Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.5.1.3 (
dihydrofolate reductase
)
5,819
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Making use of the polymerase chain reaction primed by oligonucleotides corresponding to regions conserved between members of the nucleoside monophosphate kinase family, we have isolated the yeast gene PAK3. Pak3p belongs to the subgroup of long-form
adenylate kinase
isozymes (deduced molecular mass 25.3 kDa) and exhibits highest sequence similarity to bovine AK3 rather than to the yeast isozyme, Aky2p. The gene is shown to be non-essential because haploid disruption mutants are viable, both in the presence and absence of a functional AKY2 allele. It maps on chromosome V upstream of RAD3. Its expression level is low when cells are grown on glucose or other fermentable carbon sources and about threefold higher on glycerol, but can be significantly induced by ethanol. A PAK3/mouse
dihydrofolate reductase
fusion construct expressed in yeast is targeted to mitochondria. Transformation with PAK3 on a multicopy plasmid complements neither
adenylate kinase
deficiency in an aky2-disrupted yeast strain nor in Escherichia coli cells conditionally defective in
adenylate kinase
.
...
PMID:A new member of the adenylate kinase family in yeast: PAK3 is highly homologous to mammalian AK3 and is targeted to mitochondria. 162 94
Major
adenylate kinase
(Aky2p) from yeast has no cleavable presequence and occurs in identical form in the mitochondrial intermembrane space (6-8%) and in the cytoplasm (approx. 90%). To identify the signal(s) on Aky2p that might be required for mitochondrial import, the N-terminal region was examined. The N-terminus of Aky2p can guide at least two cytoplasmic passengers,
dihydrofolate reductase
from mouse and UMP kinase (Ura6p) from yeast, to the intermembrane space in vivo, showing that the N-terminus harbours import information. In contrast, deletion of the eight N-terminal amino acid residues or the introduction of two compensating frameshifts into this segment does not abolish translocation into the organelle's intermembrane space. Thus internal targeting and sorting information must be present in Aky2p as well. Neither a pronounced amphiphilic alpha-helical moment nor positive charges in the N-terminal region is a necessary prerequisite for Aky2p to reach the intermembrane space. Even a surplus of negative charges in mutant N-termini does not impede basal import into the correct submitochondrial compartment. The potential to form an amphipathic alpha-helical structure of five to eight residues close to the N-terminus significantly improves import efficiency, whereas extension of this amphipathic structure, e.g. by replacing it with the homologous segment of Aky3p, a mitochondrial matrix protein from yeast, leads to misdirection of the chimaera to the matrix compartment. This shows that the topogenic N-terminal signal of Aky3p is dominant over the presumptive internal intermembrane space-targeting signal of Aky2p and argues that the sorting of wild-type Aky2p to the intermembrane space is not due to the presence in the protein of a specific sorting sequence for the intermembrane space, but rather is the consequence of being imported but not being sorted to the inner compartment. Some Aky2 mutant proteins are susceptible to proteolysis in the cytoplasm, indicating incorrect folding. They are nevertheless efficiently rescued by uptake into mitochondria, suggesting a negative correlation between folding velocity (or folding stability) and efficiency of import.
...
PMID:Influence of N-terminal sequence variation on the sorting of major adenylate kinase to the mitochondrial intermembrane space in yeast. 942 20
Techniques from graph theory are applied to analyze the bond networks in proteins and identify the flexible and rigid regions. The bond network consists of distance constraints defined by the covalent and hydrogen bonds and salt bridges in the protein, identified by geometric and energetic criteria. We use an algorithm that counts the degrees of freedom within this constraint network and that identifies all the rigid and flexible substructures in the protein, including overconstrained regions (with more crosslinking bonds than are needed to rigidify the region) and underconstrained or flexible regions, in which dihedral bond rotations can occur. The number of extra constraints or remaining degrees of bond-rotational freedom within a substructure quantifies its relative rigidity/flexibility and provides a flexibility index for each bond in the structure. This novel computational procedure, first used in the analysis of glassy materials, is approximately a million times faster than molecular dynamics simulations and captures the essential conformational flexibility of the protein main and side-chains from analysis of a single, static three-dimensional structure. This approach is demonstrated by comparison with experimental measures of flexibility for three proteins in which hinge and loop motion are essential for biological function: HIV protease,
adenylate kinase
, and
dihydrofolate reductase
.
...
PMID:Protein flexibility predictions using graph theory. 1139 77
Ribosomes are present inside bacterial cells at micromolar concentrations and occupy up to 20% of the cell volume. Under these conditions, even weak quinary interactions between ribosomes and cytosolic proteins can affect protein activity. By using in-cell and in vitro NMR spectroscopy, and biophysical techniques, we show that the enzymes,
adenylate kinase
and
dihydrofolate reductase
, and the respective coenzymes, ATP and NADPH, bind to ribosomes with micromolar affinity, and that this interaction suppresses the enzymatic activities of both enzymes. Conversely, thymidylate synthase, which works together with
dihydrofolate reductase
in the thymidylate synthetic pathway, is activated by ribosomes. We also show that ribosomes impede diffusion of green fluorescent protein in vitro and contribute to the decrease in diffusion in vivo. These results strongly suggest that ribosome-mediated quinary interactions contribute to the differences between in vitro and in vivo protein activities and that ribosomes play a previously under-appreciated nontranslational role in regulating cellular biochemistry.
...
PMID:Ribosome Mediated Quinary Interactions Modulate In-Cell Protein Activities. 2871 77
Enzymes and motor proteins are dynamic macromolecules that coexist in a number of conformations of similar energies. Protein function is usually accompanied by a change in structure and flexibility, often induced upon binding to ligands. However, while measuring protein flexibility changes between active and resting states is of therapeutic significance, it remains a challenge. Recently, our group has demonstrated that breadth of signal amplitudes in measured electrical signatures as an ensemble of individual protein molecules is driven through solid-state nanopores and correlates with protein conformational dynamics. Here, we extend our study to resolve subtle flexibility variation in
dihydrofolate reductase
mutants from unlabeled single molecules in solution. We first demonstrate using a canonical protein system,
adenylate kinase
, that both size and flexibility changes can be observed upon binding to a substrate that locks the protein in a closed conformation. Next, we investigate the influence of voltage bias and pore geometry on the measured electrical pulse statistics during protein transport. Finally, using the optimal experimental conditions, we systematically study a series of wild-type and mutant
dihydrofolate reductase
proteins, finding a good correlation between nanopore-measured protein conformational dynamics and equilibrium bulk fluorescence probe measurements. Our results unequivocally demonstrate that nanopore-based measurements reliably probe conformational diversity in native protein ensembles.
...
PMID:Differential Enzyme Flexibility Probed Using Solid-State Nanopores. 2963 Aug 24