Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have constructed a series of mutations in the membrane and linker domains of Syrian hamster 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-(HMG) CoA reductase in order to determine the regions critical for the regulated degradation of the enzyme. In transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells, we have expressed a fusion protein, HMGal, which consists of the membrane and linker domains of the Syrian hamster HMG-CoA reductase fused to beta-galactosidase. Using this fusion protein, we have determined that a deletion of 64 amino acids from the central region of the membrane domain causes the protein to be degraded extremely rapidly. In addition, deletion of PEST sequences has little effect on degradation, but deletion of the linker domain makes the protein's degradation insensitive to sterols and mevalonate. In addition to deletion mutations, we have systematically replaced each hydrophobic, putative membrane spanning region of the membrane domain with the first transmembrane sequence from bacteriorhodopsin. Replacement of span 4 has no effect on degradation. Replacements of spans 5 or 6 result in a protein which has a normal basal rate of degradation, but this rate of degradation is not accelerated by mevalonate, low density lipoprotein, or 25-hydroxycholesterol. Replacement of span 3 results in a protein whose degradation is similarly not accelerated by sterols or mevalonate, but since this protein might be mislocalized, these results are inconclusive. Replacement of span 7 yields a short-lived protein which is degraded more rapidly in response to mevalonate but not in response to exogenous sterols. Replacement of span 8 extends both the basal and mevalonate-accelerated half-life about 5-fold. This work begins to define the critical regions for regulated degradation within the membrane domain of HMG-CoA reductase.
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PMID:The role of the membrane domain in the regulated degradation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase. 174 Apr 63

PEP is an intracellular protein tyrosine phosphatase expressed primarily by cells of hematopoietic origin that can be divided structurally into a catalytic domain and a large carboxy-terminal domain. The carboxy-terminal domain is enriched in proline, glutamic acid, serine, and threonine residues (PEST sequences) and contains a nonperfect tandem repeat sequence enriched in proline residues and a carboxy terminus enriched in basic amino acids. Here we show that PEP is diffusely expressed in lymphoid tissues, consistent with expression by many different cell types. Analysis of the PEP protein identifies a nuclear localization sequence within the extreme carboxy terminus. Transfer of 18 amino acids from the carboxy terminus of PEP to beta-galactosidase conferred nuclear localization, indicating that this sequence was sufficient for nuclear localization. Proteins enriched in PEST sequences are often rapidly degraded. However, pulse-chase analysis indicates that PEP has a half-life of greater than 5 h.
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PMID:Nuclear localization of the PEP protein tyrosine phosphatase. 751 75

Cln3 cyclin of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a key regulator of Start, a cell cycle event in G1 phase at which cells become committed to division. The time of Start is sensitive to Cln3 levels, which in turn depend on the balance between synthesis and rapid degradation. Here we report that the breakdown of Cln3 is ubiquitin dependent and involves the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Cdc34 (Ubc3). The C-terminal tail of Cln3 functions as a transferable signal for degradation. Sequences important for Cln3 degradation are spread throughout the tail and consist largely of PEST elements, which have been previously suggested to target certain proteins for rapid turnover. The Cln3 tail also appears to contain multiple phosphorylation sites, and both phosphorylation and degradation of Cln3 are deficient in a cdc28ts mutant at the nonpermissive temperature. A point mutation at Ser-468, which lies within a Cdc28 kinase consensus site, causes approximately fivefold stabilization of a Cln3-beta-galactosidase fusion protein that contains a portion of the Cln3 tail and strongly reduces the phosphorylation of this protein. These data indicate that the degradation of Cln3 involves CDC28-dependent phosphorylation events.
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PMID:p34Cdc28-mediated control of Cln3 cyclin degradation. 782 41

The 545-residue Cln2 protein, like the other G1 cyclins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is a very unstable protein. This instability is thought to play a critical role in regulating cell cycle progression. The carboxyl-terminal domains of Cln2 and the other G1 cyclins contain sequences rich in Pro, Glu (and Asp), Ser, and Thr (so-called PEST motifs) that have been postulated to make up the signals that are responsible for the rapid degradation of these and other unstable proteins. To test this hypothesis, the carboxyl-terminal 178 residues of Cln2 were fused to the C terminus of a reporter enzyme, a truncated form of human thymidine kinase (hTK delta 40). The resulting chimeric protein (hTK delta 40-Cln2) retained thymidine kinase activity but was markedly less stable than hTK, hTK delta 40, or an hTK-beta-galactosidase fusion protein, as judged by enzyme assay, immunoblotting with anti-hTK antibodies, pulse-chase analysis of the radiolabeled polypeptides, and ability to support the growth of a thymidylate auxotroph (cdc21 mutant) on thymidine-containing medium. Thus, the presence of the Cln2 PEST domain was sufficient to destabilize a heterologous protein. Furthermore, the half-life of hTK delta 40-Cln2 was similar to that of authentic Cln2, and the rate of degradation of neither protein was detectably enhanced by treatments known to cause G1 arrest, including exposure of MATa haploids to alpha-factor mating pheromone and shifting cdc28ts and cdc34ts mutants to the restrictive temperature. These results suggest that the major signals responsible for Cln2 instability are confined to its C-terminal third. Because hTK delta 40-Cln2 and Cln2 were expressed from heterologous promoters yet their half-lives both in asynchronous cultures and when arrested at various cell cycle stages were always similar, the Cln2 PEST domain contains a signal for rapid protein turnover that is constitutively active and operative throughout the cell cycle. Removal of the 37 codons that encode the most prominent PEST-like segment from either hTK delta 40-Cln2 or Cln2 decreased the turnover rate of the resulting proteins, as expected; however, an hTK delta 40 chimera containing only this 37-residue segment was not detectably destabilized, suggesting that this PEST sequence, when removed from its normal context, is not a self-contained determinant of protein instability.
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PMID:G1 cyclin degradation: the PEST motif of yeast Cln2 is necessary, but not sufficient, for rapid protein turnover. 796 35

The ectopic expression of antibody fragments inside mammalian cells (intrabodies) is a challenging approach for probing and modulating target activities. We previously described the shuttling activity of intracellularly expressed Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase conferred by the single-chain Fv (scFv) fragment 13R4 equipped with nuclear import/export signals. Here, by appending to scFvs the proteolytic PEST signal sequence (a protein region rich in proline, glutamic acid, serine and threonine) of mouse ornithine decarboxylase, we tested whether short-lived or destabilized intrabodies could affect the steady-state level of target by redirecting it to the proteasomes. In the absence of antigen, the half-life of the modified scFv 13R4, relative to untagged molecules, was considerably reduced in vivo. However, after coexpression with either cytoplasmic or nuclear antigen, the destabilized 13R4 fragments were readily maintained in the cell and strictly colocalized with beta-galactosidase. Analysis of destabilized site-directed mutants, that were as soluble as 13R4 in the intracellular context, demonstrated that binding to antigen was essential for survival under these conditions. This unique property allowed specific detection of beta-galactosidase, even when expressed at low level in stably transformed cells, and permitted isolation by flow cytometry from a transfected cell mixture of those living cells specifically labeled with bound intrabody. Altogether, we show that PEST-tagged intrabodies of sufficient affinity and solubility are powerful tools for imaging the presence and likely the dynamics of protein antigens that are resistant to proteasomal degradation in animal cells.
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PMID:Extended half-life upon binding of destabilized intrabodies allows specific detection of antigen in mammalian cells. 1594 19