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1.
GTP hydrolysis by guinea pig liver transglutaminase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Homogeneous guinea pig liver transglutaminase was purified from a commercially available enzyme preparation by affinity chromatography on GTP-agarose. The purified transglutaminase exhibited a single band of apparent Mr = 80,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel and Western blotting and had enzyme activity of both transglutaminase and GTPase. The guinea pig liver transglutaminase has an apparent Km value of 4.4 microM for GTPase activity. GTPase activity was inhibited by guanine nucleotides in order GTP-gamma-S greater than GDP, but not by GMP. These results demonstrate that purified guinea pig liver transglutaminase catalyzes GTP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

2.
Tissue transglutaminase purified from guinea pig livers has a very broad substrate specificity in comparison with other members of the transglutaminase family and therefore is useful for substrate analogue kinetic studies. Modifications made in our laboratory to the standard purification protocol (J. E. Folk and S. I. Chung, 1985, Methods Enzymol. 113, 358-364) have yielded a 28% increase in specific activity and 55% increase in overall yield, while reducing the number of steps to the purification. Herein we report some of the highest yields and specific activities for guinea pig liver transglutaminase found in the literature, as well as the use of lyophilization as a solution to the long-standing problem of enzyme stability during storage.  相似文献   

3.
4.
1. Flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO) in pulmonary and hepatic microsomes from sheep was analyzed by western blotting by probing with antibodies raised against FMO purified from rabbit lung and pig liver. 2. Pulmonary microsomes from sheep contain a single major protein which cross-reacts with the antibody to rabbit lung FMO, but no band can be observed when probed with the antibody to the pig liver enzyme. Likewise, sheep liver microsomes contain a protein which cross-reacts with the antibody to pig liver FMO, but no significant staining is observed following incubation with antibody to the lung enzyme. 3. Sheep pulmonary and hepatic microsomal FMO also display a difference in activity toward chlorpromazine and n-dodecylamine. 4. Preliminary evidence suggests that sheep FMO may be induced (liver) or repressed (lung) during pregnancy. 5. Sheep are similar to rodents (rat, mouse, guinea pig, hamster and rabbit) in having distinct forms of pulmonary and hepatic FMO. The immunochemical and catalytic difference between sheep liver and lung FMO is similar to that of rabbit.  相似文献   

5.
Studies on the glutamine substrate specificities of human plasma factor XIIIa and guinea pig liver transglutaminase have been made using variants of the synthetic peptide substrate, Ser-Val-Leu-Ser-Leu-Ser-Gln-Ser-Lys-Val-Leu-Pro-Val-Pro-Glu. The sequence of this effective peptide substrate corresponds to the primary site of factor XIIIa-catalyzed amine incorporation into beta-casein, the most sensitive known macromolecular substrate for this enzyme (Gorman, J.J., and Folk, J.E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 419-427). Variations in specificity observed with factor XIIIa for peptides containing single substitutions and multiple substitutions in this sequence are indications that several important determinants for enzyme recognition are contained therein. Among these are several of the hydrophobic amino acid residues and the lysine residue. Less pronounced changes in specificity occur with the liver enzyme and the differences in effects of the various substitutions reveal important differences in specificity requirements of factor XIIIa and the liver enzyme. Comparisons of the activities of the enzymes toward the synthetic peptides to their activities toward macromolecular substrates suggest that higher order macromolecular structural features contribute to specificity.  相似文献   

6.
K Ikura  H Yokota  R Sasaki  H Chiba 《Biochemistry》1989,28(5):2344-2348
Transglutaminases (EC 2.3.2.13) catalyze the formation of epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine cross-links and the substitution of a variety of primary amines for the gamma-carboxamide groups of protein-bound glutaminyl residues. These enzymes are involved in many biological phenomena. In this study, the amino- and carboxyl-terminal sequences of guinea pig liver transglutaminase were identified by sequence analysis to determine whether this enzyme is processed posttranslationally at its terminal regions. Two peptides, believed to contain the amino-terminal sequences of transglutaminase, were isolated from the Pronase digest of the enzyme protein with SP-Sephadex C-25 column chromatography and reverse-phase HPLC. Analyses (amino acid analysis, sequencing after the treatment with an acylamino-acid-releasing enzyme, and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry) of these peptides indicated that the amino-terminal structure of this enzyme is acetylAla-Glu-Asp-Leu-Ile-Leu-Glu. The candidate for the carboxyl-terminal peptide in the trypsin digest of enzyme was isolated from the unadsorbed fraction of affinity chromatography with anhydrotrypsin agarose gel. The peptide was found to be Asn-Val-Ile-Ile-Gly-Pro-Ala. Both the terminal sequences were completely consistent with those predicted from the cDNA sequence [Ikura, K., Nasu, T., Yokota, H., Tsuchiya, Y., Sasaki, R., & Chiba, H. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2898-2905]. These results indicated that the amino-terminal processing occurred after or in the course of translation of this enzyme, namely, removal of the initiator methionine and a subsequent acetylation of the alanine residue adjacent to the methionine. Our results did not indicate carboxyl-terminal processing of guinea pig liver transglutaminase.  相似文献   

7.
Amino acid residues at several locations in close primary vicinity to a substrate glutamine residue have been recognized as important determinants for the specificities of human plasma factor XIIIa and guinea pig liver transglutaminase (Gorman, J. J., and Folk, J. E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2712-2715). The present studies measure the influence on transglutaminase specificity of some changes in amino acid side chains in a small synthetic glutamine peptide amide, Leu-Gly-Leu-Gly-Gln-Gly-Lys-Val-Leu-GlyNH2, which was designed to contain most of the known elements needed for enzyme recognition. The results are in agreement with previous findings and show that full catalytic activity of each enzyme may be retained upon replacement of the lysine residue by certain other amino acid residues. Evidence is provided that serine in place of glycine at one or more positions causes a significant increase in specificity with factor XIIIa, but not with liver enzyme. The effective substrate property for factor XIIIa seen with the model peptide amide is lost upon reversal of the sequence Val-Leu. This is not the case with the liver enzyme even though replacement of either of these amino acids by alanine causes a pronounced loss in activity with this enzyme. These differences and the effects of various other substitutions in the model peptide amide on the enzymes' specificities points up the relatively stringent structural requirements of factor XIIIa and the rather broad requirements for liver transglutaminase.  相似文献   

8.
Trappins are found in human, bovine, hippopotamus, and members of the pig family, but not in rat and mouse. To clarify the evolution of the trappin genes and the functional significance of their products, we isolated the trappin gene in guinea pig, a species belonging to a rodent family distinct from rat and mouse. Guinea pig trappin was confirmed to encode the same domain structure as trappin, consisting of a signal sequence, an extra large transglutaminase substrate domain, and a whey acidic protein motif. Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization histochemistry as well as immunohistochemistry demonstrated that guinea pig trappin is expressed solely in the secretory epithelium of the seminal vesicle and that its expression is androgen-dependent. We confirmed that guinea pig trappin is cross-linked by prostate transglutaminase and that the whey acidic protein motif derived from guinea pig trappin has an inhibitory activity against leukocyte elastase. Genome sequence analysis showed that guinea pig trappin belongs to the family of REST (rapidly evolving seminal vesicle transcribed) genes.  相似文献   

9.
Guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) was found to inhibit guinea pig liver transglutaminase activity as measured by [3H]putrescine incorporation into casein. GDP and GTP-gamma-S also inhibited enzyme activity (GTP-gamma-S greater than GTP greater than GDP). Kinetic studies showed that GTP acted as a reversible, noncompetitive inhibitor and that CaCl2 partially reversed GTP inhibition. GTP also inhibited rat liver and adult bovine aortic endothelial cell transglutaminase, but did not inhibit Factor XIIIa activity. Guanosine monophosphate (GMP), cyclic GMP, and polyguanylic acid did not inhibit enzyme activity. Guinea pig liver transglutaminase adsorbed well to GTP-agarose affinity columns, but not to CTP-agarose columns, and the binding was inhibited by the presence of calcium ions. Specific binding of GTP to transglutaminase was demonstrated by photoaffinity labeling with 8-azidoguanosine 5'-[gamma-32P] triphosphate, which was inhibited by the presence of GTP or CaCl2. GTP inhibited trypsin proteolysis of guinea pig liver transglutaminase without affecting the trypsin proteolysis of chromogenic substrates. Proteolytic protection was reversed by the addition of calcium. This study demonstrates that GTP binds to transglutaminase and that both GTP and calcium ions function in concert to regulate transglutaminase structure and function.  相似文献   

10.
Inhibitory antibodies against NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, detergent solubilization to dissociate functional interaction between the reductase and cytochrome P-450, and selective trypsin degradation have been used to characterize flavin-containing monooxygenase activity in microsomes from different tissues and species. A comparison of assay methods is reported. The native microsome-bound flavin-containing monooxygenase of mouse, rabbit, and rat liver, lung, and kidney can metabolize compounds containing thiol, sulfide, thioamide, secondary and tertiary amine, hydrazine, and phosphine substituents. Therefore, this enzyme from these common experimental animals has catalytic capabilities similar to those of the well-characterized porcine liver enzyme. True allosteric activation by n-octylamine does not appear to be a property of either the mouse, rabbit, or rat liver enzymes, but is a property of the pig liver and mouse lung enzymes. The microsomal pulmonary flavin-containing monooxygenase of the rabbit has some unique substrate preferences which differ from the mouse lung enzyme. Both the rabbit and mouse pulmonary enzymes have recently been shown to be distinct enzyme forms. However, the rat pulmonary flavin-containing monooxygenase appears to be catalytically identical to the rat liver enzyme, and does not have any of the unusual catalytic properties of either the rabbit or mouse lung enzymes. Enzyme activity of mouse, rabbit, and rat kidney microsomes is qualitatively similar to the hepatic activities. Substrates which saturate the microsome-bound flavin-containing monooxygenase at 1.0 mM, including thiourea, thioacetamide, methimazole, cysteamine, and thiobenzamide, are metabolized at common maximal velocities. This suggests that the kinetic mechanism of the native enzyme is similar to that established for the isolated porcine liver enzyme in that the rate-limiting step of catalysis occurs after substrate binding, and that all substrates capable of saturating the microsomal enzyme should be metabolized at a common maximal velocity.  相似文献   

11.
K Ikura  T Nasu  H Yokota  Y Tsuchiya  R Sasaki  H Chiba 《Biochemistry》1988,27(8):2898-2905
Transglutaminases (EC 2.3.2.13) catalyze the formation of epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine cross-links and the substitution of a variety of primary amines for the gamma-carboxamide groups of protein-bound glutaminyl residues. These enzymes are involved in many biological phenomena. In this paper, the complete amino acid sequence of guinea pig liver transglutaminase, a typical tissue-type nonzymogenic transglutaminase, was predicted by the cloning and sequence analysis of DNA complementary to its mRNA. The cDNA clones carrying the sequences for the 5'- and 3'-end regions of mRNA were obtained by use of the sequence of the partial-length cDNA of guinea pig liver transglutaminase [Ikura, K., Nasu, T., Yokota, H., Sasaki, R., & Chiba, H. (1987) Agric. Biol. Chem. 51, 957-961]. A total of 3695 bases were identified from sequence data of four overlapping cDNA clones. Northern blot analysis of guinea pig liver poly(A+) RNA showed a single species of mRNA with 3.7-3.8 kilobases, indicating that almost all of the mRNA sequence was analyzed. The composite cDNA sequence contained 68 bases of a 5'-untranslated region, 2073 bases of an open reading frame that encoded 691 amino acids, a stop codon (TAA), 1544 bases of a 3'-noncoding region, and a part of a poly(A) tail (7 bases). The molecular weight of guinea pig liver transglutaminase was calculated to be 76,620 from the amino acid sequence deduced, excluding the initiator Met. This enzyme contained no carbohydrate [Folk, J. E., & Chung, S. I. (1973) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 38, 109-191], but six potential Asn-linked glycosylation sites were found in the sequence deduced.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Rabbit hepatocyte surface-expressed tissue (type II) transglutaminase is shown to act as a binding site for fibrinogen or fibronectin and to covalently incorporate these glycoproteins, in addition to itself, into extracellular high molecular weight complexes. This concept is supported by the observation that a nonpeptidyl, active site-directed transglutaminase inactivator (L683685) elicited concentration-dependent (0.1-10 microM) decreases in the calcium-dependent binding and covalent cross-linking of 125I-fibrinogen, 125I-fibronectin, or [14C]putrescine by hepatocyte suspensions. In corroboration with these findings, an antiserum against rabbit liver transglutaminase, which did not cross-react with rabbit factor XIII, elicited concentration-dependent decreases in the calcium-dependent binding and covalent cross-linking of 125I-fibrinogen or [14C]putrescine by hepatocyte suspensions. Western blots of sodium dodecyl sulfate/Triton-insoluble hepatocyte fractions conducted with this antiserum, with a polyclonal antiserum against human erythrocyte transglutaminase, or with a monoclonal antibody (CUB-7401) against guinea pig liver transglutaminase detected the 80-kDa tissue transglutaminase, as well as tissue transglutaminase-immunoreactive bands of higher molecular mass (range of 90 to greater than 200 kDa). The higher molecular weight species were preferentially incorporated, in a time- and calcium-dependent manner, into very high molecular weight complexes which did not enter the stacking gel. Incorporation of these tissue transglutaminase-containing bands into the high molecular weight complexes was inhibited by L683685, indicating that cross-linking by the enzyme was responsible for the assembly of the complexes of which tissue transglutaminase was itself a component. Cellular integrins did not mediate ligand binding under the experimental conditions, as evidenced by the failure of the Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser tetrapeptide or anti-integrin antibodies to inhibit binding or cross-linking of 125I-fibrinogen or 125I-fibronectin, in the presence or absence of transglutaminase inactivators.  相似文献   

13.
H Okamoto  S Kanai  P Tipayang  Y Inada 《Enzyme》1979,24(4):273-276
Transglutaminase from guinea pig liver catalyzed the formation of cross-links between fibrinogen (or fibrin) and ribonuclease. Using transglutaminase, immoblized ribonuclease was prepared by two separate methods: (1) fibrinogen-ribonuclease conjugates formed by transglutaminase were treated with thrombin to make fibrin membrane bound covalently to the enzyme; (2) fibrin polymer formed from fibrinogen with thrombin was covalently bound to ribonuclease by transglutaminase to make fibrin-ribonuclease conjugates.  相似文献   

14.
A substantial amount of lipids (cholesterol and its esters, mono-, di- and triacylglycerols, free fatty acids and the phospholipids phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylinositol) was found associated with tissue transglutaminase purified to apparent homogeneity from guinea pig liver. Removal of lipids results in an increased tendency of the enzyme for self-association and a decreased stability. Lauric acid was detected following hydroxylamine treatment of the enzyme, suggesting the occurrence of a fatty acid-type, covalent, posttranslational modification of transglutaminase. The results provide support for the idea that part of tissue transglutaminase may be localized in the cell membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Transglutaminases (EC 2.3.2.13) catalyze the formation of epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine cross-links and the substitution of primary amines for the gamma-carboxamide groups of protein bound glutamine residues, and are involved in many biological phenomena. Transglutaminase reactions are also applicable in applied enzymology. Here, we established an expression system of recombinant mammalian tissue-type transglutaminase with high productivity. Overexpression of guinea pig liver transglutaminase in Escherichia coli, using a plasmid pET21-d, mostly resulted in the accumulation of insoluble and inactive enzyme protein. By the expression culture at lower temperatures (25 and 18 degrees C), however, a fraction of the soluble and active enzyme protein slightly increased. Co-overexpression of a molecular chaperone system (DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE) and/or a folding catalyst (trigger factor) improved the solubility of the recombinant enzyme produced in E. coli cells. The specific activity, the affinity to the amine substrate, and the sensitivity to the calcium activation and GTP inhibition of the purified soluble recombinant enzyme were lower than those of the natural liver enzyme. These results indicated that co-overexpression of folding modulators tested improved the solubility of the overproduced recombinant mammalian tissue-type transglutaminase, but the catalytic properties of the soluble recombinant enzyme were not exactly the same as those of the natural enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Using rapid amplification of cDNA ends PCR, a cDNA species for diacetyl reductase (EC 1.1.1.5) was isolated from hamster liver. The encoded protein consisted of 244 amino acids, and showed high sequence identity to mouse lung carbonyl reductase and hamster sperm P26h protein, which belong to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family. The enzyme efficiently reduced L-xylulose as well as diacetyl, and slowly oxidized xylitol. The K(m) values for L-xylulose and xylitol were similar to those reported for L-xylulose reductase (EC 1.1.1.10) of guinea pig liver. The identity of diacetyl reductase with L-xylulose reductase was demonstrated by co-purification of the two enzyme activities from hamster liver and their proportional distribution in other tissues.  相似文献   

17.
G Mannor  B Movsas  R S Yalow 《Life sciences》1984,34(14):1341-1345
The Michaelis constants (Km's) and maximum reaction velocities (Vmax's) for the degradation of beef insulin by livers from frogs, guinea pigs, rats, a rabbit, a dog and a pig were determined. The Km's for mammalian livers appear to be species-dependent and range from 0.25 microM to 0.65 microM. The Km for frog liver was somewhat lower, averaging 0.13 microM. The Km is independent of animal age, but the enzyme concentrations (Vmax) were greatly reduced in the fetal guinea pig and 3 day rat compared to the adult livers. There appears to be no relation between Km and the chemical dissimilarity between beef insulin and endogenous insulin of the species, since guinea pig liver insulinase had a Km (0.50 microM) intermediate between dog (0.47 microM) and pig (0.65 microM) liver insulinase although guinea pig insulin has a markedly different amino acid sequence and biologic activity.  相似文献   

18.
It has been reported previously (Turner, P.M., and Lorand, L. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 628-635) that human erythrocyte transglutaminase forms a noncovalent complex with human plasma fibronectin near its collagen-binding domain. In the present study, we show by nondenaturing electrophoresis that guinea pig liver transglutaminase, similarly to the erythrocyte enzyme, forms a complex with human fibronectin. Studies of anisotropic shifts of fluorescein-labeled liver and erythrocyte transglutaminases, upon addition of fibronectin, indicated that both transglutaminases bind to fibronectin with a stoichiometry of about 2:1. Polymerization of fibrinogen by human erythrocyte transglutaminase was inhibited after complex formation with fibronectin. Complexes of fibronectin with either erythrocyte or liver transglutaminase were isolated by glycerol gradient zone sedimentation and examined by rotary shadowing electron microscopy. The globular transglutaminase could be readily identified binding to the thin fibronectin strand. The binding site for transglutaminase was within 5-10 nm of the N terminus of fibronectin, consistent with its proximity to the collagen-binding domain. Under some experimental conditions, the complex of fibronectin with erythrocyte transglutaminase appeared as a ring-shaped structure in which two transglutaminase molecules had probably dimerized. The molecular weight of the erythrocyte transglutaminase was determined by sedimentation equilibrium to be 71,440 +/- 830.  相似文献   

19.
We have devised a highly sensitive fluorometric well plate assay for tissue transglutaminase that is suitable for multiple kinetic analyses/high-throughput screening of chemical inventories for inhibitors of this enzyme. The procedure measures the rate of fluorescence enhancement (lambda(exc) 260 nm, lambda(em) 538 nm) when 1-N-(carbobenzoxy-l-glutaminylglycyl)-5-N-(5'N'N'-dimethylaminonaphthalenesulfonyl)diamidopentane (glutaminyl substrate) is cross-linked to dansyl cadaverine (amine substrate). The assay procedure can be used to measure the activity of as little as 60 microU of purified guinea pig liver tissue transglutaminase (4.2 ng or 54 fmol of enzyme).  相似文献   

20.
A new procedure for the photochemical labeling of peptides and for the production of cleavable cross-links between protein molecules is given. This method is mediated through the catalytic action of the enzyme guinea pig liver transglutaminase. Each of the labeling and cross-linking reagents described here is an amine substrate for transglutaminases and, because of the narrow specificity of these enzymes, is introduced covalently only at the gamma-carboxamide group of available peptide-bound glutamine residues. Cross-linking results either solely through the action of the enzyme in the case of a diamine substrate, or by subsequent photolysis in the case of photosensitive amine substrates. Cleavable bonds in several of the substrates are disulfide or vicinal hydroxyl groups. The validity of the procedure is demonstrated by the preparation of photosensitive derivatives of substance P and glucagon 1-6 and in the cleavable covalent cross-linking of guanidinated beta-casein.  相似文献   

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