Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A protein has been purified from human brain that appears to be the human equivalent of bovine 14-3-3 protein. On polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the protein migrates as a faster major component, termed 14-3-3-2 protein, and a slower minor component, termed 14-3-3-1 protein, which consists of approximately 12% of the total protein. Both 14-3-3-1 and 14-3-3-2 have a native molecular weight of approximately 67,000. 14-3-3-2 appears to have the subunit composition alpha beta; 14-3-3-1 has the composition beta'beta'. Peptide mapping with Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase shows that alpha and beta subunits are unrelated but the beta and beta' subunits show some common peptides. Immunoperoxidase labelling shows that 14-3-3 is localised in neurones in the human cerebral cortex. 14-3-3 shows no enolase, creatine kinase, triose phosphate isomerase, ATPase, cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase, or purine nucleoside phosphorylase activity. 14-3-3 does not bind calcium and does not appear to be related to calmodulin, calcineurin, tubulin, neurofilament proteins, clathrin-associated proteins, or tropomyosin. The functional significance of this neuronal protein remains obscure.
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PMID:Purification, properties, and immunohistochemical localisation of human brain 14-3-3 protein. 703 50

Accumulating evidence suggests that 14-3-3 proteins are involved in the regulation of plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase activity. However, it is not known whether the 14-3-3 protein interacts directly or indirectly with the H(+)-ATPase. In this study, detergent-solubilized plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase isolated from fusicoccin-treated maize shoots was copurified with the 14-3-3 protein (as determined by protein gel blotting), and the H(+)-ATPase was recovered in an activated state. In the absence of fusicoccin treatment, H(+)-ATPase and the 14-3-3 protein were well separated, and the H(+)-ATPase was recovered in a nonactivated form. Trypsin treatment removed the 10-kD C-terminal region from the H(+)-ATPase as well as the 14-3-3 protein. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, we could show a direct interaction between Arabidopsis 14-3-3 GF14-phi and the last 98 C-terminal amino acids of the Arabidopsis AHA2 plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. We propose that the 14-3-3 protein is a natural ligand of the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase, regulating proton pumping by displacing the C-terminal autoinhibitory domain of the H(+)-ATPase.
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PMID:The 14-3-3 protein interacts directly with the C-terminal region of the plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. 936 17

The plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase in higher plants has been implicated in nutrient uptake, phloem loading, elongation growth and establishment of turgor. Although a C-terminal regulatory domain has been identified, little is known about the physiological factors involved in controlling the activity of the enzyme. To identify components which play a role in the regulation of the plant H(+)-ATPase, a fusicoccin responsive yeast expressing Arabidopsis plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase AHA2 was employed. By testing the fusicoccin binding activity of yeast membranes, the C-terminal regulatory domain of AHA2 was found to be part of a functional fusicoccin receptor, a component of which was the 14-3-3 protein. ATP hydrolytic activity of AHA2 expressed in yeast internal membranes was activated by all tested isoforms of the 14-3-3 protein of yeast and Arabidopsis, but only in the presence of fusicoccin, and activation was prevented by a phosphoserine peptide representing a known 14-3-3 protein binding motif in Raf-1. The results demonstrate that the 14-3-3 protein is an activator molecule of the H(+)-ATPase and provides the first evidence of a protein involved in activation of plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase.
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PMID:The 14-3-3 proteins associate with the plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase to generate a fusicoccin binding complex and a fusicoccin responsive system. 968 Oct 8

We have isolated the plasma membrane H+-ATPase in a phosphorylated form from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf tissue incubated with fusicoccin, a fungal toxin that induces irreversible binding of 14-3-3 protein to the C terminus of the H+-ATPase, thus activating H+ pumping. We have identified threonine-948, the second residue from the C-terminal end of the H+-ATPase, as the phosphorylated amino acid. Turnover of the phosphate group of phosphothreonine-948 was inhibited by 14-3-3 binding, suggesting that this residue may form part of a binding motif for 14-3-3. This is the first identification to our knowledge of an in vivo phosphorylation site in the plant plasma membrane H+-ATPase.
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PMID:A phosphothreonine residue at the C-terminal end of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase is protected by fusicoccin-induced 14-3-3 binding. 976 40

Fusicoccin (FC) is a fungal toxin that activates the plant plasma membrane H+-ATPase by binding with 14-3-3 proteins, causing membrane hyperpolarization. Here we report on the effect of FC on a gene-for-gene pathogen-resistance response and show that FC application induces the expression of several genes involved in plant responses to pathogens. Ten members of the FC-binding 14-3-3 protein gene family were isolated from tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) to characterize their role in defense responses. Sequence analysis is suggestive of common biochemical functions for these tomato 14-3-3 proteins, but their genes showed different expression patterns in leaves after challenges. Different specific subsets of 14-3-3 genes were induced after treatment with FC and during a gene-for-gene resistance response. Possible roles for the H+-ATPase and 14-3-3 proteins in responses to pathogens are discussed.
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PMID:Fusicoccin, 14-3-3 proteins, and defense responses in tomato plants. 1019 82

The plasma membrane H+-ATPase is a proton pump belonging to the P-type ATPase superfamily and is important for nutrient acquisition in plants. The H+-ATPase is controlled by an autoinhibitory C-terminal regulatory domain and is activated by 14-3-3 proteins which bind to this part of the enzyme. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis through 87 consecutive amino acid residues was used to evaluate the role of the C-terminus in autoinhibition of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase AHA2 from Arabidopsis thaliana. Mutant enzymes were expressed in a strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with a defective endogenous H+-ATPase. The enzymes were characterized by their ability to promote growth in acidic conditions and to promote H+ extrusion from intact cells, both of which are measures of plasma membrane H+-ATPase activity, and were also characterized with respect to kinetic properties such as affinity for H+ and ATP. Residues that when altered lead to increased pump activity group together in two regions of the C-terminus. One region stretches from K863 to L885 and includes two residues (Q879 and R880) that are conserved between plant and fungal H+-ATPases. The other region, incorporating S904 to L919, is situated in an extension of the C-terminus unique to plant H+-ATPases. Alteration of residues in both regions led to increased binding of yeast 14-3-3 protein to the plasma membrane of transformed cells. Taken together, our data suggest that modification of residues in two regions of the C-terminal regulatory domain exposes a latent binding site for activatory 14-3-3 proteins.
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PMID:Molecular dissection of the C-terminal regulatory domain of the plant plasma membrane H+-ATPase AHA2: mapping of residues that when altered give rise to an activated enzyme. 1035 34

All higher plants possess highly specific binding sites for fusicoccin, a metabolite of the fungus Fusicoccum amygdali Del. These sites are harboured in the plasma membranes and formed by a 14-3-3 protein dimer associated with the C-terminal autoinhibitory domain of H+-ATPase. We considered the fusicoccin binding to plasma membranes to be an indicator of complexation between the 14-3-3 dimer and H+-ATPase, we assessed the effect of cold stress on the interaction of these proteins in suspension-cultured sugar beet cells and protoplasts derived from these cells. In both objects, upon lowering the temperature to 0-4 degrees C, a portion of the cytoplasmic 14-3-3 proteins became associated with the plasma membrane, which showed an increasing amount of ATPase/14-3-3 complexes and enhanced ATPase activity. Association between ATPase and 14-3-3 resulted in a several-fold rise in the H+ efflux from protoplasts and intact cells. We suppose that regulation of the H+ pumping under changing external conditions may be based on the interaction between H+-ATPase and the 14-3-3 proteins.
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PMID:Role of the 14-3-3 proteins in the regulation of H+-ATPase activity in the plasma membrane of suspension-cultured sugar beet cells under cold stress. 1045 22

The opening of stomata, which is driven by the accumulation of K(+) salt in guard cells, is induced by blue light (BL). The BL activates the H(+) pump; however, the mechanism by which the perception of BL is transduced into the pump activation remains unknown. We present evidence that the pump is the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase and that BL activates the H(+)-ATPase via phosphorylation. A pulse of BL (30 s, 100 micromol/m(2)/s) increased ATP hydrolysis by the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase and H(+) pumping in Vicia guard cell protoplasts with a similar time course. The H(+)-ATPase was phosphorylated reversibly by BL, and the phosphorylation levels paralleled the ATP hydrolytic activity. The phosphorylation occurred exclusively in the C-termini of H(+)-ATPases on both serine and threonine residues in two isoproteins of H(+)-ATPase in guard cells. An endogenous 14-3-3 protein was co-precipitated with H(+)-ATPase, and the recombinant 14-3-3 protein bound to the phosphorylated C-termini of H(+)-ATPases. These findings demonstrate that BL activates the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase via phosphorylation of the C-terminus by a serine/threonine protein kinase, and that the 14-3-3 protein has a key role in the activation.
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PMID:Blue light activates the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase by phosphorylation of the C-terminus in stomatal guard cells. 1052 99

The plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase is activated by the binding of 14-3-3 protein to the C-terminal region of the enzyme, thus forming an H(+)-ATPase-14-3-3 complex that can be stabilized by the fungal toxin fusicoccin. A novel 14-3-3 binding motif, QQXYpT(948)V, at the C terminus of the H(+)-ATPase is identified and characterized, and the protein kinase activity in the plasma membrane fraction that phosphorylates this threonine residue in the H(+)-ATPase is identified. A synthetic peptide that corresponds to the C-terminal 16 amino acids of the H(+)-ATPase and that is phosphorylated on Thr-948 prevents the in vitro activation of the H(+)-ATPase that is obtained in the presence of recombinant 14-3-3 and fusicoccin. Furthermore, binding of 14-3-3 to the H(+)-ATPase in the absence of fusicoccin is absolutely dependent on the phosphorylation of Thr-948, whereas binding of 14-3-3 in the presence of fusicoccin occurs independently of phosphorylation but still involves the C-terminal motif YTV. Finally, by complementing yeast that lacks its endogenous H(+)-ATPase with wild-type and mutant forms of the Nicotiana plumbaginifolia H(+)-ATPase isoform PMA2, we provide physiological evidence for the importance of the phosphothreonine motif in 14-3-3 binding and, hence, in the activation of the H(+)-ATPase in vivo. Indeed, replacing Thr-948 in the plant H(+)-ATPase with alanine is lethal because this mutant fails to functionally replace the yeast H(+)-ATPase. Considering the importance of the motif QQXYpTV for 14-3-3 binding and yeast growth, this motif should be of vital importance for regulating H(+)-ATPase activity in the plant and thus for plant growth.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of Thr-948 at the C terminus of the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase creates a binding site for the regulatory 14-3-3 protein. 1059 Jan 65

14-3-3 proteins play a regulatory role in a diverse array of cellular functions such as apoptosis, regulation of the cell cycle, and regulation of gene transcription. The phytotoxin fusicoccin specifically induces association of virtually any 14-3-3 protein to plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. The 14-3-3 binding site in the Arabidopsis plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase AHA2 was localized to the three C-terminal residues of the enzyme (Tyr(946)-Thr-Val). Binding of 14-3-3 protein to this target was induced by phosphorylation of Thr(947) (K(D) = 88 nM) and was in practice irreversible in the presence of fusicoccin (K(D) = 7 nM). Mass spectrometry analysis demonstrated that AHA2 expressed in yeast was phosphorylated at Thr(947). We conclude that the extreme end of AHA2 contains an unusual high-affinity binding site for 14-3-3 protein.
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PMID:Binding of 14-3-3 protein to the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase AHA2 involves the three C-terminal residues Tyr(946)-Thr-Val and requires phosphorylation of Thr(947). 1059 86


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