Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.27 (thermolysin)
1,894 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glutamic acid 553 of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (ETA) was identified earlier as a putative active-site residue by photoaffinity labeling with NAD. Here ETA-E553D, a cloned form of the toxin in which Glu-553 has been replaced by aspartic acid, was purified from Escherichia coli extracts and characterized. Cytotoxicity of the mutant toxin for mouse L-M cells was less than 1/400,000 that of the wild type. The mutation caused a 3200-fold reduction in NAD:elongation factor 2 ADP-ribosyltransferase activity, as estimated by assays with an active fragment derived from the toxin by digestion with thermolysin. NAD glycohydrolase activity was reduced somewhat less, by a factor of 50, and photoaffinity labeling with NAD by a factor of 2. We detected less than 2-fold change in the values of KM for NAD or elongation factor 2 and no change in KD for NAD, as determined by quenching of protein fluorescence. The drastic reduction of ADP-ribosyltransferase activity therefore results primarily from an effect of the mutation on kcat, implying that Glu-553 plays an important and possibly direct role in catalyzing this reaction. The effects of the E553D mutation are similar to those of the E148D mutation in diphtheria toxin, supporting the notion that these two Glu residues perform the same function in their respective toxins.
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PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A: alterations of biological and biochemical properties resulting from mutation of glutamic acid 553 to aspartic acid. 197 45

The mitochondrial energy-linked nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase is a homodimer of monomer Mr = 109,228. Hydropathy analysis of its cDNA-deduced amino acid sequence (1043 residues) has indicated that the molecule is composed of 3 domains: a 430-residue-long hydrophilic N-terminal domain which binds NAD(H), a 200-residue-long hydrophilic C-terminal domain which binds NADP(H), and a 400-residue-long hydrophobic central domain which appears to be made up mainly of about 14 hydrophobic clusters of approximately 20 residues each. In this study, antibodies were raised to the hydrophilic N- and C-terminal domains cleaved from the isolated transhydrogenase by proteolytic digestion, and to a synthetic, hydrophilic pentadecapeptide, which corresponded to position 540-554 within the central hydrophobic domain. Immunochemical experiments with mitoplasts (mitochondria denuded of outer membrane) and submitochondrial particles (inside-out inner membrane vesicles) as sources of antigens showed that essentially the entire N- and C-terminal hydrophilic domains of the transhydrogenase, as well as epitopes from the central pentadecapeptide, protrude from the inner membrane into the mitochondrial matrix, where the N- and C-terminal domains would be expected to come together to form the enzyme's catalytic site. Treatment of mitoplasts with several proteolytic enzymes indicated that large protease-sensitive masses of the transhydrogenase are not exposed on the cytosolic side of the inner membrane, which agreed with the exception that the central highly hydrophobic domain of the molecule should be largely membrane-intercalated. Trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin, and papain had little or no effect on the mitoplast-embedded transhydrogenase. Proteinase K, subtilisin (Nagarse), thermolysin, and pronase E each split the mitoplast-embedded enzyme into two fragments only, a fragment of approximately 70 kDa containing the N-terminal hydrophilic domain, and one of approximately 40 kDa bearing the C-terminal hydrophilic domain. The cleavage site of proteinase K was determined to be A690 -A691, which is located in a small hydrophilic segment within the central hydrophobic domain. This protease-sensitive loop appears to be exposed on the cytosolic side of the inner membrane. The proteinase K-nicked enzyme containing two peptides of 71 and 39 kDa was isolated from mitoplasts and shown to have high transhydrogenase activity.
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PMID:Mitochondrial energy-linked nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase. Membrane topography of the bovine enzyme. 200 10

Photoaffinity labeling with native NAD, a method employed earlier with diphtheria toxin (DT), was used to identify an active site residue of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (ETA). An enzymically active fragment (Mr 27,000), derived by partial digestion of ETA with thermolysin, was irradiated with ultraviolet light (254 nm) in the presence of various radiolabeled preparations of NAD. Label from the nicotinamide moiety was efficiently transferred to the protein (maximally 0.79 mol/mol), and the label was exclusively located at position 553. This position, like that photolabeled in DT (position 148), corresponds to glutamic acid in the native protein. Chromatographically identical photo-products were generated at these positions in the two toxins. Glu-553 lies in a cleft in domain III that is believed to represent the active site of ETA, and other evidence supports the notion that Glu-553 of ETA and Glu-148 of DT are directly involved in catalysis. When Glu-553 of ETA was aligned with Glu-148 of DT, we found similarities of local primary structure not detected earlier. These results suggest that the catalytically active domains of ETA and DT may be evolutionarily related, and they provide information that should prove useful for preparing vaccines against ETA by recombinant DNA methods.
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PMID:Active site of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A. Glutamic acid 553 is photolabeled by NAD and shows functional homology with glutamic acid 148 of diphtheria toxin. 288 23

Isolated cytoplasmic actin of human platelet and pig liver actin, but not rabbit skeletal muscle actin, was ADP-ribosylated by botulinum C2 toxin in the presence of [32P]NAD. Tryptic digestion of the [32P]ADP-ribosylated platelet actin generated two labeled peptides: a soluble peptide covering residues 174-183 and an insoluble fragment containing residues 148-183. Further digestion of these two peptides with thermolysin yielded the same radioactive peptide, which was in both cases peptide 175-177. Amino acid sequence analysis of peptides 174-183 and 175-177 located the ADP-ribosylation on Arg177.
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PMID:Botulinum C2 toxin ADP-ribosylates cytoplasmic beta/gamma-actin in arginine 177. 333 20

D-beta-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase is a lipid-requiring enzyme which is localized on the inner face of the mitochondrial inner membrane. The apodehydrogenase, i.e. the purified enzyme devoid of lipid, has been purified from beef heart mitochondria and as such is inactive. It can be reactivated by insertion into phospholipid vesicles containing lecithin. Proteolytic digestion with different proteases has been carried out to obtain insight into the orientation of the enzyme in the membrane and to assess the extent of immersion of the protein into the phospholipid bilayer. Digestion of the apodehydrogenase with either trypsin, chymotrypsin, Staphylococcus aureus protease, thermolysin, carboxypeptidases A and Y, or Pronase (from Streptomyces griseus) leads to loss of activity, as assayed with phospholipid. Limited digestion with carboxypeptidase results in complete inactivation. Of the proteases tested, only Pronase and chymotrypsin cleave and inactivate the enzyme inserted into phospholipid vesicles (enzyme-phospholipid complex). For the enzyme-phospholipid complex, the loss of activity with Pronase digestion follows a single exponential decay to less than 10% of the initial activity. With chymotrypsin digestion, the staining intensity of the original approximately 31,500-dalton polypeptide decreases more rapidly than the loss of enzymic activity. The enzyme-phospholipid complex, after limited cleavage with chymotrypsin, retains enzymic activity and resonance energy transfer from protein to bound NADH and an approximately 26,000-dalton polypeptide is observed. Phospholipid alters the cleavage pattern with both chymotrypsin and Pronase, and the rate of inactivation of the enzyme-phospholipid complex is slowed in the presence of NAD(H). Moreover, the rate of inactivation of the apodehydrogenase with chymotrypsin is diminished approximately 3-fold in the presence of NAD+. Digestion of submitochondrial vesicles with either trypsin, chymotrypsin, or Pronase rapidly inactivates D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase; the addition of NAD+ or NADH, together with dithiothreitol and increased salt (to 50 mM), decreases the rate of inactivation, and with trypsin, virtually eliminates inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Phospholipid protection against proteolysis of D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, a lecithin-requiring enzyme. 388 38

The structure of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase has been partially refined by crystallographic least squares methods. Using x-ray phases based on the refined coordinates, analysis of the resultant electron density maps has led to a new model of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase and a tentative "x-ray sequence." The two crystallographically independent subunits comprising the dimeric enzyme are nearly identical in structure and are related to each other by roughly 2-fold rotational symmetry. The best fit of the molecular structure of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase to that of lactate dehydrogenase has been obtained by least squares methods. The active sites of these two enzymes contain similarly oriented His-Asp pairs linked by a hydrogen bond which may function as a proton relay system during catalysis. This pair could also provide an explanation for the relatively stronger binding by cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase of NADH versus NAD. Similar His-Asp pairs have been observed in the serine proteases, thermolysin, and phospholipase A2, and the His-Asp pair may play a similar functional role in all of these enzymes.
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PMID:The presence of a histidine-aspartic acid pair in the active site of 2-hydroxyacid dehydrogenases. X-ray refinement of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase. 684 15

A Staphylococcus aureus mutant conditionally defective in DNA ligase was identified by isolation of complementing plasmid clones that encode the S. aureus ligA gene. Orthologues of the putative S. aureus NAD(+)-dependent DNA ligase could be identified in the genomes of Bacillus stearothermophilus and other gram-positive bacteria and confirmed the presence of four conserved amino acid motifs, including motif I, KXDG with lysine 112, which is believed to be the proposed site of adenylation. DNA sequence comparison of the ligA genes from wild type and temperature-sensitive S. aureus strain NT64 identified a single base alteration that is predicted to result in the amino acid substitution E46G. The S. aureus ligA gene was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and the enzyme was purified to near homogeneity. NAD(+)-dependent DNA ligase activity was demonstrated with the purified enzyme by measuring ligation of (32)P-labeled 30-mer and 29-mer oligonucleotides annealed to a complementary strand of DNA. Limited proteolysis of purified S. aureus DNA ligase by thermolysin produced products with apparent molecular masses of 40, 22, and 21 kDa. The fragments were purified and characterized by N-terminal sequencing and mass analysis. The N-terminal fragment (40 kDa) was found to be fully adenylated. A fragment from residues 1 to 315 was expressed as a His-tagged fusion in E. coli and purified for functional analysis. Following deadenylation with nicotinamide mononucleotide, the purified fragment could self-adenylate but lacked detectable DNA binding activity. The 21- and 22-kDa C-terminal fragments, which lacked the last 76 amino acids of the DNA ligase, had no adenylation activity or DNA binding activity. The intact 30-kDa C terminus of the S. aureus LigA protein expressed in E. coli did demonstrate DNA binding activity. These observations suggest that, as in the case with the NAD(+)-dependent DNA ligase from B. stearothermophilus, two independent functional domains exist in S. aureus DNA ligase, consisting of separate adenylation and DNA binding activities. They also demonstrate a role for the extreme C terminus of the ligase in DNA binding. As there is much evidence to suggest that DNA ligase is essential for bacterial survival, its discovery in the important human pathogen S. aureus indicates its potential as a broad-spectrum antibacterial target for the identification of novel antibiotics.
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PMID:Cloning and functional characterization of an NAD(+)-dependent DNA ligase from Staphylococcus aureus. 1132 28