scholarly journals Ornithine decarboxylase stability in HMOA and DH23b cells is not due to post-translational truncation of a C-terminal recognition site

1996 ◽  
Vol 318 (3) ◽  
pp. 879-882
Author(s):  
John L. A. MITCHELL ◽  
Chung-youl CHOE ◽  
Gary G JUDD

The normally labile ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) becomes unusually stable when Cys-441 is replaced with Trp in the variant cell lines HMOA and DH23b. This stable ODC is also observed to have higher mobility on SDS/PAGE. Because previous studies have shown that ODC stability can be achieved when as few as five amino acid residues are removed from its C-terminus, it was suggested that the amino acid substitution in the variant ODC might alter its conformation sufficiently to promote a similar proteolytic loss of a C-terminal degradation signal, resulting in a stable yet active ODC. To examine this mechanism, amino acids in the C-terminal regions of both wild-type and stable (Trp-441) ODC proteins were released, by means of carboxypeptidase-Y digestion, and identified by HPLC. The C-terminal ends were found to be the same, and are as predicted from the cDNA sequence. This study proves that stability of the Trp-441 form of ODC is not simply due to proteolytic removal of a C-terminal proteasome-targeting sequence, thereby implying that the stabilization of this mutant ODC form must result directly from a conformational change associated with the loss of Cys-441.

1985 ◽  
Vol 230 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
L P Chung ◽  
D R Bentley ◽  
K B Reid

By using synthetic oligonucleotides as probes, plasmid clones containing portions of cDNA coding for human C4b-binding protein were isolated from a liver cDNA library. The entire amino acid sequence of the C4b-binding protein can be predicted from this study of the cloned cDNA when allied to a previous sequence study at the protein level [Chung, Gagnon & Reid (1985) Mol. Immunol. 22, 427-435], in which over 55% of the amino acid sequence, including the N-terminal 62 residues, was obtained. The plasmid clones isolated allowed the unambiguous determination of 1717 nucleotides of cDNA sequence between the codon for the 32nd amino acid in the sequence of C4b-binding protein and the 164th nucleotide in the 3′ non-translated region. The sequence studies show that the secreted form of C4b-binding protein, found in plasma, is composed of chains of apparent Mr 70 000 that contains 549 amino acid residues. Examination of the protein and cDNA sequence results show that there are at least two polymorphic sites in the molecule. One is at position 44, which can be glutamine or threonine, and the other is at position 309, which can be tyrosine or histidine. Northern-blot analysis indicated that the mRNA for C4b-binding protein is approx. 2.5 kilobases long. The N-terminal 491 amino acids of C4b-binding protein can be divided into eight internal homologous regions, each approx. 60 amino acids long, which can be aligned by the presence in each region of four half-cystine, one tryptophan and several other conserved residues. These regions in C4b-binding protein are homologous with the three internal-homology regions that have been reported to be present within the Ba region of the complement enzyme factor B and also to the internal-homology regions found in the non-complement beta 2-glycoprotein I.


1995 ◽  
Vol 308 (2) ◽  
pp. 607-612 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Kuźnicki ◽  
T L Wang ◽  
B M Martin ◽  
L Winsky ◽  
D M Jacobowitz

Calretinin is an EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding protein expressed predominantly in some neurons. We have found that the tryptic digestion pattern of rat recombinant calretinin depends on Ca2+ concentration as determined by SDS/PAGE, amino-acid-sequence analysis and electrospray-ionization MS. Ca(2+)-saturated calretinin was cleaved between amino acids 60 and 61 to yield two fragments, which accumulated during cleavage. Small amounts of the larger fragment (amino acid residues 61-271) were further cleaved from the C-terminal end. Ca(2+)-free calretinin was also cleaved between residues 60 and 61; however, under the latter conditions the fragment 61-271 was further cleaved from the N-terminal end. Native rat calretinin was cleaved by trypsin in a similar Ca(2+)-dependent fashion. All identified fragments of recombinant calretinin bound 45Ca2+ on nitrocellulose filters, although to a different extent. The 61-271 fragment was released by EGTA from an octyl-agarose column in a manner similar to intact calretinin, while fragment 61-233 was not eluted by EGTA. These observations show that there are trypsin cleavage sites in calretinin that are available regardless of Ca2+ binding, other sites that are completely protected against trypsin on Ca(2+)-binding and sites which become partially available on Ca(2+)-binding. Together these data show that calretinin changes its conformation on Ca2+ binding and identify the regions which are exposed in apo and Ca(2+)-bound form.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1027-1027
Author(s):  
Melissa A. Blum ◽  
Tivadar Orban ◽  
Daniel O. Beck ◽  
Michael Kalafatis

Abstract The prothrombinase complex, composed of the enzyme factor Xa, the cofactor factor Va, and the substrate prothrombin associated on a cell surface in the presence of divalent metal ions, catalyzes the activation of prothrombin to thrombin 300,000-fold more effectively than the enzyme, factor Xa, alone. We have demonstrated that amino acids E323, Y324 and E330, V331 are binding sites for factor Xa on the factor Va heavy chain and are required for coordinating the spatial arrangement of enzyme and substrate directing prothrombin cleavage at two spatially distinct sites. We have also demonstrated that amino acid region 332–336 contains residues that are involved in cofactor function. Peptide studies have identified amino acid residues 334DY335 as major participants in factor Va cofactor activity. We have employed site-directed mutagenesis to study the effect of these amino acids on the catalytic efficiency of prothrombinase. Recombinant factor V molecules with the mutations D334K and Y335F, designated factor VKF, and D334A and Y335A, designated factor VAA were produced, transiently transfected, expressed in COS7L cells, and purified. Kinetic studies demonstrate that while factor VaKF has a KD for factor Xa similar to the KD observed for wild type factor Va, the kcat of prothrombinase assembled with factor VaKF has approximately a 1.5-fold decreased value compared to kcat of prothrombinase assembled with the wild type cofactor molecule. On the contrary, prothrombinase assembled with factor VaAA was found to have a nearly 10-fold decrease kcat, compared to prothrombinase assembled with wild type factor Va. This data suggest that not all amino acid substitutions are well tolerated at positions 334–335. Analysis of the sequence 323–340 using the recently published completed model of coagulation factor Va (pdb entry 1Y61) revealed that amino acids 334–335 are located at the end of a beta-sheet. To ascertain the importance of these mutants and their contribution to cofactor activity we have combined the mutations of amino acids 334–335 with mutations at amino acids 323–324 (E323F, Y324F) and 330–331 (E330M, V331I). We thus created quadruple mutants resulting in recombinant factor VFF/KF, factor VFF/AA, factor VMI/KF and factor VMI/AA. These molecules were transiently expressed in COS-7L cells and studied for their ability to be incorporated into prothrombinase. Free energies associated with the catalytic efficiencies of prothrombinase assembled with each mutant were also calculated (ΔΔGint). The ΔΔGint of interaction for the double mutants, factor VaFF/KF and factor VaMI/KF, had positive values indicating that the side chains of amino acids 330EV331, 323EY324 and 334DY335 located in and around the factor Xa binding site interact in a synergistic manner resulting in the destabilization of the transition state complex and a decelerated rate of catalysis. Conversely, combining the factor Xa binding site mutants with recombinant factor VaAA result in ΔΔGint values of approximately zero. In conclusion, the data demonstrate that replacement of amino acids 334–335 by two hydrophilic residues results in decreased cofactor function. In contrast, replacement of these amino acids by two small hydrophobic residues do not appear to be well tolerated by the cofactor resulting in severely impaired cofactor activity. Altogether, these data demonstrate the importance of amino acid residues D334 and Y335 for the rearrangement of enzyme and substrate required for efficient catalysis.


2012 ◽  
Vol 78 (24) ◽  
pp. 8595-8600 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiuzhen Gao ◽  
Xi Chen ◽  
Weidong Liu ◽  
Jinhui Feng ◽  
Qiaqing Wu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTmeso-Diaminopimelate dehydrogenase (meso-DAPDH) is an NADP+-dependent enzyme which catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination on thed-configuration ofmeso-2,6-diaminopimelate to producel-2-amino-6-oxopimelate. In this study, the gene encoding ameso-diaminopimelate dehydrogenase fromSymbiobacterium thermophilumwas cloned and expressed inEscherichia coli. In addition to the native substratemeso-2,6-diaminopimelate, the purified enzyme also showed activity towardd-alanine,d-valine, andd-lysine. This enzyme catalyzed the reductive amination of 2-keto acids such as pyruvic acid to generated-amino acids in up to 99% conversion and 99% enantiomeric excess. Sincemeso-diaminopimelate dehydrogenases are known to be specific tomeso-2,6-diaminopimelate, this is a unique wild-typemeso-diaminopimelate dehydrogenase with a more relaxed substrate specificity and potential ford-amino acid synthesis. The enzyme is the most stablemeso-diaminopimelate dehydrogenase reported to now. Two amino acid residues (F146 and M152) in the substrate binding sites ofS. thermophilum meso-DAPDH different from the sequences of other knownmeso-DAPDHs were replaced with the conserved amino acids in othermeso-DAPDHs, and assay of wild-type and mutant enzyme activities revealed that F146 and M152 are not critical in determining the enzyme's substrate specificity. The high thermostability and relaxed substrate profile ofS. thermophilum meso-DAPDH warrant it as an excellent starting enzyme for creating effectived-amino acid dehydrogenases by protein engineering.


2000 ◽  
Vol 68 (8) ◽  
pp. 4566-4573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dagmar Blöcker ◽  
Holger Barth ◽  
Elke Maier ◽  
Roland Benz ◽  
Joseph T. Barbieri ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The binary Clostridium botulinum C2 toxin consists of two separate proteins, the binding component C2II (80.5 kDa) and the actin-ADP-ribosylating enzyme component C2I (49.4 kDa). For its cytotoxic action, C2II binds to a cell membrane receptor and induces cell entry of C2I via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Here we studied the structure-function relationship of C2II by constructing truncated C2II proteins and producing polyclonal antisera against selective regions of C2II. An antibody raised against the C terminus (amino acids 592 to 721) of C2II inhibited binding of C2II to cells. The antibody prevented pore formation by C2II oligomers in artificial membranes but did not influence the properties of existing channels. To further define the region responsible for receptor binding, we constructed proteins with deletions in C2II; specifically, they lacked amino acid residues 592 to 721 and the 7 C-terminal amino acid residues. The truncated proteins still formed sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable oligomers but were unable to bind to cells. Our data indicate that the C terminus of C2II mediates binding of the protein to cells and that the 7 C-terminal amino acids are structurally important for receptor binding.


2006 ◽  
Vol 74 (10) ◽  
pp. 5595-5601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia L. Sears ◽  
Simy L. Buckwold ◽  
Jai W. Shin ◽  
Augusto A. Franco

ABSTRACT To evaluate the role of the C-terminal region in Bacteroides fragilis toxin (BFT) activity, processing, and secretion, sequential C-terminal truncation and point mutations were created by site-directed mutagenesis. Determination of BFT activity on HT29/C1 cells, cleavage of E-cadherin, and the capacity to induce interleukin-8 secretion by wild-type BFT and C-terminal deletion mutants showed that deletion of only 2 amino acid residues at the C terminus significantly reduced BFT biological activity and deletion of eight or more amino acid residues obliterated BFT biologic activity. Western blot and reverse transcription-PCR analyses indicated that BFT mutants lacking seven or fewer amino acid residues in the C-terminal region are processed and expressed similar to wild-type BFT. However, BFT mutants lacking eight or more amino acids at the C terminus are expressed similar to wild-type BFT but are unstable. We concluded that the C terminus of BFT is not tolerant of modest amino acid deletions, suggesting that it is biologically important for BFT activity.


1997 ◽  
Vol 324 (2) ◽  
pp. 517-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio. C. M CAMARGO ◽  
Marcelo. D GOMES ◽  
Antonia. P REICHL ◽  
Emer. S FERRO ◽  
Saul JACCHIERI ◽  
...  

A systematic analysis of the peptide sequences and lengths of several homologues of bioactive peptides and of a number of quenched-fluorescence (qf) opioid- and bradykinin-related peptides was performed to determine the main features leading the oligopeptides to hydrolysis by the recombinant rat testis thimet oligopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.15). The results indicate that a minimum substrate length of six amino acids is required and that among the oligopeptides six to thirteen amino acid residues long, their susceptibility as substrates is highly variable. Thimet oligopeptidase was able to hydrolyse, with similar catalytic efficiency, peptide bonds having hydrophobic or hydrophilic amino acids as well as proline in the P1 position of peptides, ranging from a minimum of six to a maximum of approximately thirteen amino acid residues. An intriguing observation was the shift of the cleavage site, at a Leu-Arg bond in qf dynorphin-(2–8) [qf-Dyn2–8; Abz-GGFLRRV-EDDnp, where Abz stands for o-aminobenzoyl and EDDnp for N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl) ethylenediamine], to Arg-Arg in qf-Dyn2–8Q, in which Gln was substituted for Val at its C-terminus. Similarly, a cleavage site displacement was also observed with the hydrolysis of the internally quenched-fluorescence bradykinin analogues containing Gln at the C-terminal position, namely Abz-RPPGFSPFR-EDDnp and Abz-GFSPFR-EDDnp are cleaved at the Phe-Ser bond, but Abz-RPPGFSPFRQ-EDDnp and Abz-GFSPFRQ-EDDnp are cleaved at the Pro-Phe bond.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
In Ra Seo ◽  
Dae Eun Kang ◽  
Dong Woo Song ◽  
Do Han Kim

Imperatoxin A () is known to modify the gating of skeletal ryanodine receptor (RyR1). In this paper, the ability of charged aa residues of to induce substate of native RyR1 in HSR was examined. Our results show that the basic residues (e.g., Lys19, Lys20, Lys22, Arg23, and Arg24) are important for producing substate of RyR1. In addition, other basic residues (e.g., Lys30, Arg31, and Arg33) near the C-terminus and some acidic residues (e.g., Glu29, Asp13, and Asp2) are also involved in the generation of substate. Residues such as Lys8and Thr26may be involved in the self-regulation of substate of RyR1, since alanine substitution of the aa residues led to a drastic conversion to the substate. The modifications of the channel gating by the wild-type and mutant toxins were similar in purified RyR1. Taken together, the specific charge distributions on the surface of are essential for regulation of the channel gating of RyR1.


1988 ◽  
Vol 251 (3) ◽  
pp. 691-699 ◽  
Author(s):  
R W Olafson ◽  
W D McCubbin ◽  
C M Kay

Biochemical and physiological studies of Synechococcus cyanobacteria have indicated the presence of a low-Mr heavy-metal-binding protein with marked similarity to eukaryotic metallothioneins (MTs). We report here the characterization of a Synechococcus prokaryotic MT isolated by gel-permeation and reverse-phase chromatography. The large number of variants of this molecule found during chromatographic separation could not be attributed to the presence of major isoproteins as assessed by amino acid analysis and amino acid sequencing of isoforms. Two of the latter were shown to have identical primary structures that differed substantially from the well-described eukaryotic MTs. In addition to six long-chain aliphatic residues, two aromatic residues were found adjacent to one another near the centre of the molecule, making this the most hydrophobic MT to be described. Other unusual features included a pair of histidine residues located in repeating Gly-His-Thr-Gly sequences near the C-terminus and a complete lack of association of hydroxylated residues with cysteine residues, as is commonly found in eukaryotes. Similarly, aside from a single lysine residue, no basic amino acid residues were found adjacent to cysteine residues in the sequence. Most importantly, sequence alignment analyses with mammalian, invertebrate and fungal MT sequences showed no statistically significant homology aside from the presence of Cys-Xaa-Cys structures common to all MTs. On the other hand, like other MTs, the prokaryotic molecule appears to be free of alpha-helical structure but has a considerable amount of beta-structure, as predicted by both c.d. measurements and the Chou & Fasman empirical relations. Considered together, these data suggested that some similarity between the metal-thiolate clusters of the prokaryote and eukaryote MTs may exist.


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