Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.5.1.3 (
dihydrofolate reductase
)
5,819
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A hybrid precursor protein constructed by fusing the mitochondrial matrix-targeting signal of rat preornithine carbamyl transferase to murine cytosolic
dihydrofolate reductase
(designated pO-
DHFR
) was expressed in Escherichia coli. Following purification under denaturing conditions, pO-
DHFR
was capable of membrane translocation when diluted directly into import medium containing purified mitochondria but lacking cytosolic extracts. This import competence was lost with time, however, when the precursor was diluted and preincubated in medium lacking mitochondria, unless cytosolic proteins (provided by rabbit reticulocyte lysate) were present. Identical results were obtained for purified precursor made by in vitro translation. The ability of the cytosolic proteins to maintain the purified precursor in an import-competent state was sensitive to protease, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), and was heat labile. Further, this activity appeared to be signal sequence dependent. ATP was not required for the maintenance of pO-
DHFR
competence, nor did purified 70-kDa heat shock protein (the constitutive form of Hsp70) substitute for this activity. Interestingly, however, purified Hsp70 prevented aggregation of the precursor in an ATP-dependent manner and, as well, retarded the apparent rate and extent of pO-
DHFR
folding. Partial purification of reticulocyte lysate proteins indicated that competence activity resides within a large mass protein fraction (200-250 kDa) that contains Hsp70.
Sucrose
density gradient analysis revealed that pO-
DHFR
reversibly interacts with components of this fraction. Pretreatment of the fraction with NEM, however, significantly stabilized the subsequent formation of a complex with the precursor. The results indicate that Hsp70 can retard precursor polypeptide folding and prevent precursor aggregation; however, by itself, Hsp70 cannot confer import competence to pO-
DHFR
. Maintenance of import competence correlates with interactions between the precursor and an NEM-sensitive cytosolic protein fraction. Efficient dissociation of the precursor from this complex appears to require a reactive thiol moiety on the cytosolic protein(s).
...
PMID:Mitochondrial precursor protein. Effects of 70-kilodalton heat shock protein on polypeptide folding, aggregation, and import competence. 219 31
Cockayne syndrome type B ATPase (CSB) belongs to the SwItch/
Sucrose
nonfermentable family. Its mutations are linked to Cockayne syndrome phenotypes and classically are thought to be caused by defects in transcription-coupled repair, a subtype of DNA repair. Here we show that after UV-C irradiation, immediate early genes such as activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) are overexpressed. Although the ATF3 target genes, including
dihydrofolate reductase
(
DHFR
), were unable to recover RNA synthesis in CSB-deficient cells, transcription was restored rapidly in normal cells. There the synthesis of
DHFR
mRNA restarts on the arrival of RNA polymerase II and CSB and the subsequent release of ATF3 from its cAMP response element/ATF target site. In CSB-deficient cells ATF3 remains bound to the promoter, thereby preventing the arrival of polymerase II and the restart of transcription. Silencing of ATF3, as well as stable introduction of wild-type CSB, restores RNA synthesis in UV-irradiated CSB cells, suggesting that, in addition to its role in DNA repair, CSB activity likely is involved in the reversal of inhibitory properties on a gene-promoter region. We present strong experimental data supporting our view that the transcriptional defects observed in UV-irradiated CSB cells are largely the result of a permanent transcriptional repression of a certain set of genes in addition to some defect in DNA repair.
...
PMID:Regulatory interplay of Cockayne syndrome B ATPase and stress-response gene ATF3 following genotoxic stress. 2373 32