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A single amino acid mutation (Ser180----Cys) determines the polymorphism in cytochrome P450g (P4502C13) by altering protein stability.
Authors:M B Faletto  P Linko  J A Goldstein
Affiliation:Laboratory of Biochemical Risk Analysis, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709.
Abstract:Cytochrome P450g is polymorphic in the male rat. This polymorphism is characterized by a 20-40-fold difference in the hepatic content of P450g in the two phenotypes. Sequencing of cDNAs from high (+g) and low (-g) phenotype rats has shown that the low phenotype is due to a defective mRNA containing nine base mutations encoding 7 amino acid substitutions. To determine the role of these structural changes in the phenotypic expression of P450g, we altered each of these residues by site-directed mutagenesis in the present studies and expressed the normal and mutant cDNAs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. P450+g protein was expressed at a level 4-6-fold higher than that of P450-g in yeast cells, despite the presence of identical mRNA levels. This difference in protein expression approaches the difference seen in the rat. A single amino acid change from Ser180 in P450+g to Cys in P450-g, in a highly conserved region in the P4502C subfamily, was found to be solely responsible for the phenotypic differences in expression of P450g. Protein half-life studies demonstrated that this mutation increases the degradation of P450g. This is the first example of a single amino acid substitution which alters the phenotypic expression of a P450 protein by affecting its stability.
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