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Query: EC:3.4.16.2 (
PCP
)
3,761
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper describes the glycosylation sites of kappa-casein component P-5 from bovine mature milk. A short glycopeptide was prepared from kappa-casein component P-5 containing two carbohydrate chains by pronase P digestion, followed by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatographies. The glycopeptide obtained corresponded to residues 128-141 (Gly-Glu-Pro-Thr-Ser-Thr-Pro-Thr-Thr-Glu-Ala-Val-Glu-Ser) of kappa-casein A from the results of analyses with chemical and enzymatic procedures. The effect of alkaline borohydride treatment indicated the presence of serine as well as
threonine
as the binding site of carbohydrate moieties. From the facts of Edman degradation and
carboxypeptidase P
hydrolysis of glycopeptide treated with alkali, the carbohydrate moieties were considered to be attached to
threonine
residue No. 133 and serine residue No. 141.
...
PMID:Presence of O-glycosidic linkage through serine residue in kappa-casein component from bovine mature milk. 679 4
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is the paradigm of the neurotransmitter-gated ion channel superfamily. The pharmacological behavior of the AChR can be described as three basic processes that progress sequentially. First, the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) binds the receptor. Next, the intrinsically coupled ion channel opens upon ACh binding with subsequent ion flux activity. Finally, the AChR becomes desensitized, a process where the ion channel becomes closed in the prolonged presence of ACh. The existing equilibrium among these physiologically relevant processes can be perturbed by the pharmacological action of different drugs. In particular, non-competitive inhibitors (NCIs) inhibit the ion flux and enhance the desensitization rate of the AChR. The action of NCIs was studied using several drugs of exogenous origin. These include compounds such as chlorpromazine (CPZ), triphenylmethylphosphonium (TPMP+), the local anesthetics QX-222 and meproadifen, trifluoromethyl-iodophenyldiazirine (TID), phencyclidine (
PCP
), histrionicotoxin (HTX), quinacrine, and ethidium. In order to understand the mechanism by which NCIs exert their pharmacological properties several laboratories have studied the structural characteristics of their binding sites, including their respective locations on the receptor. One of the main objectives of this review is to discuss all available experimental evidence regarding the specific localization of the binding sites for exogenous NCIs. For example, it is known that the so-called luminal NCIs bind to a series of ring-forming amino acids in the ion channel. Particularly CPZ, TPMP+, QX-222, cembranoids, and
PCP
bind to the serine, the
threonine
, and the leucine ring, whereas TID and meproadifen bind to the valine and extracellular rings, respectively. On the other hand, quinacrine and ethidium, termed non-luminal NCIs, bind to sites outside the channel lumen. Specifically, quinacrine binds to a non-annular lipid domain located approximately 7 A from the lipid-water interface and ethidium binds to the vestibule of the AChR in a site located approximately 46 A away from the membrane surface and equidistant from both ACh binding sites. The non-annular lipid domain has been suggested to be located at the intermolecular interfaces of the five AChR subunits and/or at the interstices of the four (M1-M4) transmembrane domains. One of the most important concepts in neurochemistry is that receptor proteins can be modulated by endogenous substances other than their specific agonists. Among membrane-embedded receptors, the AChR is one of the best examples of this behavior. In this regard, the AChR is non-competitively modulated by diverse molecules such as lipids (fatty acids and steroids), the neuropeptide substance P, and the neurotransmitter 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT). It is important to take into account that the above mentioned modulation is produced through a direct binding of these endogenous molecules to the AChR. Since this is a physiologically relevant issue, it is useful to elucidate the structural components of the binding site for each endogenous NCI. In this regard, another important aim of this work is to review all available information related to the specific localization of the binding sites for endogenous NCIs. For example, it is known that both neurotransmitters substance P and 5-HT bind to the lumen of the ion channel. Particularly, the locus for substance P is found in the deltaM2 domain, whereas the binding site for 5-HT and related compounds is putatively located on both the serine and the
threonine
ring. Instead, fatty acid and steroid molecules bind to non-luminal sites. More specifically, fatty acids may bind to the belt surrounding the intramembranous perimeter of the AChR, namely the annular lipid domain, and/or to the high-affinity quinacrine site which is located at a non-annular lipid domain. Additionally, steroids may bind to a site located on the extracellular hydrophi
...
PMID:Binding sites for exogenous and endogenous non-competitive inhibitors of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. 974 59
1. Measurements of cell capacitance were used to investigate the molecular mechanisms by which somatostatin inhibits Ca(2+)-induced exocytosis in single rat glucagon-secreting pancreatic alpha-cells. 2. Somatostatin decreased the exocytotic responses elicited by voltage-clamp depolarisations by 80 % in the presence of cyclic AMP-elevating agents such as isoprenaline and forskolin. Inhibition was time dependent and half-maximal within 22 s. 3. The inhibitory action of somatostatin was concentration dependent with an IC(50) of 68 nM and prevented by pretreatment of the cells with pertussis toxin. The latter effect was mimicked by intracellular dialysis with specific antibodies to G(i1/2) and by antisense oligonucleotides against G proteins of the subtype G(i2). 4. Somatostatin lacked inhibitory action when applied in the absence of forskolin or in the presence of the L-type Ca(2+) channel blocker nifedipine. The size of the omega-conotoxin-sensitive and forskolin-independent component of exocytosis was limited to 60 fF. By contrast, somatostatin abolished L-type Ca(2+) channel-dependent exocytosis in alpha-cells exposed to forskolin. The magnitude of the latter pool amounted to 230 fF. 5. The inhibitory effect of somatostatin on exocytosis was mediated by activation of the serine/
threonine
protein phosphatase calcineurin and was prevented by pretreatment with cyclosporin A and deltamethrin or intracellularly applied calcineurin autoinhibitory peptide. Experiments using the stable ATP analogue AMP-
PCP
indicate that somatostatin acts by depriming of granules. 6. We propose that somatostatin receptors associate with L-type Ca(2+) channels and couple to G(i2) proteins leading to a localised activation of calcineurin and depriming of secretory granules situated close to the L-type Ca(2+) channels.
...
PMID:Somatostatin inhibits exocytosis in rat pancreatic alpha-cells by G(i2)-dependent activation of calcineurin and depriming of secretory granules. 1153 41
The iron-chelating catechol siderophore vibriobactin of the pathogenic Vibrio cholerae is assembled by a four-subunit, ten-domain nonribosomal peptide synthetase system, VibE, VibB, VibH, and VibF, using 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate and L-threonine as precursors to two (dihydroxyphenyl)methyloxazolinyl groups in amide linkage on a norspermidine scaffold. We have utilized site-specific and domain-deletion mutagenesis to map the heterocyclization and primary and secondary amine acylation activities of the six-domain (Cy1-Cy2-A-C1-
PCP
-C2) VibF subunit. We have found that Cy2 is capable of and limited to the condensation (amide bond formation) step of the three-step heterocyclization process, while Cy1 is capable of and limited to the final processing (cyclization/dehydration) steps to the completed heterocycle. Additionally, we have observed that the C2 domain functions in both N(9) (primary amine) acylation and N(5) (secondary amine) acylation of the (dihydroxybenzoyl)norspermidine substrate, leaving no catalytic role for the C1 domain, a conclusion confirmed with the formation of vibriobactin in a C1-deficient system. Thus VibF is an NRPS with two domains, Cy1 and Cy2, that perform a function otherwise performed by one and with one domain, C2, that performs a function otherwise performed by two. While C2 appeared to tolerate uncyclized
threonine
in place of the usual heterocycle in primary amine acylation, it refused this replacement in the corresponding donor substrate in secondary amine acylation.
...
PMID:Catalytic mapping of the vibriobactin biosynthetic enzyme VibF. 1177 22
We investigated changes in signal transduction via calcineurin (CaN) in the striatum of rats behaviorally sensitized to methamphetamine (Meth). The rats were injected with Meth (4 mg/kg, s.c.) five times a week for 3 weeks and then were given a challenge dose of Meth (2 mg/kg, s.c.). Seven days after the challenge test, we determined the levels of CaN Aalpha and Abeta by Western blotting. We further immunoquantified DARPP-32 (dopamine- and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein, mw 32,000) and phosphothreonine-DARPP-32, which can be dephosphorylated at
threonine
sites by CaN. We found that both CaN Aalpha and Abeta were significantly decreased in the particulate fractions but were not changed in the soluble fractions from the striatum of Meth-sensitized rats as compared with control rats. The same findings were observed in the striatum of rats 6 h after the injection of
PCP
(10 mg/kg, s.c.). In the striatum of Meth-sensitized rats, phosphothreonine-DARPP-32 immunoreactivities significantly increased, but DARPP-32 immunoreactivities were not significantly different from those of the control rats. These results indicate that the activity of signal transduction via CaN is functionally decreased in the striatum of Meth-sensitized rats.
...
PMID:Decreased calcineurin and increased phosphothreonine-DARPP-32 in the striatum of rats behaviorally sensitized to methamphetamine. 1195 50
Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS), fatty acid synthases (FAS), and polyketide sythases (PKS) are multimodular enzymatic assembly lines utilized in natural product biosynthesis. Previous data on FAS and PKS subunits have indicated that they are homodimers and that some of their catalytic functions can work in trans. When NRPS assembly lines have been probed for comparable formation of stable oligomers, no evidence had been forthcoming that species other than monomer forms were active. In this work we focus on the six-domain (Cy1-Cy2-A-C1-
PCP
-C2) enzyme VibF from the vibriobactin synthetase assembly line, which contains three other proteins, VibB, VibE, and VibH, that--when purified and mixed with VibF and the substrates ATP,
threonine
, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate (DHB), and norspermidine--produce the iron chelator vibriobactin. Using a deletion of the Cy1 domain and separate inactivating mutations in the Cy2, A,
PCP
, and C2 domains of VibF, we report regain of catalytic activity upon mutant protein mixing that argues for heterodimer formation, stable for hundreds to thousands of catalytic cycles, with acyl chain processing and transfer around blocked domains. Ultracentrifugation data likewise confirm a dimeric structure for VibF and establish that domains within NRPS dimeric modules can act on acyl chains in trans. The results described here are the first indication for an NRPS subunit that homodimerization can occur and that there is a continuum of functional oligomerization states between monomers and dimers in nonribosomal peptide synthetases.
...
PMID:Dimeric structure of the six-domain VibF subunit of vibriobactin synthetase: mutant domain activity regain and ultracentrifugation studies. 1253 89
Cyclization (Cy) domains in NRPS catalyze the heterocyclization of cysteine and serine/
threonine
to thiazoline and oxazoline rings. A model system consisting of the first two modules of bacitracin synthetase A fused to the thioesterase (Te) domain of tyrocidine synthetase was constructed (BacA1-2-Te) and shown to be active in production of the heterocyclic IleCys(thiazoline). Based on this model system, the feasibility of Cy domain module fusions was investigated by replacing the BacA2 Cy-A-
PCP
-module with modules of MbtB and MtaD from the biosynthesis systems of mycobactin and myxothiazol, revealing the formation of novel heterocyclic dipeptides. To dissect the reaction sequence of the Cy domain in peptide bond formation and heterocyclization, several residues of the BacA1-2-Te Cy domain were analyzed by mutagenesis. Two mutants exhibited formation of the noncyclic dipeptide, providing clear evidence for the independence of condensation and cyclization.
...
PMID:Rational design of a bimodular model system for the investigation of heterocyclization in nonribosomal peptide biosynthesis. 1512 87
Drugs of abuse share the ability to enhance dopaminergic neurotransmission in the dorsal and ventral striatum. The action of dopamine is modulated by additional neurotransmitters, including glutamate, serotonin and adenosine. All these neurotransmitters regulate the phosphorylation state of Dopamine- and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein, Mr 32 kDa (DARPP-32). Phosphorylation at Thr(34) by protein kinase A converts DARPP-32 into a potent inhibitor of the multifunctional serine/
threonine
protein phosphatase, PP-1. Phosphorylation at Thr(75) by Cdk5 converts DARPP-32 into an inhibitor of protein kinase A. The state of phosphorylation of DARPP-32 at Thr(34) also depends on the phosphorylation state of Ser(97) and Ser(130), which are phosphorylated by CK2 and CK1, respectively. By virtue of regulation of these 4 phosphorylation sites, and through its ability to modulate the activity of PP-1 and protein kinase A, DARPP-32 plays a key role in integrating a variety of biochemical, electrophysiological, and behavioral responses controlled by dopamine and other neurotransmitters. Importantly, there is now a large body of evidence that supports a key role for DARPP-32-dependent signaling in mediating the actions of multiple drugs of abuse including cocaine, amphetamine, nicotine, caffeine, LSD,
PCP
, ethanol and morphine.
...
PMID:DARPP-32 mediates the actions of multiple drugs of abuse. 1635 15
The p90 ribosomal S6 kinases (RSKs) also known as MAPKAP-Ks are serine/
threonine
protein kinases that are activated by ERK or PDK1 and act as downstream effectors of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). RSK1, a member of the RSK family, contains two distinct kinase domains in a single polypeptide chain, the regulatory C-terminal kinase domain (CTKD) and the catalytic N-terminal kinase domain (NTKD). Autophosphorylation of the CTKD leads to activation of the NTKD that subsequently phosphorylates downstream substrates. Here we report the crystal structures of the unactivated RSK1 NTKD bound to different ligands at 2.0 A resolution. The activation loop and helix alphaC, key regulatory elements of kinase function, are disordered. The DFG motif of the inactive RSK1 adopts an "active-like" conformation. The beta-PO(4) group in the AMP-
PCP
complex adopts a unique conformation that may contribute to inactivity of the enzyme. Structures of RSK1 ligand complexes offer insights into the design of novel anticancer agents and into the regulation of the catalytic activity of RSKs.
...
PMID:Crystal structures of the N-terminal kinase domain of human RSK1 bound to three different ligands: Implications for the design of RSK1 specific inhibitors. 1796 87
It is fundamentally important that signaling gradients provide positional information to govern morphogenesis of multicellular organisms. Morphogen gradients can generate different cell types in specific spatial order at distinct threshold concentrations. However, it is largely unknown whether and how signaling gradients also control cell polarities by acting as global cues. Here, we show that Wnt signaling gradient provides directional information to a field of cells. Vangl2, a core component in planar cell polarity, forms Wnt-induced receptor complex with Ror2 to sense Wnt dosages. Wnts dose-dependently induce Vangl2 phosphorylation of serine/
threonine
residues and Vangl2 activities depend on its levels of phosphorylation. In the limb bud, Wnt5a signaling gradient controls limb elongation by establishing
PCP
in chondrocytes along the proximal-distal axis through regulating Vangl2 phosphorylation. Our studies have provided new insight to Robinow syndrome, Brachydactyly Type B1, and spinal bifida which are caused by mutations in human ROR2, WNT5A, or VANGL.
...
PMID:Wnt signaling gradients establish planar cell polarity by inducing Vangl2 phosphorylation through Ror2. 2131 83
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