首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
The yeast URA2 locus encodes a multifunctional protein which possesses the carbamylphosphate synthetase and aspartate transcarbamylase activities and which catalyzes the first two reactions of the pyrimidine pathway. We report here the nucleotide sequence of the central and the 3' region of this locus. The latter encodes that part of the multifunctional protein which has the aspartate transcarbamylase activity. The deduced amino acid sequence shows a high degree of homology with the known aspartate transcarbamylases of various organisms from Escherichia coli to mammals. The amino acid residues that have been shown to be involved in the catalytic site of the E. coli enzyme are all conserved suggesting that, in the more complex structure of the yeast protein, the catalytic sites are also located at subunit interfaces. There is also an important conservation of the amino acid pairs that, in E. coli, are implicated in intra- and interchain interactions. As well as the oligomeric structure suggested by these two features, the three-dimensional structure of the yeast enzyme must also be organized to account for the channeling of carbamylphosphate, from the carbamylphosphate synthetase catalytic site to that of aspartate transcarbamylase, and for the concomitant feedback inhibition of the two activities by the end product UTP. The URA2 gene product was shown to be localized in the nucleus. With the aim of identifying the regions that may be involved in this transport, we have determined by electron microscopy the subcellular distribution of aspartate transcarbamylase in three strains expressing different fragments of the URA2 locus. In the first strain the protein lacks 190 residues at the N terminus, but accumulates normally in the nucleus. In the second strain the protein lacks 382 residues in the central part and seems impaired in the nuclear transport process. In the third strain the 476-residue protein encoded by the 3' region of URA2 locus and catalyzing the aspartate transcarbamylase reaction is able by itself to migrate to and accumulate in the nucleus. This suggests that two regions are involved in the nuclear accumulation. On the basis of their conservation in analogous proteins of other eukaryotes and their similarity to sequences already identified as nuclear location signals, a sequence in the central region of the protein and two short sequences in the C-terminal region are good candidates for the nuclear location signal involved in the targeting of the URA2 product.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Although aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) is an independent, monofunctional enzyme in Escherichia coli, mammalian ATCase is one of the globular enzymatic domains of the multifunctional CAD protein. We subcloned fragments of the hamster CAD cDNA and assayed polypeptide products expressed in E. coli for ATCase activity in order to isolate a stretch of cDNA which encodes only the ATCase domain. Three such expression constructs contain fragments of hamster CAD cDNA similar in length to the gene encoding the E. coli ATCase catalytic subunit (pyrB). These constructs yield stable proteins with ATCase activity, ascertained by both in vivo and in vitro assays; the clones also possess sequence homology with the pyrB gene at both the 5 and 3 ends. The clone producing the most active ATCase contains cDNA which is analogous to the entire pyrB gene, plus a small amount of CAD sequence upstream of this region. Because these constructs produce independently folded, active ATCase from a piece of cDNA the size of the E. coli pyrB gene, they open the door for the in-depth investigation of the isolated mammalian enzyme domain utilizing recombinant DNA technology. This approach is potentially useful for the analysis of domains of other multifunctional proteins.Abbreviations (EC 2.1.3.2) ATCase, aspartate transcarbamylase - CAD the trifunctional protein catalyzing the first three steps of pyrimidine biosynthesis in higher eukaryotes - (EC 6.3.5.5) CPSaseII, glutamine-dependent carbamylphosphate synthetase II - (EC 3.5.2.3) DHOase, dihydroorotase - IPTG isopropyl--d-thiogalactopyranoside  相似文献   

4.
A strain of Escherichia coli has been constructed which greatly overproduces the enzyme aspartate transcarbamylase. This strain has a deletion in the pyrB region of the chromosome and also carries a leaky mutation in pyrF. Although this strain is a pyrimidine auxotroph, it will grow very slowly without pyrimidines if a plasmid containing the pyrB gene is introduced into it. Derepression occurs when this strain exhausts its uracil supply during exponential growth. Under extreme derepression, aspartate transcarbamylase can account for as much as 60% of the total cellular protein. This host strain/plasmid system can be utilized for the rapid purification of wild-type aspartate transcarbamylase or plasmid-born mutant versions of the enzyme. This system is particularly well-suited for analysis of the latter since the control of overproduction resides exclusively on the bacterial chromosome. Therefore, any plasmid bearing the pyrBI operon can be made to overproduce aspartate transcarbamylase in this host strain. Based on this system, a rapid purification procedure has been developed for E. coli aspartate transcarbamylase. The purification scheme involves an ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by a single precipitation of the enzyme at its isoelectric point. In a similar fashion, this strain can also be employed to produce exclusively the catalytic subunit of the enzyme if the plasmid only carries the pyrB gene. This system may be adapted to overproduce other proteins as well by using this host strain and the strong pyrB promoter linked to another gene.  相似文献   

5.
Mitochondrial NAD(+)-dependent malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40) is expressed in rapidly proliferating cells and tumor cells, where it is probably linked to the conversion of amino acid carbon to pyruvate. In this paper, we report the cDNA cloning, amino acid sequence, and expression in Escherichia coli of functional human NAD(+)-dependent mitochondrial malic enzyme. The cDNA is 1,923 base pairs long and contains an open reading frame coding for a 584-amino acid protein. The molecular mass is 65.4 kDa for the unprocessed precursor protein. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of the human protein with the published NADP(+)-dependent mammalian cytosolic or plant chloroplast malic enzymes reveals highly conserved regions interrupted with long stretches of amino acids without significant homology. Expression of the processed protein in E. coli yielded an enzyme with the same kinetic and allosteric properties as malic enzyme purified from human cells.  相似文献   

6.
Aspartate transcarbamylase from Bacillus subtilis has been purified to apparent homogeneity. A subunit molecular weight of 33,500 +/- 1,000 was obtained from electrophoresis in polyarcylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulfate and from sedimentation equilibrium analysis of the protein dissolved in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was determined to be 102,000 +/- 2,000 by sedimentation velocity and sedimentation equilibrium analysis. Aspartate transcarbamylase thus appears to be a trimeric protein; cross-linking with dimethyl suberimidate and electrophoretic analysis confirmed this structure. B. subtilis aspartate transcarbamylase has an amino acid composition quite similar to that of the catalytic subunit from Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase; only the content of four amino acids is substantially different. The denaturated enzyme has one free sulfhydryl group. Aspartate transcarbamylase exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics and was neither inhibited nor activated by nucleotides. Several anions stimulated activity 2- to 5-fold. Immunochemical studies indicated very little similarity between B. subtilis and E. coli aspartate transcarbamylase or E. coli aspartate transcarbamylase catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

7.
Comparative modeling of mammalian aspartate transcarbamylase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
J L Scully  D R Evans 《Proteins》1991,9(3):191-206
Mammalian aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) is part of a 243 kDa multidomain polypeptide, called CAD, that catalyzes the first three steps in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. The structural organization of the mammalian enzyme is very different from E. coli ATCase, a dodecameric, monofunctional molecule comprised of six copies of separate catalytic and regulatory chains. Nevertheless, sequence similarities and other properties suggested that the mammalian ATCase domain and the E. coli ATCase catalytic chain have the same tertiary fold. A model of mammalian ATCase was built using the X-ray coordinates of the E. coli catalytic chain as a tertiary template. Five small insertions and deletions could be readily accommodated in the model structure. Following energy minimization the RMS difference in the alpha carbon positions of the mammalian and bacterial proteins was 0.93 A. A comparison of the hydrophobic energies, surface accessibility index, and the distribution of hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues of the CAD ATCase structure with correctly and incorrectly folded proteins and with several X-ray structures supported the validity of the model. The mammalian ATCase domain associates to form a compact globular trimer, a prerequisite for catalysis since the active site is comprised of residues from adjacent subunits. Interactions between the clearly defined aspartate and carbamyl phosphate subdomains of the monomer were largely preserved while there was appreciable remodeling of the trimeric interfaces. Several clusters of basic residues are located on the upper surface of the domain which account in part for the elevated isoelectric point (pI = 9.4) and may represent contact regions with other more acidic domains within the chimeric polypeptide. A long interdomain linker connects the monomer at its upper surface to the remainder of the polypeptide. The configuration of active site residues is virtually identical in the mammalian and bacterial enzymes. While the CAD ATCase domain can undergo the local conformational changes that accompany catalysis in the E. coli enzyme, the high activity, closed conformation is probably more stable in the mammalian enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Eucaryotic expression vectors containing the Escherichia coli pyrB gene (pyrB encodes the catalytic subunit of aspartate transcarbamylase [ATCase]) and the Tn5 phosphotransferase gene (G418 resistance module) were transfected into a mutant Chinese hamster ovary cell line possessing a CAD multifunctional protein lacking ATCase activity. G418-resistant transformants were isolated and analyzed for ATCase activity, the ability to complement the CAD ATCase defect, and the ability to resist high concentrations of the ATCase inhibitor N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) by amplifying the donated pyrB gene sequences. We report that bacterial ATCase is expressed in these lines, that it complements the CAD ATCase defect in trans, and that its amplification engenders PALA resistance. In addition, we derived rapid and sensitive assay conditions which enable the determination of bacterial ATCase enzyme activity in the presence of mammalian ATCase.  相似文献   

9.
D-aspartate is present at high concentrations in the tissues of Scapharca broughtonii, and its production depends on aspartate racemase. This enzyme is the first aspartate racemase purified from animal tissues and unique in its pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependence in contrast to microbial aspartate racemases thus far characterized. The enzyme activity is markedly increased in the presence of AMP and decreased in the presence of ATP. To analyze the structure-function relationship of the enzyme further, we cloned the cDNA of aspartate racemase, and then purified and characterized the recombinant enzyme expressed in Escherichia coli. The cDNA included an open reading frame of 1,017 bp encoding a protein of 338 amino acids, and the deduced amino acid sequence contained a PLP-binding motif. The sequence exhibits the highest identity (43-44%) to mammalian serine racemase, followed mainly by threonine dehydratase. These relationships are fully supported by phylogenetic analyses of the enzymes. The active recombinant aspartate racemase found in the Escherichia coli extract represented about 10% of total bacterial protein and was purified to display essentially identical physicochemical and catalytic properties with those of the native enzyme. In addition, the enzyme showed a dehydratase activity toward L-threo-3-hydroxyaspartate, similar to the mammalian serine racemase that produces pyruvate from D- and L-serine.  相似文献   

10.
A 871-base pair cDNA encoding the human N-methylpurine-DNA glycosylase (MPG) was cloned from a HeLa S3 cDNA expression library in a pUC vector by phenotypic screening of MPG-negative (tag- alkA-) Escherichia coli cells exposed to methylmethane sulfonate. The active MPG is expressed as a 31-kDa fusion protein. The human cDNA-encoded MPG releases 3-methyladenine, 7-methylguanine, and 3-methylguanine from DNA and thus has a substrate range similar to that of the indigenous enzyme and the E. coli AlkA protein. The cDNA hybridizes with distinct restriction fragments of mammalian DNAs but not with E. coli or yeast DNA. A search in the GenBank data bank failed to show any other cloned DNA with a similar sequence. Although the human protein has 62% sequence homology with the corresponding rat enzyme, only a few amino acid residues are conserved between the human protein and the E. coli and yeast MPGs. However, a conserved glutamine residue in all MPGs that release 3-alkyladenine and an arginine residue in eukaryotic MPGs and E. coli AlkA that act additionally on N-alkylguanines suggest that these residues are involved in recognition of adenine and guanine adducts in DNA, respectively. Although the 1.1-kilobase mRNAs of MPG from human and rodents are similar in size, liver and cultured cells of rat have much lower levels of MPG mRNA than do human and mouse cells. A hamster cell line variant isolated as being resistant to methylmethane sulfonate does not have a higher level of MPG mRNA than the parent cell line.  相似文献   

11.
We have cloned a DNA complementary to the messenger RNA encoding the precursor of ornithine transcarbamylase from rat liver. This complementary DNA contains the entire protein coding region of 1062 nucleotides and 86 nucleotides of 5'- and 298 nucleotides of 3'-untranslated sequences. The predicted amino acid sequence has been confirmed by extensive protein sequence data. The mature rat enzyme contains the same number of amino acid residues (322) as the human enzyme and their amino acid sequences are 93% homologous. The rat and human amino-terminal leader sequences of 32 amino acids, on the other hand, are only 69% homologous. The rat leader contains no acidic and seven basic residues compared to four basic residues found in the human leader. There is complete sequence homology (residues 58-62) among the ornithine and aspartate transcarbamylases from E. coli and the rat and human ornithine transcarbamylases at the carbamyl phosphate binding site. Finally, a cysteine containing hexapeptide (residues 268-273), the putative ornithine binding site in Streptococcus faecalis, Streptococcus faecium, and bovine transcarbamylases, is completely conserved among the two E. coli and the two mammalian transcarbamylases.  相似文献   

12.
Glutamine-dependent carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (EC 6.3.5.5) catalyzes the first step in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. The mammalian enzyme is part of a 240-kDa multifunctional protein which also has the second (aspartate carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.2), and third (dihydroorotase, EC 3.5.2.3) activities of the pathway. Shigesada et al. (Shigesada, K., Stark, G.R., Maley, J.A., and Davidson, J.N. (1985) Mol. Cell Biol. 175, 1-7) produced a truncated cDNA clone from a Syrian hamster cell line that contained most of the coding region for this protein. We have completed sequencing this clone, known as pCAD142. The cDNA insert contained all of the coding region for the glutaminase (GLN) and carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) domains but lacked a short amino-terminal segment. By comparing the primary structure of the mammalian chimera to monofunctional proteins we have identified the borders of the functional domains. The GLN domain is 21 kDa, close to the size of the functionally similar polypeptide products of the Escherichia coli pabA and hisH genes. The domain has the three regions of homology common to trpG-type glutamine amidotransferases, as well as a fourth region specific to the carbamyl phosphate synthetases. The CPSase domain is similar to other reported CPSases in size (120 kDa), primary structure (37-67% amino acid identity), and homology between its amino and carboxyl halves. Analysis of the nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities among the various carbamyl phosphate synthetases suggests that the gene fusion which joined the GLN and CPS domains was an early event in the evolution of eukaryotic organisms and that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzyme consisting of separate subunits arose by defusion from an ancestral multifunctional protein.  相似文献   

13.
Conditions were found under which the processes of repression and derepression of ornithine transcarbamylase were separated from the process of enzyme synthesis. After 10 min of arginine deprivation followed by the addition of 2 to 200 mug of l-arginine per ml, a number of strains of Escherichia coli exhibited a significant burst of ornithine transcarbamylase synthesis which lasted 3 to 4 min before the onset of repression. The rapid increase of enzyme activity was shown to require protein synthesis, and was not due to a slow uptake of arginine or induction of an arginine-inducible ornithine transcarbamylase. The capacity of E. coli to synthesize the burst of ornithine transcarbamylase reached a maximum after 10 min of arginine deprivation and then remained constant. The observed increase in enzyme synthesis may reflect the level of unstable messenger ribonucleic acid (RNA) for ornithine transcarbamylase present in the cell at the time protein synthesis was reinitiated. After the addition of arginine in the absence of protein synthesis, the burst of ornithine transcarbamylase decayed with a half-life of about 3 min. The data implied that arginine prevents synthesis of new messenger RNA that can translate this enzyme. Repression of ornithine transcarbamylase by l-canavanine (100 to 200 mug/ml) was observed, and no active enzyme was formed in the presence of this analogue. The action of canavanine as a repressor was distinguished from the inhibitory effect of this compound on protein synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
L A Musmanno  J A Maley  J N Davidson 《Gene》1991,99(2):211-216
CAD is the multifunctional protein of higher eukaryotes which catalyzes the first three steps of pyrimidine biosynthesis. Its enzymatic activities exist as independent domains in the order: N terminus-carbamylphosphate synthetase II(CPSase)-dihydroorotase(DHOase)-aspartate transcarbamylase(ATCase)-C terminus. To functionally define the minimum hamster cDNA region required to encode an active DHOase, expression constructs were generated. Many such constructs complement Escherichia coli mutants defective not only in DHOase but also in ATCase. Constructs deleted for most of the sequence encoding the ATCase domain continue to complement E. coli mutants defective in DHOase. All of these smaller constructs also lack the region encoding CPSase. Therefore, a 'genetic cassette', containing information for neither the CPSase nor the ATCase domain, can direct the synthesis of a polypeptide with DHOase activity. Interestingly, inclusion of a portion of the DHOase-ATCase interdomain bridge appears to be required for optimum activity.  相似文献   

15.
The nucleotide sequence of ornithine aminotransferase mRNA from rat liver, including the entire coding and 3' untranslated regions, was determined from two overlapping cDNA clones. The mRNA encodes a precursor polypeptide of 439 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 48,332. The deduced amino acid composition of the proposed mature enzyme sequence (residues 35 through 439) was in good agreement with that reported for the purified protein. The amino-terminal segment of the precursor corresponding to residues 1 through 34 has an overall positive charge, containing 6 basic residues and only a single acidic residue, and is postulated to be the mitochondrial leader sequence. The first 22 amino acid residues of the proposed leader sequences share 54% homology with the leader peptide of rat ornithine transcarbamylase precursor and more limited homology to the leader peptides of other nuclear-encoded mitochondrial matrix proteins. Homology was also observed between residues 286 through 362 ornithine aminotransferase precursor and a region containing the pyridoxyl phosphate binding domain of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase.  相似文献   

16.
An heterologous complex was formed between E. coli protein L1 and P. vulgaris 23S RNA. We determined the primary structure of the RNA region which remained associated with protein L1 after RNase digestion of this complex. We also identified the loci of this RNA region which are highly susceptible to T1, S1 and Naja oxiana nuclease digestions respectively. By comparison of these results with those previously obtained with the homologous regions of E. coli and B. stearothermophilus 23S RNAs, we postulate a general structure for the protein L1 binding region of bacterial 23S RNA. Both mouse and human mit 16S rRNAs and Xenopus laevis and Tetrahymena 28S rRNAs contain a sequence similar to the E. coli 23s RNS region preceding the L1 binding site. The region of mit 16S rRNA which follows this sequence has a potential secondary structure bearing common features with the L1-associated region of bacterial 23S rRNA. The 5'-end region of the L11 mRNA also has several sequence potential secondary structures displaying striking homologies with the protein L1 binding region of 23S rRNA and this probably explains how protein L1 functions as a translational repressor. One of the L11 mRNA putative structures bears the features common to both the L1-associated region of bacterial 23S rRNA and the corresponding region of mit 16S rRNA.  相似文献   

17.
The genes coding for aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) in the deep-sea hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus abyssi were cloned by complementation of a pyrB Escherichia coli mutant. The sequence revealed the existence of a pyrBI operon, coding for a catalytic chain and a regulatory chain, as in Enterobacteriaceae. Comparison of primary sequences of the polypeptides encoded by the pyrB and pyrI genes with those of homologous eubacterial and eukaryotic chains showed a high degree of conservation of the residues which in E. coli ATCase are involved in catalysis and allosteric regulation. The regulatory chain shows more-extensive divergence with respect to that of E. coli and other Enterobacteriaceae than the catalytic chain. Several substitutions suggest the existence in P. abyssi ATCase of additional hydrophobic interactions and ionic bonds which are probably involved in protein stabilization at high temperatures. The catalytic chain presents a secondary structure similar to that of the E. coli enzyme. Modeling of the tridimensional structure of this chain provides a folding close to that of the E. coli protein in spite of several significant differences. Conservation of numerous pairs of residues involved in the interfaces between different chains or subunits in E. coli ATCase suggests that the P. abyssi enzyme has a quaternary structure similar to that of the E. coli enzyme. P. abyssi ATCase expressed in transgenic E. coli cells exhibited reduced cooperativity for aspartate binding and sensitivity to allosteric effectors, as well as a decreased thermostability and barostability, suggesting that in P. abyssi cells this enzyme is further stabilized through its association with other cellular components.  相似文献   

18.
C Noda  K Ito  T Nakamura  A Ichihara 《FEBS letters》1988,234(2):331-335
The nucleotide sequence of serine dehydratase mRNA of rat liver has been determined from a recombinant cDNA clone, previously cloned in this laboratory, and from a recombinant cDNA clone screened from a primer-extended cDNA library. The sequence of 1322 nucleotides includes the entire protein coding region and noncoding regions on the 3'- and 5'-sides. The deduced polypeptide consists of 327 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 34,462 Da. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the serine dehydratase polypeptide with those of biosynthetic threonine dehydratase of yeast and biodegradative threonine dehydratase of E. coli revealed various extents of homology. A heptapeptide sequence, Gly-Ser-Phe-Lys-Ile-Arg-Gly, which is the pyridoxal-binding site in the yeast and E. coli threonine dehydratases was found as a highly conserved sequence.  相似文献   

19.
A cDNA for rat prolyl oligopeptidase was cloned which contained an open reading frame of 2,130 nucleotides encoding a protein of 710 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence is around 95% homologous to other mammalian prolyl oligopeptidases and about 40% to bacterial prolyl oligopeptidases. The recombinant prolyl oligopeptidase generated in E. coli was purified and its properties were examined. The substrate specificity and the susceptibility to proteinase inhibitors were similar to those of the native enzyme. Northern blot analysis showed wide expression of the prolyl oligopeptidase gene. Using ovaries from hormone-treated rats, it was found that both the mRNA expression and enzyme activity increased in the luteal phase. These findings suggest the involvement of prolyl oligopeptidase in events associated with corpus luteum formation and/or luteal regression.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号