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1.
Activity staining of extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gels revealed an additional methylcobalamin:coenzyme M (methylcobalamin:CoM) methyltransferase present in cells grown on acetate but not in those grown on trimethylamine. This methyltransferase is the 480-kDa corrinoid protein previously identified by its methylation following inhibition of methyl-CoM reductase in otherwise methanogenic cell extracts. The methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase activity of the purified 480-kDa protein increased from 0.4 to 3.8 micromol/min/mg after incubation with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Following SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of unheated protein samples, a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 48 kDa which possessed methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase activity was detected. This polypeptide migrated with an apparent mass of 41 kDa when the 480-kDa protein was heated before electrophoresis, indicating that the alpha subunit is responsible for the activity. The N-terminal sequence of this subunit was 47% similar to the N termini of the A and M isozymes of methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase (methyltransferase II). The endogenous methylated corrinoid bound to the beta subunit of the 480-kDa protein could be demethylated by CoM, but not by homocysteine or dithiothreitol, resulting in a Co(I) corrinoid. The Co(I) corrinoid could be remethylated by methyl iodide, and the protein catalyzed a methyl iodide:CoM transmethylation reaction at a rate of 2.3 micromol/min/mg. Methyl-CoM was stoichiometrically produced from CoM, as demonstrated by high-pressure liquid chromatography with indirect photometric detection. Two thiols, 2-mercaptoethanol and mercapto-2-propanol, were poorer substrates than CoM, while several others tested (including 3-mercaptopropanesulfonate) did not serve as methyl acceptors. These data indicate that the 480-kDa corrinoid protein is composed of a novel isozyme of methyltransferase II which remains firmly bound to a corrinoid cofactor binding subunit during isolation.  相似文献   

2.
The 480-kDa corrinoid protein was significantly methylated in extracts of acetate- but not methanol-grown cells incubated with 14CH3OH, in part because of its decreased synthesis in cells grown on substrates other than acetate. In addition, a 200-kDa corrinoid protein was methylated in extracts of methanol- but not acetate-grown cells.  相似文献   

3.
Reconstitution of trimethylamine-dependent coenzyme M (CoM) methylation was achieved with three purified polypeptides. Two of these polypeptides copurified as a trimethylamine methyl transfer (TMA-MT) activity detected by stimulation of the TMA:CoM methyl transfer reaction in cell extracts. The purified TMA-MT fraction stimulated the rate of methyl-CoM formation sevenfold, up to 1.7 micromol/min/mg of TMA-MT protein. The TMA-MT polypeptides had molecular masses of 52 and 26 kDa. Gel permeation of the TMA-MT fraction demonstrated that the 52-kDa polypeptide eluted with an apparent molecular mass of 280 kDa. The 26-kDa protein eluted primarily as a monomer, but some 26-kDa polypeptides also eluted with the 280-kDa peak, indicating that the two proteins weakly associate. The two polypeptides could be completely separated using gel permeation in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The corrinoid remained associated with the 26-kDa polypeptide at a molar ratio of 1.1 corrin/26-kDa polypeptide. This polypeptide was therefore designated the TMA corrinoid protein, or TCP. The TMA-MT polypeptides, when supplemented with purified methylcorrinoid:CoM methyltransferase (MT2), could effect the demethylation of TMA with the subsequent methylation of CoM and the production of dimethylamine at specific activities of up to 600 nmol/min/mg of TMA-MT protein. Neither dimethylamine nor monomethylamine served as the substrate, and the activity required Ti(III) citrate and methyl viologen. TMA-MT could interact with either isozyme of MT2 but had the greatest affinity for the A isozyme. These results suggest that TCP is uniquely involved in TMA-dependent methanogenesis, that this corrinoid protein is methylated by the substrate and demethylated by either isozyme of MT2, and that the predominant isozyme of MT2 found in TMA-grown cells is the favored participant in the TMA:CoM methyl transfer reaction.  相似文献   

4.
Methyl transfer from dimethylamine to coenzyme M was reconstituted in vitro for the first time using only highly purified proteins. These proteins isolated from Methanosarcina barkeri included the previously unidentified corrinoid protein MtbC, which copurified with MtbA, the methylcorrinoid:Coenzyme M methyltransferase specific for methanogenesis from methylamines. MtbC binds 1.0 mol of corrinoid cofactor/mol of 24-kDa polypeptide and stimulated dimethylamine:coenzyme M methyl transfer 3.4-fold in a cell extract. Purified MtbC and MtbA were used to assay and purify a dimethylamine:corrinoid methyltransferase, MtbB1. MtbB1 is a 230-kDa protein composed of 51-kDa subunits that do not possess a corrinoid prosthetic group. Purified MtbB1, MtbC, and MtbA were the sole protein requirements for in vitro dimethylamine:coenzyme M methyl transfer. An MtbB1:MtbC ratio of 1 was optimal for coenzyme M methylation with dimethylamine. MtbB1 methylated either corrinoid bound to MtbC or free cob(I)alamin with dimethylamine, indicating MtbB1 carries an active site for dimethylamine demethylation and corrinoid methylation. Experiments in which different proteins of the resolved monomethylamine:coenzyme M methyl transfer reaction replaced proteins involved in dimethylamine:coenzyme M methyl transfer indicated high specificity of MtbB1 and MtbC in dimethylamine:coenzyme M methyl transfer activity. These results indicate MtbB1 demethylates dimethylamine and specifically methylates the corrinoid prosthetic group of MtbC, which is subsequently demethylated by MtbA to methylate coenzyme M during methanogenesis from dimethylamine.  相似文献   

5.
6.
J D Kremer  X Cao    J Krzycki 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(15):4824-4833
Two corrinoid proteins with molecular sizes of 480 and 29 kDa are stably methylated by [2-14C]acetate-derived intermediates in cell extracts of aceticlastic Methanosarcina barkeri when methylreductase is inhibited by the addition of bromoethanesulfonic acid. Both 14CH3-proteins have been isolated to near homogeneity and found to be abundant soluble proteins. The larger protein possesses two subunits, of 41.4 and 30.4 kDa, in an equimolar ratio, suggesting an alpha 6 beta 6 conformation with six bound methylated corrinoids per 480-kDa molecule. The 29-kDa protein is a monomer in solution and possesses only one methylated corrinoid. All methyl groups on both proteins are photolabile, but the methylated corrinoid bound to the 29-kDa protein undergoes photolysis at a higher rate than that bound to the 480-kDa protein. The two proteins possess discrete N termini and do not appear to be forms of the same protein in equilibrium. Neither protein has an Fe4S4 cluster, and both have UV-visible spectra most similar to that of a base-on methylated corrinoid. A previously identified methylated protein, designated the unknown A 14CH3-protein, copurifies with the 480-kDa protein and has the same subunit composition. The methyl groups of both isolated 14CH3-proteins are converted to methane in cell extracts. The methylated proteins that accumulate in extracts in the presence of bromoethanesulfonic acid are demethylated by the addition of coenzyme M. Both isolated proteins are abundant novel corrinoid proteins that can methylate and be methylated by intermediates of the methanogenic pathway.  相似文献   

7.
Archaeal methane formation from methylamines is initiated by distinct methyltransferases with specificity for monomethylamine, dimethylamine, or trimethylamine. Each methylamine methyltransferase methylates a cognate corrinoid protein, which is subsequently demethylated by a second methyltransferase to form methyl-coenzyme M, the direct methane precursor. Methylation of the corrinoid protein requires reduction of the central cobalt to the highly reducing and nucleophilic Co(I) state. RamA, a 60-kDa monomeric iron-sulfur protein, was isolated from Methanosarcina barkeri and is required for in vitro ATP-dependent reductive activation of methylamine:CoM methyl transfer from all three methylamines. In the absence of the methyltransferases, highly purified RamA was shown to mediate the ATP-dependent reductive activation of Co(II) corrinoid to the Co(I) state for the monomethylamine corrinoid protein, MtmC. The ramA gene is located near a cluster of genes required for monomethylamine methyltransferase activity, including MtbA, the methylamine-specific CoM methylase and the pyl operon required for co-translational insertion of pyrrolysine into the active site of methylamine methyltransferases. RamA possesses a C-terminal ferredoxin-like domain capable of binding two tetranuclear iron-sulfur proteins. Mutliple ramA homologs were identified in genomes of methanogenic Archaea, often encoded near methyltrophic methyltransferase genes. RamA homologs are also encoded in a diverse selection of bacterial genomes, often located near genes for corrinoid-dependent methyltransferases. These results suggest that RamA mediates reductive activation of corrinoid proteins and that it is the first functional archetype of COG3894, a family of redox proteins of unknown function.Most methanogenic Archaea are capable of producing methane only from carbon dioxide. The Methanosarcinaceae are a notable exception as representatives are capable of methylotrophic methanogenesis from methylated amines, methylated thiols, or methanol. Methanogenesis from these substrates requires methylation of 2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid (coenzyme M or CoM) that is subsequently used by methylreductase to generate methane and a mixed disulfide whose reduction leads to energy conservation (14).Methylation of CoM with trimethylamine (TMA),4 dimethylamine (DMA), or monomethylamine (MMA) is initiated by three distinct methyltransferases that methylate cognate corrinoid-binding proteins (3). MtmB, the MMA methyltransferase, specifically methylates cognate corrinoid protein, MtmC, with MMA (see Fig. 1) (5, 6). The DMA methyltransferase, MtbB, and its cognate corrinoid protein, MtbC, interact specifically to demethylate DMA (7, 8). TMA is demethylated by the TMA methyltransferase (MttB) in conjunction with the TMA corrinoid protein (MttC) (8, 9). Each of the methylated corrinoid proteins is a substrate for a methylcobamide:CoM methyltransferase, MtbA, which produces methyl-CoM (1012).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.MMA:CoM methyl transfer. A schematic of the reactions catalyzed by MtmB, MtmC, and MtbA is shown that emphasizes the key role of MtmC in the catalytic cycle of both methyltransferases. Oxidation to Co(II)-MtmC of the supernucleophilic Co(I)-MtmC catalytic intermediate inactivates methyl transfer from MMA to the thiolate of coenzyme M (HSCoM). In vitro reduction of the Co(II)-MtmC with either methyl viologen reduced to the neutral species or with RamA in an ATP-dependent reaction can regenerate the Co(I) species. In either case in vitro Ti(III)-citrate is the ultimate source of reducing power.CoM methylation with methanol requires the methyltransferase MtaB and the corrinoid protein MtaC, which is then demethylated by another methylcobamide:CoM methyltransferase, MtaA (1315). The methylation of CoM with methylated thiols such as dimethyl sulfide in Methanosarcina barkeri is catalyzed by a corrinoid protein that is methylated by dimethyl sulfide and demethylated by CoM, but in this case an associated CoM methylase carries out both methylation reactions (16).In bacteria, analogous methyltransferase systems relying on small corrinoid proteins are used to achieve methylation of tetrahydrofolate. In Methylobacterium spp., CmuA, a single methyltransferase with a corrinoid binding domain, along with a separate pterin methylase, effect the methylation of tetrahydrofolate with chloromethane (17, 18). In Acetobacterium dehalogenans and Moorella thermoacetica various three-component systems exist for specific demethylation of different phenylmethyl ethers, such as vanillate (19) and veratrol (20), again for the methylation of tetrahydrofolate. Sequencing of the genes encoding the corrinoid proteins central to the archaeal and bacterial methylotrophic pathways revealed they are close homologs. Furthermore, genes predicted to encode such corrinoid proteins and pterin methyltransferases are widespread in bacterial genomes, often without demonstrated metabolic function. All of these corrinoid proteins are similar to the well characterized cobalamin binding domain of methionine synthase (21, 22).In contrast, the TMA, DMA, MMA, and methanol methyltransferases are not homologous proteins. The methylamine methyltransferases do share the common distinction of having in-frame amber codons (6, 8) within their encoding genes that corresponds to the genetically encoded amino acid pyrrolysine (2325). Pyrrolysine has been proposed to act in presenting a methylammonium adduct to the central cobalt ion of the corrinoid protein for methyl transfer (3, 23, 26). However, nucleophilic attack on a methyl donor requires the central cobalt ion of a corrinoid cofactor is in the nucleophilic Co(I) state rather than the inactive Co(II) state (27). Subsequent demethylation of the methyl-Co(III) corrinoid cofactor regenerates the nucleophilic Co(I) cofactor. The Co(I)/Co(II) in the cobalamin binding domain of methionine synthase has an Em value of -525 mV at pH 7.5 (28). It is likely to be similarly low in the homologous methyltrophic corrinoid proteins. These low redox potentials make the corrinoid cofactor subject to adventitious oxidation to the inactive Co(II) state (Fig. 1).During isolation, these corrinoid proteins are usually recovered in a mixture of Co(II) or hydroxy-Co(III) states. For in vitro studies, chemical reduction can maintain the corrinoid protein in the active Co(I) form. The methanol:CoM or the phenylmethyl ether:tetrahydrofolate methyltransferase systems can be activated in vitro by the addition of Ti(III) alone as an artificial reductant (14, 19). In contrast, activation of the methylamine corrinoid proteins further requires the addition of methyl viologen as a redox mediator. Ti(III) reduces methyl viologen to the extremely low potential neutral species. In vitro activation with these agents does not require ATP (5, 7, 9).Cellular mechanisms also exist to achieve the reductive activation of corrinoid cofactors in methyltransferase systems. Activation of human methionine synthase involves reduction of the co(II)balamin by methionine synthase reductase (29), whereas the Escherichia coli enzyme requires flavodoxin (30). The endergonic reduction is coupled with the exergonic methylation of the corrinoid with S-adenosylmethionine (27). An activation system exists in cellular extracts of A. dehalogenans that can activate the veratrol:tetrahydrofolate three-component system and catalyze the direct reduction of the veratrol-specific corrinoid protein to the Co(I) state; however, the activating protein has not been purified (31).For the methanogen methylamine and methanol methyltransferase systems, an activation process is readily detectable in cell extracts that is ATP- and hydrogen-dependent (32, 33). Daas et al. (34, 35) examined the activation of the methanol methyltransferase system in M. barkeri and purified in low yield a methyltransferase activation protein (MAP) which in the presence of a preparation of hydrogenase and uncharacterized proteins was required for ATP-dependent reductive activation of methanol:CoM methyl transfer. MAP was found to be a heterodimeric protein without a UV-visible detectable prosthetic group. Unfortunately, no protein sequence has been reported for MAP, leaving the identity of the gene in question. The same MAP protein was also suggested to activate methylamine:CoM methyl transfer, but this suggestion was based on results with crude protein fractions containing many cellular proteins other than MAP (36).Here we report of the identification and purification to near-homogeneity of RamA (reductive activation of methyltransfer, amines), a protein mediating activation of methylamine:CoM methyl transfer in a highly purified system (Fig. 1). Quite unlike MAP, which was reported to lack prosthetic groups, RamA is an iron-sulfur protein that can catalyze reduction of a corrinoid protein such as MtmC to the Co(I) state in an ATP-dependent reaction (Fig. 1). Peptide mapping of RamA allowed identification of the gene encoding RamA and its homologs in the genomes of Methanosarcina spp. RamA belongs to COG3894, a group of uncharacterized metal-binding proteins found in a number of genomes. RamA, thus, provides a functional example for a family of proteins widespread among bacteria and Archaea whose physiological role had been largely unknown.  相似文献   

8.
Corrinoid proteins have been implicated as methyl carriers in methane formation from acetate, yet specific corrinoid proteins methylated by acetate-derived intermediates have not been identified. In the presence of ATP, H2, and bromoethanesulfonic acid, label from 3H- or 2-14C-labeled acetate was incorporated into the protein fraction of cell extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri. Incorporated label was susceptible to photolysis, yielding labeled methane as the anaerobic photolysis product. Size exclusion high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) demonstrated the presence of at least three labeled proteins with native molecular sizes of 480, 200, and 29 kDa, while electrophoresis indicated that four major labeled proteins were present. Dual-label experiments demonstrated that these four proteins were methylated rather than acetylated. Two of the proteins (480 and 29 kDa) contained the majority of radiolabel and were stably methylated. After labeling with [2-14C]acetate, the stable 14CH3-proteins were partially purified, and 14CH3-cofactors were isolated from each protein. UV-visible spectroscopy and HPLC demonstrated these to be methylated corrinoids. When the 480-kDa corrinoid protein was purified to 70% homogeneity, the preparation was found to have subunits of 40 and 30 kDa. The 480-kDa protein but not the 29-kDa protein was methylated during in vitro methanogenesis from acetate and demethylated as methanogenesis ceased, consistent with the involvement of this protein in methane formation.  相似文献   

9.
DNA of Escherichia coli virus T1 is resistant to MboI cleavage and appears to be heavily methylated. Analysis of methylation by the isoschizomeric restriction enzymes Sau3AI and DpnI revealed that recognition sites for E. coli DNA adenine methylase (dam methylase) are methylated. The same methylation pattern was found for virus T1 DNA grown on an E. coli dam host, indicating a T1-specific DNA methyltransferase.  相似文献   

10.
Fast protein liquid chromatography of cell extract from methanol- or acetate-grown Methanosarcina thermophila resolved two peaks of CO dehydrogenase activity. The activity of one of the CO dehydrogenases was sixfold greater in acetate-grown compared with methanol-grown cells. This CO dehydrogenase was purified to apparent homogeneity (70 mumol of methyl viologen reduced per min per mg of protein) and made up greater than 10% of the cellular protein of acetate-grown cells. The native enzyme (Mr 250,000) formed aggregates with an Mr of approximately 1,000,000. The enzyme contained five subunits (Mrs 89,000, 71,000, 60,000, 58,000, and 19,000), suggesting a multifunctional enzyme complex. Nickel, iron, cobalt, zinc, inorganic sulfide, and a corrinoid were present in the complex. The UV-visible spectrum suggested the presence of iron-sulfur centers. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum contained g values of 2.073, 2.049, and 2.028; these features were broadened in enzyme that was purified from cells grown in the presence of medium enriched with 61Ni, indicating the involvement of this metal in the spectrum. The pattern of potassium cyanide inhibition indicated that cyanide binds at or near the CO binding site. The properties of the enzyme imply an involvement in the dissimilation of acetate to methane, possibly by cleavage of acetate or activated acetate.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The genome of Methanosarcina acetivorans encodes three homologs, initially annotated as hypothetical fused corrinoid/methyl transfer proteins, which are highly elevated in CO-grown cells versus cells grown with alternate substrates. Based only on phenotypic analyses of deletion mutants, it was previously concluded that the homologs are strictly dimethylsulfide:coenzyme M (CoM) methyltransferases not involved in the metabolism of CO (E. Oelgeschlager and M. Rother, Mol. Microbiol. 72:1260 -1272, 2009). The homolog encoded by MA4383 (here designated CmtA) was reexamined via biochemical characterization of the protein overproduced in Escherichia coli. Purified CmtA reconstituted with methylcob(III)alamin contained a molar ratio of cobalt to protein of 1.0 ± 0.2. The UV-visible spectrum was typical of methylated corrinoid-containing proteins, with absorbance maxima at 370 and 420 nm and a band of broad absorbance between 450 and 600 nm with maxima at 525, 490, and 550 nm. CmtA reconstituted with aquocobalamin showed methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin:CoM (CH(3)-THMPT:HS-CoM) methyltransferase activity (0.31 μmol/min/mg) with apparent K(m) values of 135 μM for CH(3)-THMPT and 277 μM for HS-CoM. The ratio of CH(3)-THMPT:HS-CoM methyltransferase activity in the soluble versus membrane cellular fractions was 15-fold greater in CO-grown versus methanol-grown cells. A mutant strain deleted for the CmtA gene showed lower growth rates and final yields when cultured with growth-limiting partial pressures of CO, demonstrating a role for CmtA during growth with this substrate. The results establish that CmtA is a soluble CH(3)-THSPT:HS-CoM methyltransferase postulated to supplement the membrane-bound CH(3)-THMPT:HS-CoM methyltransferase during CO-dependent growth of M. acetivorans. Thus, we propose that the name of the enzyme encoded by MA4384 be CmtA (for cytoplasmic methyltransferase).  相似文献   

13.
Das A  Fu ZQ  Tempel W  Liu ZJ  Chang J  Chen L  Lee D  Zhou W  Xu H  Shaw N  Rose JP  Ljungdahl LG  Wang BC 《Proteins》2007,67(1):167-176
The strict anaerobic, thermophilic bacterium Moorella thermoacetica metabolizes C1 compounds for example CO(2)/H(2), CO, formate, and methanol into acetate via the Wood/Ljungdahl pathway. Some of the key steps in this pathway include the metabolism of the C1 compounds into the methyl group of methylenetetrahydrofolate (MTHF) and the transfer of the methyl group from MTHF to the methyl group of acetyl-CoA catalyzed by methyltransferase, corrinoid protein and CO dehydrogenase/acetyl CoA synthase. Recently, we reported the crystallization of a 25 kDa methanol-induced corrinoid protein from M. thermoacetica (Zhou et al., Acta Crystallogr F 2005; 61:537-540). In this study we analyzed the crystal structure of the 25 kDa protein and provide genetic and biochemical evidences supporting its role in the methanol metabolism of M. thermoacetia. The 25 kDa protein was encoded by orf1948 of contig 303 in the M. thermoacetica genome. It resembles similarity to MtaC the corrinoid protein of the methanol:CoM methyltransferase system of methane producing archaea. The latter enzyme system also contains two additional enzymes MtaA and MtaB. Homologs of MtaA and MtaB were found to be encoded by orf2632 of contig 303 and orf1949 of contig 309, respectively, in the M. thermoacetica genome. The orf1948 and orf1949 were co-transcribed from a single polycistronic operon. Metal analysis and spectroscopic data confirmed the presence of cobalt and the corrinoid in the purified 25 kDa protein. High resolution X-ray crystal structure of the purified 25 kDa protein revealed corrinoid as methylcobalamin with the imidazole of histidine as the alpha-axial ligand replacing benziimidazole, suggesting base-off configuration for the corrinoid. Methanol significantly activated the expression of the 25 kDa protein. Cyanide and nitrate inhibited methanol metabolism and suppressed the level of the 25 kDa protein. The results suggest a role of the 25 kDa protein in the methanol metabolism of M. thermoacetica.  相似文献   

14.
Methanosarcina barkeri was recently shown to contain two cytoplasmic isoenzymes of methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase (methyltransferase 2). Isoenzyme I predominated in methanol-grown cells and isoenzyme II in acetate-grown cells. It was therefore suggested that isoenzyme I functions in methanogenesis from methanol and isoenzyme II in methanogenesis from acetate. We report here that cells of M. barkeri grown on trimethylamine, H2/CO2, or acetate contain mainly isoenzyme II. These cells were found to have in common that they can catalyze the formation of methane from trimethylamine and H2, whereas only acetate-grown cells can mediate the formation of methane from acetate. Methanol-grown cells, which contained only low concentrations of isoenzyme II, were unable to mediate the formation of methane from both trimethylamine and acetate. These and other results suggest that isoenzyme II (i) is employed for methane formation from trimethylamine rather than from acetate, (ii) is constitutively expressed rather than trimethylamine-induced, and (iii) is repressed by methanol. The constitutive expression of isoenzyme II in acetate-grown M. barkeri can explain its presence in these cells. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of isoenzyme I and isoenzyme II were analyzed and found to be only 55% similar.Abbreviations H-S-CoM coenzyme M or 2-mercaptoethane-sulfonate - CH3-S-CoM methyl-coenzyme M or 2(methylthio)-ethanesulfonate - [Co] cobalamin - CH3-[Co] methylcobalamin - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH3-H4MPT N 5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin - MT1 methyltransferase 1 or methanol: 5-hydroxybenzimidazolyl cobamide methyltransferase - MT2 methyltransferase 2 or methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase - Mops morpholinopropanesulfonate - 1 U = 1 mol/min  相似文献   

15.
B Hippler  R K Thauer 《FEBS letters》1999,449(2-3):165-168
In methanogenic archaea the transfer of the methyl group of N5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin to coenzyme M is coupled with energy conservation. The reaction is catalyzed by a membrane associated multienzyme complex composed of eight different subunits MtrA-H. The 23 kDa subunit MtrA harbors a corrinoid prosthetic group which is methylated and demethylated in the catalytic cycle. We report here that the 34 kDa subunit MtrH catalyzes the methylation reaction. MtrH was purified and shown to exhibit methyltetrahydromethanopterin:cob(I)alamin methyltransferase activity. Sequence comparison revealed similarity of MtrH with MetH from Escherichia coli and AcsE from Clostridium thermoaceticum: both enzymes exhibit methyltetrahydrofolate:cob(I)alamin methyltransferase activity.  相似文献   

16.
目的: 探讨小鼠胚胎干细胞(mouse embryonic stem cells, mESCs)向生殖细胞(Embryonic germ cells,EG)分化过程中5-杂氮-2'-脱氧胞苷(5-Aza-2'-deoxycytidine,5-Aza-dC) 对DNA甲基化转移酶Dnmt1和Dnmt3a及生殖细胞特征基因Mvh表达变化的DNA甲基化调控机制。方法:将mES细胞分化形成拟胚体(embryoid bodies, EBs) 作为向生殖细胞分化的启动步骤,采用不同浓度(0.05μmol/L,0.1μmol/L,0.5μmol/L,1μmol/L,3μmol/L)处理EBs,RT-PCR实时荧光定量RT-PCR和Western blot分别检测检测在5-Aza-dC处理前后Dnmt1和Dnmt3a在ES细胞和EBs中的表达,甲基化特异性PCR(MSP)检测原始生殖细胞分化特征基因Mvh启动子甲基化状态。结果: 5-Aza-dC的浓度在0.05 μmol/L~1 μmol/L之间时,EBs保持较高的存活率而EBs的形态明显发生了变化;5-Aza-dC 处理后, Dnmt1和Dnmt3a在EBs中mRNA表达量明显降低,其变化特点与WB结果相一致。MSP和测序结果显示, Mvh启动子区表现为部分甲基化,5-Aza-dC 处理后的4d EBs中Mvh CpG岛有4个CG位点发生突变,而mES细胞中未见突变。结论: EBs经5-Aza-dC处理后,Dnmt1和Dnmt3a的表达明显下调;同时,Mvh启动子发生部分甲基化,有可能启动了向生殖细胞的分化进程。  相似文献   

17.
18.
The enzyme systems involved in the methyl group transfer from methanol and from tri- and dimethylamine to 2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid (coenzyme M) were resolved from cell extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri Fusaro grown on methanol and trimethylamine, respectively. Resolution was accomplished by ammonium sulfate fractionation, anion-exchange chromatography, and fast protein liquid chromatography. The methyl group transfer reactions from tri- and dimethylamine, as well as the monomethylamine:coenzyme M methyltransferase reaction, were strictly dependent on catalytic amounts of ATP and on a protein present in the 65% ammonium sulfate supernatant. The latter could be replaced by methyltransferase-activating protein isolated from methanol-grown cells of the organism. In addition, the tri- and dimethylamine:coenzyme M methyltransferase reactions required the presence of a methylcobalamin:coenzyme M methyltransferase (MT2), which is different from the analogous enzyme from methanol-grown M. barkeri. In this work, it is shown that the various methylamine:coenzyme M methyltransfer steps proceed in a fashion which is mechanistically similar to the methanol:coenzyme M methyl transfer, yet with the participation of specific corrinoid enzymes and a specific MT2 isoenzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Methanosarcina acetivorans is able to use carbon monoxide (CO) as the sole source of energy for growth. Its carboxidotrophic growth is peculiar as it involves formation of acetate, formate and methylated thiols, besides methane. Under this condition three proteins homologous to both corrinoid proteins and methyltransferases (MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558) are highly abundant. To address their role in M. acetivorans , a set of single and double mutants, and the triple mutant, was constructed by deletion/disruption of the encoding genes. Phenotypic analysis of the mutants rules out an important role of the methyltransferase homologues in the CO2 reduction pathway of methanogenesis. Instead, the single and double mutants were affected to various degrees in their capacity to generate dimethylsulphide (DMS) from CO and to form methane from DMS. The triple mutant was unable to produce or metabolize DMS, and could not grow with DMS as the sole energy source, which demonstrates that MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558 are involved in, and required for, methylsulphide metabolism of M. acetivorans . Based on these findings we propose to designate MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558 as m ethyl t ransferases specific for methyl s ulphides, MtsD, MtsF and MtsH respectively.  相似文献   

20.
The Assimilation of Acetate by Chlorella vulgaris   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The acetate metabolism of autotrophically grown, acetate-adaptedand acetate-grown cells is compared. All oxidize acetate rapidlyand assimilate about half of the acetate added in short-termexperiments. Kinetic analysis of the incorporation of 14C-acetatereveals citrate as a primary product of acetate assimilationin all cells in darkness. Malate formed from acetate-I-14C byacetate-grown cells is asymmetrically labelled in a manner consistentwith a primary incorporation of acetate into malate by a malatesynthase reaction. The chief difference between autotrophic and acetate-grown cellsis the faster rate at which the latter incorporate acetate carboninto compounds outside the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In particular,incorporation into protein and carbohydrate is much faster inacetate-grown cells and it is suggested that enzymes catalysingreactions leading away from the tricarboxylic acid cycle mayincrease in activity in acetate-grown cells. Light greatly stimulates acetate incorporation into lipide andalso increases the synthesis of protein and carbohydrate.  相似文献   

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