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1.
Glucosidase II is an ER heterodimeric enzyme that cleaves sequentially the two innermost alpha-1,3-linked glucose residues from N-linked oligosaccharides on nascent glycoproteins. This processing allows the binding and release of monoglucosylated (Glc(1)Man(9)GlcNAc(2)) glycoproteins with calnexin and calreticulin, the lectin-like chaperones of the endoplasmic reticulum. We have isolated two cDNA isoforms of the human alpha subunit (alpha1 and alpha2) differing by a 66 bp stretch, and a cDNA for the corresponding beta subunit. The alpha1 and alpha2 forms have distinct mobilities on SDS-PAGE and are expressed in most of the cell lines we have tested, but were absent from the glucosidase II-deficient cell line PHA(R) 2.7. Using COS7 cells, the coexpression of the beta subunit with the catalytic alpha subunit was found to be essential for enzymatic activity, solubilization, and/or stability, and ER retention of the alpha/beta complex. Transfected cell extracts expressing either alpha1 or alpha2 forms with the beta subunit showed similar activities, while mutating( )the nucleophile (D542N) predicted from the glycoside hydrolase Family 31 active site consensus sequence abolished enzymatic activity. In order to compare the kinetic parameters of both alpha1/beta and alpha2/beta forms of human glucosidase II the protein was expressed with the baculovirus expression system. Expression of the human alpha or beta subunit alone led to the formation of active human/insect heteroenzymes, demonstrating functional complementation by the endogenous insect glucosidase II subunits. The activity of both forms of recombinant human glucosidase II was examined with a p-nitrophenyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside substrate, and a two binding site kinetic model for this substrate was shown. The K(M1-2) values and apparent K(i1-2 )for deoxynojirimycin and castanospermine were determined and found to be identical for both isoforms suggesting they have similar catalysis and inhibition characteristics. The substrate specificities of both isoforms using the physiological oligosaccharides were assessed and found to be similar.  相似文献   

2.
Cook TA  Ghomashchi F  Gelb MH  Florio SK  Beavo JA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(44):13516-13523
PDE6 (type 6 phosphodiesterase) from rod outer segments consists of two types of catalytic subunits, alpha and beta; two inhibitory gamma subunits; and one or more delta subunits found only on the soluble form of the enzyme. About 70% of the phosphodiesterase activity found in rod outer segments is membrane-bound, and is thought to be anchored to the membrane through C-terminal prenyl groups. The recombinant delta subunit has been shown to solubilize the membrane-bound form of the enzyme. This paper describes the site and mechanism of this interaction in more detail. In isolated rod outer segments, the delta subunit was found exclusively in the soluble fraction, and about 30% of it did not coimmunoprecipitate with the catalytic subunits. The delta subunit that was bound to the catalytic subunits dissociated slowly, with a half-life of about 3.5 h. To determine whether the site of this strong binding was the C-termini of the phosphodiesterase catalytic subunits, peptides corresponding to the C-terminal ends of the alpha and beta subunits were synthesized. Micromolar concentrations of these peptides blocked the phosphodiesterase/delta subunit interaction. Interestingly, this blockade only occurred if the peptides were both prenylated and methylated. These results suggested that a major site of interaction of the delta subunit is the methylated, prenylated C-terminus of the phosphodiesterase catalytic subunits. To determine whether the catalytic subunits of the full-length enzyme are methylated in situ when bound to the delta subunit, we labeled rod outer segments with a tritiated methyl donor. Soluble phosphodiesterase from these rod outer segments was more highly methylated (4.5 +/- 0.3-fold) than the membrane-bound phosphodiesterase, suggesting that the delta subunit bound preferentially to the methylated enzyme in the outer segment. Together these results suggest that the delta subunit/phosphodiesterase catalytic subunit interaction may be regulated by the C-terminal methylation of the catalytic subunits.  相似文献   

3.
Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT) catalyzes the synthesis of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet). The mammalian MAT II isozyme consists of catalytic alpha(2) and regulatory beta subunits. The aim of this study was to investigate the interaction and kinetic behavior of the human MAT II subunit proteins in mammalian cells. COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with pTargeT vector harboring full-length cDNA that encodes for the MAT II alpha(2) or beta subunits. Expression of the His-tagged recombinant alpha(2) (ralpha(2)) subunit in COS-1 cells markedly increased MAT II activity and resulted in a shift in the K(m) for L-methionine (L-Met) from 15 microM (endogenous MAT II) to 75 microM (ralpha(2)), and with the apparent existence of two kinetic forms of MAT in the transfected COS-1 cell extracts. By contrast, expression of the recombinant beta (rbeta) subunit had no effect on the K(m) for L-Met of the endogenous MAT II, while it did cause an increase in both the V(max) and the specific activity of endogenous MAT. Co-expression of both ralpha(2) and rbeta subunits resulted in a significant increase of MAT specific activity with the appearance of a single kinetic form of MAT (K(m) = 20 microM). The recombinant MAT II alpha(2) and rbeta subunit associated spontaneously either in cell-free system or in COS-1 cells co-expressing both subunits. Analysis of nickel-agarose-purified His-tagged ralpha(2) subunit from COS-1 cell extracts showed that the beta subunit co-purified with the alpha(2) subunit. Furthermore, the alpha(2) and beta subunits co-migrated in native polyacrylamide gels. Together, the data provide evidence for alpha(2) and beta MAT subunit association. In addition, the beta subunit regulated MAT II activity by reducing its K(m) for L-Met and by rendering the enzyme more susceptible to feedback inhibition by AdoMet. We believe that the previously described differential expression of MAT II beta subunit may be an important mechanism by which MAT activity can be modulated to provide different levels of AdoMet that may be required at different stages of cell growth and differentiation.  相似文献   

4.
Casein kinase II consists of catalytic (alpha) and regulatory (beta) subunits complexed into a heterotetrameric alpha 2 beta 2 structure. Full-length cDNAs encoding the alpha and beta subunits of human casein kinase II were subcloned into an expression vector containing the cytomegalovirus promotor, yielding the expression constructs pCMV-alpha and pCMV-beta. Northern analyses of total cellular RNA prepared from COS-1 fibroblasts 65 h after transfection with pCMV-alpha or pCMV-beta or with both expression constructs showed marked specific increases in corresponding alpha and beta subunit RNAs. Immunoblot analysis utilizing anti-casein kinase II antiserum of cytosolic extracts prepared from COS-1 cells co-transfected with pCMV-alpha and pCMV-beta showed 2- and 4-fold increases in immunoreactive alpha and beta subunit protein, respectively, relative to vector-transfected cells. These same cytosolic fractions exhibited an average 5-fold increase in casein kinase II catalytic activity. COS-1 cells transfected with pCMV-alpha alone exhibited a 3-fold increase in immunoreactive alpha subunit protein and a nearly 2-fold increase in cytosolic casein kinase II catalytic activity. Transfection with the cDNA coding for the noncatalytic beta subunit alone also caused a near doubling of cytosolic casein kinase II catalytic activity. No increase in immunoreactive alpha subunit protein was observed in pCMV-beta-transfected cells, and no increase in immunoreactive beta subunit protein was observed in pCMV-alpha-transfected cells. These results indicate that a portion of the endogenous cellular casein kinase II protein is not fully active and that raising the concentration of the alpha or beta subunit stimulates this latent activity.  相似文献   

5.
Casein kinase II (CKII) is composed of a catalytic (alpha) and a regulatory (beta) subunit which unite to form an alpha 2 beta 2 holoenzyme. Saccharomyces cerevisiae CKII consists of two distinct catalytic (Sc alpha and Sc alpha') and regulatory (Sc beta and Sc beta') subunits. Simultaneous disruption of the CKA1 and CKA2 genes (encoding the alpha and alpha' subunits, respectively) is lethal. Such double disruptions can be rescued by GAL1, 10-induced expression of the Drosophila alpha and beta subunits (Dm alpha+beta) together or by GAL10-induced expression of the Drosophila alpha subunit (Dm alpha) alone (Padmanabha, R., Chen-Wu, J. L.-P., Hanna, D. E., and Glover, C. V. C. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 10, 4089-4099). Here we report quantitation, purification, and characterization of casein kinase II activity from such rescued strains. Casein kinase II activity from a strain rescued by Dm alpha alone purifies as a free, catalytically active alpha subunit monomer, whereas that from a strain rescued by Dm alpha/beta purifies as a mixture of tetrameric holoenzyme and monomeric alpha subunit. Interestingly, neither Sc beta nor Sc beta' is present at detectable levels in the enzyme obtained from either strain, raising the possibility that rescue by Dm alpha alone may be mediated via the free, monomeric catalytic subunit. Overexpression of total casein kinase II activity from 6- to 18-fold is not toxic and indeed has no overt phenotypic consequences. Production of large amounts of free catalytic subunit also appears to be without effect, even though free catalytic subunit is normally undetectable in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,133(6):1193-1204
Subunit assembly plays an essential role in the maturation of oligomeric proteins. In this study, we have characterized the main structural and functional consequences of the assembly of alpha and beta subunits of Na,K-ATPase. Xenopus oocytes injected with alpha and/or beta cRNA were treated with brefeldin A, which permitted the accumulation of individual subunits or alpha-beta complexes in the ER. Only alpha subunits that are associated with beta subunits become resistant to trypsin digestion and cellular degradation. Similarly, assembly with beta subunits is necessary and probably sufficient for the catalytic alpha subunit to acquire its main functional properties at the level of the ER, namely the ability to adopt different ligand- dependent conformations and to hydrolyze ATP in an Na(+)- and K(+)- dependent, ouabain-inhibitable fashion. Not only the alpha but also the beta subunit undergoes a structural change after assembly, which results in a global increase in its protease resistance. Furthermore, extensive and controlled proteolysis assays on wild-type and NH2- terminally modified beta subunits revealed a K(+)-dependent interaction of the cytoplasmic NH2 terminus of the beta subunit with the alpha subunit, which is likely to be involved in the modulation of the K(+)- activation of the Na,K-pump transport activity. Thus, we conclude that the ER assembly process not only establishes the basic structural interactions between individual subunits, which are required for the maturation of oligomeric proteins, but also distinct, functional interactions, which are involved in the regulation of functional properties of mature proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Casein kinase II is an ubiquitous serine-threonine kinase whose functional significance and regulation in the living cell are not clearly understood. The native enzyme has an oligomeric structure made of two different (alpha and beta) subunits with an alpha 2 beta 2 stoichiometry. To facilitate the study of the structure-activity relationship of the kinase, we have expressed its isolated subunits in a baculovirus-directed insect cell expression system. The resulting isolated recombinant alpha subunit exhibited a protein kinase catalytic activity, in agreement with previous observations [Cochet, C., & Chambaz, E. M. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 1403-1406]. Coinfection of insect cells with recombinant viruses encoding the two kinase subunits resulted in the biosynthesis of a functional enzyme. Active recombinant oligomeric kinase was purified to near homogeneity with a yield of about 5 mg of enzymatic protein per liter, showing that, in coinfected host cells, synthesis was followed, at least in part, by recombination of the two subunits with an alpha 2 beta 2 stoichiometry. The catalytic properties of the recombinant enzyme appeared highly similar to those previously observed for casein kinase II purified from bovine tissue. Access to the isolated subunits and to their alpha 2 beta 2 association disclosed that the beta subunit is required for optimal catalytic activity of the kinase. In addition, the beta subunit is suggested to play an essential role in the regulated activity of the native casein kinase II. This is clearly illustrated by the observation of the effect of spermine which requires the presence of the beta subunit to stimulate the kinase catalytic activity which is borne by the alpha subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Casein kinase II is a key regulatory enzyme involved in many cellular processes, including the control of growth and cell division. We report the molecular cloning and sequencing of cDNAs encoding the alpha and the beta subunits of casein kinase II of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The deduced amino acid sequence of Cka1, the alpha catalytic subunit, shows high sequence similarity to alpha subunits identified in other species. The amino acid sequence of Ckb1, the S. pombe beta subunit, is 57% identical to that of the human beta subunit. Cka1 overexpression results in no detectable phenotype. In contrast, Ckb1 overexpression inhibits cell growth and cytokinesis, with formation of multiseptated cells. Disruption of the ckb1+ gene causes a cold-sensitive phenotype and abnormalities in cell shape. In these cells, the casein kinase II activity is reduced to undetectable levels, demonstrating that Ckb1 is required for enzyme activity in vivo. In agreement with this, the activity measured in a strain expressing high levels of Cka1 is enhanced only when the Ckb1 protein is coexpressed. Altogether, our data suggest that Ckb1 is a positive regulator of the enzyme activity, and that it plays a role in mediating the interaction of casein kinase II with downstream targets and/or with additional regulators.  相似文献   

9.
Binding of the photoreactive ATP analog, 3'-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyl adenosine 5'-triphosphate (BzATP), to the isolated alpha and beta subunits of TF1 and to the alpha 3 beta 3 "core" complex of the holoenzyme is described. About 1 mol of BzATP/mol of subunit was incorporated to isolated alpha and beta subunits. The incorporation of BzATP was prevented by ATP. Covalent binding of BzATP to the alpha subunit was in general somewhat lower than that observed with the beta subunit. No complex was formed upon mixing of either of the modified subunits with the complementary nontreated subunits. Covalent binding of 3 mol of BzATP/alpha 3 beta 3 complex completely inhibited ATPase activity and resulted in the dissociation of the complex. The labeled nucleotide analog was specifically incorporated into the beta subunit of the complex. The holoenzyme TF1, in contrast to the core complex, did not dissociate to the individual subunits upon covalent binding of BzATP. These results are discussed in relation to the location of the catalytic nucleotide binding site(s) and the conformation stability of the alpha 3 beta 3 core complex of TF1.  相似文献   

10.
Normal modes have been used to explore the inherent flexibility of the alpha, beta and gamma subunits of F(1)-ATPase in isolation and as part of the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex. It was found that the structural plasticity of the gamma and beta subunits, in particular, correlates with their functions. The N and C-terminal helices forming the coiled-coil domain of the gamma subunit are highly flexible in the isolated subunit, but more rigid in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex due to interactions with other subunits. The globular domain of the gamma subunit is structurally relatively rigid when isolated and in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex; this is important for its functional role in coupling the F(0) and F(1) complex of ATP synthase and in inducing the conformational changes of the beta subunits in synthesis. Most important, the character of the lowest-frequency modes of the beta(E) subunit is highly correlated with the large beta(E) --> beta(TP) transition. This holds for the C-terminal domain and the nucleotide-binding domain, which undergo significant conformational transitions in the functional cycle of F(1)-ATPase. This is most evident in the ligand-free beta(E) subunit; the flexibility in the nucleotide-binding domain is reduced somewhat in the beta(TP) subunit in the presence of Mg(2+).ATP. The low-frequency modes of the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex show that the motions of the globular domain of the gamma subunit and of the C-terminal and nucleotide binding domains of the beta(E) subunits are coupled, in accord with their function. Overall, the normal mode analysis reveals that F(1)-ATPase, like other macromolecular assemblies, has the intrinsic structural flexibility required for its function encoded in its sequence and three-dimensional structure. This inherent plasticity is an essential aspect of assuring a small free energy cost for the large-scale conformational transition that occurs in molecular motors.  相似文献   

11.
Following the action of glucosidase I to clip the terminal alpha1,2-linked glucose, glucosidase II sequentially cleaves the two inner alpha1,3-linked glucose residues from the Glcalpha1,2Glcalpha1,3Glcalpha1,3Man(9)GlcNAc(2) oligosaccharide of the incipient glycoprotein as it undergoes folding and maturation. Glucosidase II belongs to family 31 glycosidases. These enzymes act by the acid-base catalytic mechanism. The cDNA of the wild-type and several mutant forms of the fusion protein of the enzyme in which mutations were introduced in the conserved motif D(564)MNE(567) were expressed in Sf9 cells, and the proteins were purified on Ni-NTA matrix. The catalytic activity of the purified proteins was determined with radioactive Glc(2)Man(9)GlcNAc(2) substrate. The results show that the aspartate and glutamate within the D(564)MNE(567) motif can serve for catalysis, most likely as the acid-base pair within the active site of the enzyme. The developmental regulation of glucosidase II was studied during the ontogeny of the mouse mammary gland for its growth and differentiation. The mRNA of both alpha and beta subunits of the enzyme, immunoreactive alpha and beta subunits, and enzyme activity were measured over the complete developmental cycle. The changes in all the parameters were consistent with similar fluctuations with several other enzymes of the N-glycosylation machinery reported earlier, reaching a three- to fourfold increase over the basal level in the virgin gland at the peak of lactation. Altogether it appears that there is a coordinated regulation of the enzymes involved in protein N-glycosylation during the development of the mouse mammary gland.  相似文献   

12.
Na,K- and H,K-ATPase (X,K-ATPase) alpha subunits need association with a beta subunit for their maturation, but the authentic beta subunit of nongastric H,K-ATPase alpha subunits has not been identified. To better define alpha-beta interactions in these ATPases, we coexpressed human, nongastric H,K-ATPase alpha (AL1) and Na,K-ATPase alpha1 (alpha1NK) as well as AL1-alpha1 and alpha1-AL1 chimeras, which contain exchanged M9 and M10 membrane domains, together with each of the known beta subunits in Xenopus oocytes and followed their resistance to cellular and proteolytic degradation and their ER exit. We show that all beta subunits (gastric betaHK, beta1NK, beta2NK, beta3NK, or Bufo bladder beta) can associate efficiently with alpha1NK, but only gastric betaHK, beta2NK, and Bufo bladder beta can form stably expressed AL1-beta complexes that can leave the ER. The trypsin resistance and the forces of subunit interaction, probed by detergent resistance, are lower for AL1-beta complexes than for alpha1NK-beta complexes. Furthermore, chimeric alpha1-AL1 can be stabilized by beta subunits, but alpha1-AL1-gastric betaHK complexes are retained in the ER. On the other hand, chimeric AL1-alpha1 cannot be stabilized by any beta subunit. In conclusion, these results indicate that (1) none of the known beta subunits is the real partner subunit of AL1 but an as yet unidentified, authentic beta should have structural features resembling gastric betaHK, beta2NK, or Bufo bladder beta and (2) beta-mediated maturation of alpha subunits is a multistep process which depends on the membrane insertion properties of alpha subunits as well as on several discrete events of intersubunit interactions.  相似文献   

13.
Recent purification and cDNA cloning of the endoplasmic reticulum processing enzyme glucosidase II have revealed that it is composed of two soluble proteins: a catalytic alpha-subunit and a beta-subunit of unknown function, both of which are highly conserved in mammals. Since the beta-subunit, which contains a C-terminal His-Asp-Glu-Leu (HDEL) motif, may function to link the catalytic subunit to the KDEL receptor as a retrieval mechanism, we sought to map the regions of the mouse beta-subunit protein responsible for mediating the association with the alpha-subunit. By screening a panel of recombinant beta-subunit glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins for the ability to precipitate glucosidase II activity, we have identified two non-overlapping interaction domains (ID1 and ID2) within the beta-subunit. ID1 encompasses 118 amino acids at the N-terminus of the mature polypeptide, spanning the cysteine-rich element in this region. ID2, located near the C-terminus, is contained within amino acids 273-400, a region occupied in part by a stretch of acidic residues. Variable usage of 7 alternatively spliced amino acids within ID2 was found not to influence the association of the two sub-units. We theorize that the catalytic subunit of glucosidase II binds synergistically to ID1 and ID2, explaining the high associative stability of the enzyme complex.  相似文献   

14.
DNA cleavage is a biochemical hallmark of apoptosis. In humans, apoptotic DNA cleavage is executed by DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) 40. In proliferating cells DFF40 is expressed in the presence of its chaperone and inhibitor DFF45, which results in the formation of the DFF complex. Here, we present a systematic analysis of the nuclear import of the DFF complex. Our in vitro experiments demonstrate that the importin alpha/beta-heterodimer mediates the translocation of the DFF complex from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. Both DFF subunits interact directly with the importin alpha/beta-heterodimer. However, importin alpha/beta binds more tightly to the DFF complex compared with the individual subunits. Additionally, the isolated C-terminal regions of both DFF subunits together bind importin alpha/beta more strongly than the individual C termini. Our results from in vivo studies reveal that the C-terminal regions of both DFF subunits harbor nuclear localization signals. Furthermore, nuclear import of the DFF complex requires the C-terminal regions of both subunits. In more detail, one basic cluster in the C-terminal region of each subunit, DFF40 (RLKRK) and DFF45 (KRAR), is essential for nuclear accumulation of the DFF complex. Based on these findings two alternative models for the interaction of importin alpha/beta with the DFF complex are presented.  相似文献   

15.
Mammalian AMP-activated protein kinase is a serine/threonine protein kinase that acts as a sensor of cellular energy status. AMP-activated protein kinase is a heterotrimer of three different subunits, i.e. alpha, beta, and gamma, with alpha being the catalytic subunit and beta and gamma having regulatory roles. Although several studies have defined different domains in alpha and beta involved in the interaction with the other subunits of the complex, little is known about the regions of the gamma subunits involved in these interactions. To study this, we have made sequential deletions from the N termini of the gamma subunit isoforms and studied the interactions with alpha and beta subunits, both by two-hybrid analysis and by co-immunoprecipitation. Our results suggest that a conserved region of 20-25 amino acids in gamma1, gamma2, and gamma3, immediately N-terminal to the Bateman domains, is required for the formation of a functional, active alphabetagamma complex. This region is required for the interaction with the beta subunits. The interaction between the alpha and gamma subunits does not require this region and occurs instead within the Bateman domains of the gamma subunit, although the alpha-gamma interaction does appear to stabilize the beta-gamma interaction. In addition, sequential deletions from the C termini of the gamma subunits indicate that deletion of any of the CBS (cystathionine beta-synthase) motifs prevents the formation of a functional complex with the alpha and beta subunits.  相似文献   

16.
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an important metabolic stress-sensing protein kinase responsible for regulating metabolism in response to changing energy demand and nutrient supply. Mammalian AMPK is a stable alphabetagamma heterotrimer comprising a catalytic alpha and two non-catalytic subunits, beta and gamma. The beta subunit targets AMPK to membranes via an N-terminal myristoyl group and to glycogen via a mid-molecule glycogen-binding domain. Here we find that the conserved C-terminal 85-residue sequence of the beta subunit, beta1-(186-270), is sufficient to form an active AMP-dependent heterotrimer alpha1beta1-(186-270)-gamma1, whereas the 25-residue beta1 C-terminal (246-270) sequence is sufficient to bind gamma1, gamma2, or gamma3 but not the alpha subunit. Deletion of the beta C-terminal Ile-270 precludes betagamma association in the absence of the alpha subunit, but the presence of the alpha subunit or substitution of Ile-270 with Ala or Glu restores betagamma binding. Truncation of the alpha subunit reveals that beta1 binding requires the alpha1-(313-473) sequence. The conserved C-terminal 85-residue sequence of the beta subunit (90% between beta1 and beta2) is the primary alphagamma binding sequence responsible for the formation of the AMPK alphabetagamma heterotrimer.  相似文献   

17.
cDNAs containing the entire coding regions of the alpha and beta subunits of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) were isolated from a rat cerebrum cDNA library, ligated into an expression vector under the control of SV40 early promoter and introduced into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. To investigate the role of the alpha and beta subunits and their functional domains in CaM kinase II activity, the properties of the kinases expressed in the transfected cells were studied. CaM kinase II activity was detected in the transfected cells when the alpha and beta cDNAs were introduced into CHO cells simultaneously. RNA transfer blot and protein immunoblot analyses demonstrated the expression of the mRNAs and proteins of both alpha and beta subunits in the cloned cells. When alpha or beta cDNA was introduced into CHO cells separately, a significant level of the enzyme activity was also expressed, indicating that the alpha and beta subunits exhibited enzyme activity individually. The apparent Km values for ATP and MAP 2 were almost the same for the alpha subunit, beta subunit, alpha beta complex, and brain CaM kinase II. However, there was a slight difference in the affinity for calmodulin between the expressed proteins. The alpha and beta subunits expressed in the same cells polymerized to form alpha beta complex of a size similar to that of brain CaM kinase II. The alpha subunit also polymerized to form an oligomer, which showed almost the same S value as that of alpha beta complex and brain CaM kinase II. In contrast, the beta subunit did not polymerize. The alpha subunit, beta subunit, alpha beta complex, and brain CaM kinase II were autophosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, which resulted in the appearance of Ca2+-independent activity. The Ca2+-independent activity was 60-75% of the total activity as measured in the presence of Ca2+ plus calmodulin. To examine the functional relationship of peptide domains of the subunits of CaM kinase II, deleted cDNAs were introduced into CHO cells and the properties of the expressed proteins were studied. In cells transfected with alpha or beta cDNA from which the association domain was deleted, a significant level of kinase activity was expressed. However, the expressed proteins showed hardly any autophosphorylation and the appearance of Ca2+-independent enzyme activity was very low, indicating that the association domain was essential for the autophosphorylation and for the appearance of the Ca2+-independent activity.  相似文献   

18.
Azospirillum brasilense glutamate synthase (GltS) is the prototype of bacterial NADPH-dependent enzymes, a class of complex iron-sulfur flavoproteins essential in ammonia assimilation processes. The catalytically active GltS alpha beta holoenzyme and its isolated alpha and beta subunits (162 and 52 kDa, respectively) were analyzed using synchrotron radiation x-ray solution scattering. The GltS alpha subunit and alpha beta holoenzyme were found to be tetrameric in solution, whereas the beta subunit was a mixture of monomers and dimers. Ab initio low resolution shapes restored from the scattering data suggested that the arrangement of alpha subunits in the (alpha beta)4 holoenzyme is similar to that in the tetrameric alpha 4 complex and that beta subunits occupy the periphery of the holoenzyme. The structure of alpha 4 was further modeled using the available crystallographic coordinates of the monomeric alpha subunit assuming P222 symmetry. To model the entire alpha beta holoenzyme, a putative alpha beta protomer was constructed from the coordinates of the alpha subunit and those of the N-terminal region of porcine dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, which is similar to the beta subunit. Rigid body refinement yielded a model of GltS with an arrangement of alpha subunits similar to that in alpha 4, but displaying contacts also between beta subunits belonging to adjacent protomers. The holoenzyme model allows for independent catalytic activity of the alpha beta protomers, which is consistent with the available biochemical evidence.  相似文献   

19.
The signal recognition particle receptor (SR) is required for the cotranslational targeting of both secretory and membrane proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. During targeting, the SR interacts with the signal recognition particle (SRP) which is bound to the signal sequence of the nascent protein chain. This interaction catalyzes the GTP-dependent transfer of the nascent chain from SRP to the protein translocation apparatus in the ER membrane. The SR is a heterodimeric protein comprised of a 69-kD subunit (SR alpha) and a 30- kD subunit (SR beta) which are associated with the ER membrane in an unknown manner. SR alpha and the 54-kD subunits of SRP (SRP54) each contain related GTPase domains which are required for SR and SRP function. Molecular cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding SR beta revealed that SR beta is a transmembrane protein and, like SR alpha and SRP54, is a member of the GTPase superfamily. Although SR beta defines its own GTPase subfamily, it is distantly related to ARF and Sar1. Using UV cross-linking, we confirm that SR beta binds GTP specifically. Proteolytic digestion experiments show that SR alpha is required for the interaction of SRP with SR. SR alpha appears to be peripherally associated with the ER membrane, and we suggest that SR beta, as an integral membrane protein, mediates the membrane association of SR alpha. The discovery of its guanine nucleotide-binding domain, however, makes it likely that its role is more complex than that of a passive anchor for SR alpha. These findings suggest that a cascade of three directly interacting GTPases functions during protein targeting to the ER membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The three-dimensional structure of the bifunctional tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex from Pyrococcus furiosus was determined by crystallographic analysis. This crystal structure, with the structures of an alpha subunit monomer and a beta(2) subunit dimer that have already been reported, is the first structural set in which changes in structure that occur upon the association of the individual tryptophan synthase subunits were observed. To elucidate the structural basis of the stimulation of the enzymatic activity of each of the alpha and beta(2) subunits upon alpha(2)beta(2) complex formation, the conformational changes due to complex formation were analyzed in detail compared with the structures of the alpha monomer and beta(2) subunit dimer. The major conformational changes due to complex formation occurred in the region correlated with the catalytic function of the enzyme as follows. (1) Structural changes in the beta subunit were greater than those in the alpha subunit. (2) Large movements of A46 and L165 in the alpha subunit due to complex formation caused a more open conformation favoring the entry of the substrate at the alpha active site. (3) The major changes in the beta subunit were the broadening of a long tunnel through which the alpha subunit product (indole) is transferred to the beta active site and the opening of an entrance at the beta active site. (4) The changes in the conformations of both the alpha and beta subunits due to complex formation contributed to the stabilization of the subunit association, which is critical for the stimulation of the enzymatic activities.  相似文献   

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