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Cobalamin (vitamin B12) binding, phylogeny, and synteny of human transcobalamin
Authors:Kalra Seema  Li Ning  Yammani Raghunatha R  Seetharam Shakuntla  Seetharam Bellur
Affiliation:Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin and Clement Zablocki VA Medical Center, Milwaukee, WI 53295, USA.
Abstract:Selected residues in a highly conserved 15-residue region, 174SVDTAAMAGLAFTC L188 of human transcobalamin (TC), a cobalamin (Cbl: vitamin B12) binding protein, were subjected to site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant constructs were expressed in TC-deficient fibroblasts or in vitro to assess the effect of these mutations on Cbl binding. Phylogenetic analyses and protein parsimony indicated that TC evolved earlier than other mammalian Cbl-binding proteins, intrinsic factor and haptocorrins, and divergence occurred between mouse/rat and human dispersing TC gene to different chromosomes. These studies show that (a) two of the three polar residues, S174, T177, or D176 and two of the three conserved alanine residues, A179 and A184 present in the 15-residue evolutionary conserved region are essential for Cbl-binding by human TC, and (b) TC gene is transferred in a syntenic manner to different chromosomes, at least before the divergence of mouse/rat and human.
Keywords:Transcobalamin   Vitamin B12 binding   Phylogeny   Syntenic transfer
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