomes shift frame from the 5′ ORF to ORF2 with an efficiency regulated by polyamines. At least in mammals, this is part of an autoregulatory circuit. The shift site and 23 of 25 of the flanking nucleotides which are likely important for efficient frameshifting are identical to their mammalian homologs. In the reverse orientation, within one of the introns of the Drosophila antizyme gene, the gene for snRNP Sm D3 is located. Previously, it was shown that two closely linked P-element transposon insertions caused the gutfeeling phenotype of embryonic lethality and aberrant neuronal and muscle cell differentiation. The present work shows that defects in either snRNP Sm D3 or antizyme, or both, are likely causes of the phenotype.  相似文献   

16.
Interestingly, there is a major difference in turnover rate between ornithine decarboxylases (ODCs) from various trypanosomatids. ODCs from Trypanosoma brucei and Leishmania donovani are both stable proteins, whereas ODC from Crithidia fasciculata is a metabolically unstable protein in the parasite. C. fasciculata ODC is also rapidly degraded in mammalian systems, whereas the closely related L. donovani ODC is not. The degradation of C. fasciculata ODC in the mammalian systems is shown to be dependent on a functional 26 S proteasome. However, in contrast to the degradation of mammalian ODC, the degradation of C. fasciculata ODC does not involve antizyme. Instead, it appears the degradation of C. fasciculata ODC may be associated with poly-ubiquitination of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Mammalian antizyme (mAz) is a central element of a feedback circuit regulating cellular polyamines by accelerating ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) degradation and inhibiting polyamine uptake. Although yeast antizyme (yAz) stimulates the degradation of yeast ODC (yODC), we show here that it has only a minor effect on polyamine uptake by yeast cells. A segment of yODC that parallels the Az binding segment of mammalian ODC (mODC) is required for its binding to yAz. Although demonstrating minimal homology to mAz, our results suggest that yAz stimulates yODC degradation via a similar mechanism of action. We demonstrate that interaction with yAz provokes degradation of yODC by yeast but not by mammalian proteasomes. This differential recognition may serve as a tool for investigating proteasome functions.  相似文献   

18.
Overproduction of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) regulatory protein ODC-antizyme has been shown to correlate with cell growth inhibition in a variety of different cell types. Although the exact mechanism of this growth inhibition is not known, it has been attributed to the effect of antizyme on polyamine metabolism. Antizyme binds directly to ODC, targeting ODC for ubiquitin-independent degradation by the 26 S proteasome. We now show that antizyme induction also leads to degradation of the cell cycle regulatory protein cyclin D1. We demonstrate that antizyme is capable of specific, noncovalent association with cyclin D1 and that this interaction accelerates cyclin D1 degradation in vitro in the presence of only antizyme, cyclin D1, purified 26 S proteasomes, and ATP. In vivo, antizyme up-regulation induced either by the polyamine spermine or by antizyme overexpression causes reduction of intracellular cyclin D1 levels. The antizyme-mediated pathway for cyclin D1 degradation is independent of the previously characterized phosphorylation- and ubiquitination-dependent pathway, because antizyme up-regulation induces the degradation of a cyclin D1 mutant (T286A) that abrogates its ubiquitination. We propose that antizyme-mediated degradation of cyclin D1 by the proteasome may provide an explanation for the repression of cell growth following antizyme up-regulation.  相似文献   

19.
Hoffman DW  Carroll D  Martinez N  Hackert ML 《Biochemistry》2005,44(35):11777-11785
Antizyme and its isoforms are members of an unusual yet broadly conserved family of proteins, with roles in regulating polyamine levels within cells. Antizyme has the ability to bind and inhibit the enzyme ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), targeting it for degradation at the proteasome; antizyme is also known to affect the transport of polyamines and interact with the antizyme inhibitor protein (AZI), as well as the cell-cycle protein cyclin D1. In the present work, NMR methods were used to determine the solution structure of a stable, folded domain of mammalian antizyme isoform-1 (AZ-1), consisting of amino acid residues 87-227. The protein was found to contain eight beta strands and two alpha helices, with the strands forming a mixed parallel and antiparallel beta sheet. At the level of primary sequence, antizyme is not similar to any protein of known structure, and results show that antizyme exhibits a novel arrangement of its strands and helices. Interestingly, however, the fold of antizyme is similar to that found in a family of acetyl transferases, as well as translation initiation factor IF3, despite a lack of functional relatedness between these proteins. Structural results, combined with amino acid sequence comparisons, were used to identify conserved features among the various homologues of antizyme and their isoforms. Conserved surface residues, including a cluster of acidic amino acids, were found to be located on a single face of antizyme, suggesting this surface is a possible site of interaction with target proteins such as ODC. This structural model provides an essential framework for an improved future understanding of how the different parts of antizyme play their roles in polyamine regulation.  相似文献   

20.
This review considers the role of antizyme, of amino acids and of protein synthesis in the regulation of polyamine biosynthesis.The ornithine decarboxylase of eukaryotic ceils and ofEscherichia coli coli can be non-competitively inhibited by proteins, termed antizymes, which are induced by di-and poly- amines. Some antizymes have been purified to homogeneity and have been shown to be structurally unique to the cell of origin. Yet, the E. c o l i antizyme and the rat liver antizyme cross react and inhibit each other's biosynthetic decarboxylases. These results indicate that aspects of the control of polyamine biosynthesis have been highly conserved throughout evolution.Evidence for the physiological role of the antizyme in mammalian cells rests upon its identification in normal uninduced cells, upon the inverse relationship that exists between antizyme and ornithine decarboxylase as well as upon the existence of the complex of ornithine decarboxylase and antizyme in vivo. Furthermore, the antizyme has been shown to be highly specific; its Keq for ornithine decarboxylase is 1.4 x 1011 M-1. In addition, mammalian ceils contain an anti-antizyme, a protein that specifically binds to the antizyme of an ornithine decarboxylase-antizyme complex and liberates free ornithine decarboxylase from the complex. In B. coli , in which polyamine biosynthesis is mediated both by ornithine decarboxylase and by arginine decarboxylase, three proteins (one acidic and two basic) have been purified, each of which inhibits both these enzymes. They do not inhibit the biodegradative ornithine and arginine decarboxylases nor lysine decarboxylase. The two basic inhibitors have been shown to correspond to the ribosomal proteins S20/L26 and L34, respectively. The relationship of the acidic antizyme to other known B. coli proteins remains to be determined.  相似文献   

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