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Query: EC:4.1.1.6 (
CAD
)
4,420
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
On the basis of homology, the mammalian
CAD
(glutamine-dependent carbamyl phosphate synthetase-aspartate transcarbamylase-dihydroorotase) gene appears to have arisen from the fusion of four separate ancestral genes. Evidence for two of these precursor genes is found in the carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPSase) domain of
CAD
. In prokaryotes, such as Escherichia coli CPSase is encoded by two distinct cistrons of the carAB operon. Whereas carA and carB are separated by a short noncoding intercistronic region, the homologous sequences of the
CAD
gene encode an amino acid bridge. This bridge connects the subdomains of the
CAD
CPSase. We constructed a bacterial carAB fusion gene in which the intercistronic region codes for a hamster bridgelike sequence. The fused carAB gene directs the synthesis of a stable bifunctional polypeptide whose
glutamine
-dependent CPSase activity is comparable to the E. coli CPSase holoenzyme. The fusion in E. coli of the single gene counterparts of
CAD
demonstrates a potential model system to study the genetic events that lead to gene fusion and the creation of multienzymatic proteins.
...
PMID:Evidence that mammalian glutamine-dependent carbamyl phosphate synthetase arose through gene fusion. 151 89
The multifunctional protein CAD catalyzes the first three steps in pyrimidine biosynthesis in mammalian cells, including the synthesis of carbamyl phosphate from bicarbonate, MgATP and
glutamine
. The Syrian hamster
CAD
glutaminase (GLNase) domain, a trpG-type amidotransferase, catalyzes
glutamine
hydrolysis in the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate (Km = 95 microM and kcat = 0.14 s-1). Unlike E. coli carbamyl phosphate synthetase (Wellner, V.P., Anderson, P.M., and Meister, A. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 2061-2066), a stable thioester intermediate did not accumulate when the mammalian enzyme was incubated with
glutamine
. However, a covalent adduct could be isolated when the protein was denatured in acid. The steady state concentration of the intermediate increased with increasing
glutamine
concentration to nearly one mole per mole of enzyme with half saturation at 105 microM, close to the Km value for
glutamine
. The adduct formed at the active site of the glutaminase domain. The rate of breakdown of the intermediate (k4), determined directly, was 0.17 s-1 and the rate of formation (k3) was estimated as 0.52 s-1. In the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate, k4 = kcat indicating that the decomposition of the intermediate is the rate-limiting step. The intermediate was chemically and kinetically competent, and the
glutamine
dissociation constant (330 microM) and rate constants were consistent with steady state kinetics and accurately predicted the steady state concentration of the intermediate. These studies suggest a mechanism similar to the cysteine proteases such as recently proposed by Mei and Zalkin (Mei, B., and Zalkin, H. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16613-16619) who identified a catalytic triad in
glutamine
phosphoribosyl-5'-pyrophosphate amidotransferase, a purF-type enzyme. MgATP and bicarbonate increased kcat of the glutaminase reaction 14-fold by accelerating both the rate of formation and the rate of breakdown of the intermediate, and prevented the accumulation of the intermediate; however, the Km value for
glutamine
was not significantly altered. The instability of the thioester intermediate leads to appreciable hydrolysis of
glutamine
in the absence of the other substrates. However, bicarbonate alone spares
glutamine
by increasing the Km and Ks of
glutamine
to 600 and 8960 microM, respectively, thus reducing kcat/Km 3-fold when MgATP is limiting. In the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate, ammonia decreased the rate of hydrolysis and the accumulation of the thioester intermediate indicating that ammonia had direct access to the thioester at the GLNase domain active site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The catalytic mechanism of the amidotransferase domain of the Syrian hamster multifunctional protein CAD. Evidence for a CAD-glutamyl covalent intermediate in the formation of carbamyl phosphate. 167 73
The
CAD
multidomain protein, which includes active sites of carbamyl phosphate synthetase II (CPS II,
glutamine
-dependent), aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase, was immunostained in normal rat brains, the gliotic brains of myelin-deficient mutant rats, and brains from normal weanling hamsters. In each of these tissues
CAD
was observed in cells resembling astrocytes. In hamster brain,
CAD
immunofluorescence was also found in cells closely related to astrocytes, i.e., the Bergmann glia in cerebellum and the tanycytes surrounding the third ventricle. The astrocytic identity of the
CAD
-positive cells in rat brain was confirmed by double immunofluorescence staining with antibodies against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). The two enzymes carbonic anhydrase and glutamine synthetase occur in the cytoplasm of normal astrocytes in gray matter and of reactive astrocytes during gliosis. Products of each enzyme, i.e., bicarbonate and
glutamine
, are required for the CPS II reaction, which is the first step in the biosynthesis of pyrimidines. Therefore, the present results suggest roles for carbonic anhydrase and glutamine synthetase, as well as
CAD
, in pyrimidine biosynthesis in brain and a role for the astrocytes in the de novo synthesis of pyrimidines.
...
PMID:Localization of the multifunctional protein CAD in astrocytes of rodent brain. 167 39
The ATP analogue 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine (FSBA) was used to chemically modify the ATP binding sites of the carbamyl phosphate synthetase domain of
CAD
, the multifunctional protein that catalyzes the first steps in mammalian pyrimidine biosynthesis. Reaction of
CAD
with FSBA resulted in the inactivation of the ammonia- and
glutamine
-dependent CPSase activities but had no effect on its glutaminase, aspartate transcarbamylase, or dihydroorotase activities. ATP protected
CAD
against inactivation by FSBA whereas the presence of the allosteric effectors UTP and PRPP afforded little protection, which suggests that the ATP binding sites were specifically labeled. The inactivation exhibited saturation behavior with respect to FSBA with a K1 of 0.93 mM. Of the two ATP-dependent partial activities of carbamyl phosphate synthetase, bicarbonate-dependent ATPase was inactivated more rapidly than the carbamyl phosphate dependent ATP synthetase, which indicates that these partial reactions occur at distinct ATP binding sites. The stoichiometry of [14C]FSBA labeling showed that only 0.4-0.5 mol of FSBA/mol of protein was required for complete inactivation. Incorporation of radiolabeled FSBA into
CAD
and subsequent proteolysis, gel electrophoresis, and fluorography demonstrated that only the carbamyl phosphate synthetase domain of
CAD
is labeled. Amino acid sequencing of the principal peaks resulting from tryptic digests of FSBA-modified
CAD
located the sites of FSBA modification in regions that exhibit high homology to ATP binding sites of other known proteins. Thus
CAD
has two ATP binding sites, one in each of the two highly homologous halves of the carbamyl phosphate domain which catalyze distinct ATP-dependent partial reactions in carbamyl phosphate synthesis.
...
PMID:Identification of the ATP binding sites of the carbamyl phosphate synthetase domain of the Syrian hamster multifunctional protein CAD by affinity labeling with 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine. 168
Mammalian DHOase (S-dihydroorotate amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.2.3) is part of a large multifunctional protein called
CAD
, which also has a carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase [carbon-dioxide:
L-glutamine
amido-ligase (ADP-forming, carbamate-phosphorylating), EC 6.3.5.5] and aspartate transcarbamoylase (carbamoyl-phosphate: L-aspartate carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.2) activities. We sequenced selected restriction fragments of a Syrian hamster
CAD
cDNA. The deduced amino acid sequence agreed with the sequence of tryptic peptides and the amino acid composition of the DHOase domain isolated by controlled proteolysis of
CAD
. Escherichia coli transformed with a recombinant plasmid containing the cDNA segment 5' to the aspartate transcarbamoylase coding region expressed a polypeptide recognized by DHOase domain-specific antibodies. Thus, the order of domains within the polypeptide is NH2-carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase-DHO-aspartate transcarbamoylase-COOH. The 334-residue DHOase domain has a molecular weight of 36,733 and a pI of 6.1. A fragment of
CAD
having DHOase activity that was isolated after trypsin digestion has extensions on both the NH2 (18 residues) and COOH (47-65 residues) termini of this core domain. Three of five conserved histidines are within short, highly conserved regions that may participate in zinc binding. Phylogenetic analysis clustered the monofunctional and fused DHOases separately. Although these families may have arisen by convergent evolution, we favor a model involving DHOase gene duplication and insertion into an ancestral bifunctional locus.
...
PMID:Mammalian dihydroorotase: nucleotide sequence, peptide sequences, and evolution of the dihydroorotase domain of the multifunctional protein CAD. 196 94
CAD
, is a multidomain polypeptide, with a molecular weight of over 200,000, that has
glutamine
-dependent carbamyl-phosphate synthetase, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase activity as well as regulatory sites that bind UTP and 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate. The protein thus catalyzes the first three steps of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis and controls the activity of the pathway in higher eukaryotes. Controlled proteolysis of
CAD
isolated from Syrian hamster cells, cleaves the molecule into seven major proteolytic fragments that contain one or more of the functional domains. The two smallest fragments, which had molecular weights of 44,000 and 40,000, corresponded to the fully active dihydroorotase (DHO) and aspartate transcarbamylase (ATC) domains, respectively, but the larger fragments have not been previously characterized. In this study, enzymatic assays of partially fractionated digests and immunoblotting with antibodies specifically directed against the purified ATC domain, the purified dihydroorotase domain and an 80-kDa fragment of the putative carbamyl-phosphate synthetase domain established the precursor-product relationships among all of the major proteolytic fragments of
CAD
. These results indicate that 1) only the intact molecule had all of the functional domains, 2) a species with a molecular weight of 200,000 was produced in the first step of proteolysis which had
glutamine
-dependent carbamyl-phosphate synthetase and dihydroorotase activity, but neither aspartate transcarbamylase activity nor the antigenic determinants present on the isolated ATC domain, and 3) cleavage of the 200-kDa species produced a species, with a molecular mass of 150,000 which lacked both aspartate transcarbamylase and dihydroorotase domains. This 150-kDa species, containing the postulated carbamyl-phosphate synthetase,
glutamine
, and regulatory (UTP, 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate) domains, had two elastase-sensitive sites that divided this region of the polypeptide chain into 10-, 65-, and 80-kDa segments. The location of the functional sites on these segments has not yet been established. The immunochemical analysis also revealed the existence of possible precursors of the stable aspartate transcarbamylase and dihydroorotase domains, suggesting that the chain segments connecting the functional domains of
CAD
are extensive and that the overall size of the intact polypeptide chain has been underestimated. On the basis of these studies we have proposed a model of the domain structure of
CAD
.
...
PMID:Immunochemical analysis of the domain structure of CAD, the multifunctional protein that initiates pyrimidine biosynthesis in mammalian cells. 286 87
The hamster
CAD
gene encodes a protein that catalyzes the first three steps of pyrimidine biosynthesis. We have sequenced a portion of a
CAD
cDNA and determined the location of the carbamyl phosphate synthetase II coding region. Subdomains coding for the
glutamine
hydrolyzing and carbamyl phosphate synthesizing functions have been identified through their high degree of similarity to carbamyl phosphate synthetase genes from a variety of organisms. The proline-rich junction between the glutaminase and synthetase domains, however, does not appear to be conserved among carbamyl phosphate synthetases.
...
PMID:Identification of the junction between the glutamine amidotransferase and carbamyl phosphate synthetase domains of the mammalian CAD protein. 290 Jun 34
The first three steps of mammalian de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis are catalyzed by the multifunctional protein CAD, consisting of
glutamine
-dependent carbamylphosphate synthetase, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase. The intracellular distribution of
CAD
in two hamster cell lines, BHK 21 and BHK 165-23 (a strain in which the
CAD
gene was selectively amplified), was determined by differential centrifugation and by two different cytochemical immunolocalization methods. Ammonia-dependent carbamylphosphate synthetase I was found in both cell types at a concentration of 0.01% of the total cell protein, so its distribution was also determined as a control for possible cross-reactivity of the
CAD
antibody probes and as a mitochondrial marker.
CAD
was localized in the cytoplasmic compartment and almost completely excluded from the nucleus. A punctate staining pattern suggested that it was not uniformly dispersed throughout the cytosol (unlike typical soluble proteins) but was associated with subcellular organelles. Although there was a slight tendency for
CAD
to be localized in the vicinity of the nuclear envelope, the amount of staining was much less than expected from differential centrifugation, which showed that 30% of the protein was found in the nuclear fraction. No interactions with other subcellular components could be detected by centrifugation. It is possible, however, that
CAD
is associated with subcellular structures that cosediment with the nuclei. Despite a 150-fold increase in
CAD
concentration in the over-producing cells, the distribution of the protein was unaltered.
CAD
was not concentrated near the mitochondria where the next enzyme of the de novo pathway, dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, is localized, which indicates that the intermediate dihydroorotate is not channeled, but rather dissociates from
CAD
and diffuses through the bulk cellular fluid.
...
PMID:Intracellular location of the multidomain protein CAD in mammalian cells. 290 6
Improved methodologies are described which allow the measurement of the part-reactions, with
glutamine
or ammonia as nitrogen donor, of mammalian carbamoyl-phosphate synthase II (EC 6.3.5.5) through the incorporation of [14C]bicarbonate into either carbamoyl phosphate or carbamoylaspartate. The enzyme is part of the multifunctional polypeptide (
CAD
) which also comprises the pyrimidine-biosynthetic enzymes aspartate transcarbamoylase (EC 2.1.3.2) and dihydro-orotase (EC 3.5.2.3). The conformational stability of the carbamoyl-phosphate synthase was investigated through the inactivation of the part-reactions which occurred during incubation at 37 degrees C. The domain involved in the removal of the amide N from
glutamine
was more thermolabile than the ammonia-dependent synthase moiety. The former activity was stabilized in the presence of sodium aspartate or MgATP, whereas the latter was stabilized by MgATP and MgUTP. Binding of MgUTP and MgATP to
CAD
restricted the initial proteolysis by trypsin and elastase of one or both regions linking the carbamoyl-phosphate synthase domain to the other major domains. A model is described to account for both aspects of nucleotide binding to
CAD
; these stabilizing effects may be important in the cell, where similar concentrations of nucleotides are found.
...
PMID:Nucleotide ligands protect the inter-domain regions of the multifunctional polypeptide CAD against limited proteolysis, and also stabilize the thermolabile part-reactions of the carbamoyl-phosphate synthase II domains within the CAD polypeptide. 363 65
Carbamyl-phosphate synthetases from different organisms have similar catalytic mechanisms and amino acid sequences, but their structural organization, sub-unit structure, and mode of regulation can be very different. Escherichia coli carbamyl-phosphate synthetase (CPSase), a monofunctional protein consisting of amido-transferase and synthetase subunits, is allosterically inhibited by UMP and activated by NH3, IMP, and ornithine. In contrast, mammalian CPSase II, part of the large multifunctional polypeptide,
CAD
, is inhibited by UTP and activated by 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP). Previous photoaffinity labeling studies of E. coli CPSase showed that allosteric effectors bind near the carboxyl-terminal end of the synthetase subunit. This region of the molecule may be a regulatory subdomain common to all CPSases. An E. coli mammalian hybrid CPSase gene has been constructed and expressed in E. coli. The hybrid consists of the E. coli CPSase synthetase catalytic subdomains, residues 1-900 of the 1073 residue polypeptide, fused to the amino-terminal end of the putative 190-residue regulatory subdomain of the mammalian protein. The hybrid CPSase had normal activity, but was no longer regulated by the prokaryotic allosteric effectors. Instead, the
glutamine
- and ammonia-dependent CPSase activities and both ATP-dependent partial reactions were activated by PRPP and inhibited by UTP, indicating that the binding sites of both of these ligands are located in a regulatory region at the carboxyl-terminal end of the CPSase domain of
CAD
. The apparent ligand dissociation constants and extent of inhibition by UTP are similar in the hybrid and the wild type mammalian protein, but PRPP binds 4-fold more weakly to the hybrid. The allosteric ligands affected the steady state kinetic parameters of the hybrid differently, suggesting that while the linkage between the catalytic and regulatory subdomains has been preserved, there may be qualitative differences in interdomain signal transmission. Nevertheless, switching prokaryotic and eukaryotic allosteric controls argues for remarkable conservation of structure and regulatory mechanisms in this family of proteins.
...
PMID:Identification of the regulatory domain of the mammalian multifunctional protein CAD by the construction of an Escherichia coli hamster hybrid carbamyl-phosphate synthetase. 752 61
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