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Query: EC:6.1.1.4 (
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
)
297
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present investigation was undertaken to clarify the effect of zinc on bone protein synthesis in tissue culture. Calvaria were removed from 3-week-old male rats and cultured for periods up to 96 hr in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium (high glucose, 4500 mg/dl) supplemented with antibiotics and bovine serum albumin. The calvaria were incubated at 37 degrees in 5% CO2/95% air in the medium containing 10(-6)-10(-4) M zinc. Zinc content in bone cells was increased when the culture was treated with 10(-5) and 10(-4) M zinc for 48 hr. When calvaria cultured in the presence of 10(-4) M zinc were pulsed with [14C]uridine, the incorporation of [14C]uridine into the bone RNA was not increased significantly. In the pulse with [3H]leucine, the presence of 10(-5) to 10(-4) M zinc in the medium caused a significant increase in the incorporation of [3H]leucine into the acid-insoluble residues of bone tissue. This increase was blocked completely by treatment with 10(-7) M cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. When [3H]leucine was added into the reaction mixture containing the 5500 g supernatant fraction of the homogenate prepared from calvaria cultured in the presence of 10(-4) M zinc, the in vitro protein synthesis was increased about 2-fold. The activity of [3H]
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
in the 105,000 g supernatant fraction (cytosol) of the bone homogenate was increased about 2-fold by the culture with 10(-4) M zinc. The presence of 10(-4) M dipicolinate, a specific chelator of zinc, in the culture medium negated the effect of zinc on [3H]
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity. The addition of 10(-7) to 10(-6) M zinc into the reaction mixture containing enzyme extracts obtained from uncultured rat calvaria caused a 2-fold increase of [3H]
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity. These results clearly indicate that zinc induces the stimulation of protein synthesis at the translational level in bone cells. The present study further supports the view that zinc increases protein synthesis in bone cells and that the metal induces bone formation.
...
PMID:Zinc stimulation of bone protein synthesis in tissue culture. Activation of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. 246 Dec 1
We show that the nuclear genes for the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
(
LeuRS
) of Neurospora crassa are distinct in their encoded proteins, codon usage, mRNA levels, and regulation. The 4.2-kilobase-pair region representing the structural gene for cytoplasmic
LeuRS
and flanking regions has been sequenced. The positions of the 5' and 3' ends of mRNA and of a single 62-base-pair intron have been mapped. The methionine-initiated open reading frame encoded a protein of 1,123 amino acids and displayed a strong codon bias. Although cytoplasmic
LeuRS
shares with mitochondrial
LeuRS
some general features common to most aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, there is little amino acid sequence similarity between them, mRNA levels for cytoplasmic
LeuRS
were much higher than those for mitochondrial
LeuRS
. This observation and the strong codon bias in the cytoplasmic
LeuRS
gene may contribute to a greater abundance of cytoplasmic
LeuRS
than mitochondrial
LeuRS
. The genes for cytoplasmic and mitochondrial
LeuRS
are regulated independently. The cytoplasmic
LeuRS
gene is regulated by the cross-pathway control system in N. crassa, which is analogous to general amino acid control in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The cytoplasmic
LeuRS
mRNA levels are induced by amino acid starvation resulting from the addition of aminotriazole. Part of this increase is due to utilization of new transcription start sites. In contrast, the mitochondrial
LeuRS
gene is not induced by amino acid limitation. However, the mitochondrial
LeuRS
mRNA levels did increase dramatically upon inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis by chloramphenicol or ethidium bromide or in the temperature-sensitive strain leu-5 carrying a mutation in the mitochondrial
LeuRS
structural gene.
...
PMID:Regulation of the nuclear genes encoding the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetases of Neurospora crassa. 253
Exposure of the temperature-sensitive
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
mutant of Chinese hamster ovary cells, tsH1, to the non-permissive temperature of 39.5 degrees C results in a rapid inhibition of polypeptide chain initiation. This inhibition is caused by a reduced ability of the eukaryotic initiation factor eIF-2 to participate in the formation of eIF-2.GTP.Met-tRNAf ternary complexes and thus in the formation of 43S ribosomal pre-initiation complexes. Associated with this decreased eIF-2 activity is an increased phosphorylation of the eIF-2 alpha subunit. It has previously been shown in other systems that phosphorylation of eIF-2 alpha slows the rate of recycling of eIF-2.GDP to eIF-2.GTP catalysed by the guanine nucleotide exchange factor eIF-2B. We show here that phosphorylation of eIF-2 alpha by the reticulocyte haem-controlled repressor also inhibits eIF-2B activity in cell-free extracts derived from tsH1 cells. Thus the observed increased phosphorylation of eIF-2 alpha at the non-permissive temperature in this system is consistent with impaired recycling of eIF-2 in vivo. Using a single-step temperature revertant of tsH1 cells, TR-3 (which has normal
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity at 39.5 degrees C), we demonstrate here that all inhibition of eIF-2 function reverts together with the synthetase mutation. This establishes the close link between synthetase function and eIF-2 activity. In contrast, recharging tRNALeu in vivo in tsH1 cells at 39.5 degrees C by treatment with a low concentration of cycloheximide failed to reverse the inhibition of eIF-2 function. This indicates that tRNA charging per se is not involved in the regulatory mechanism. Our data indicate a novel role for aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in the regulation of eIF-2 function mediated through phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of this factor. However, in spite of the fact that cell-free extracts from Chinese hamster ovary cells contain protein kinase and phosphatase activities active against either exogenous or endogenous eIF-2 alpha, we have been unable to show any activation of kinase or inactivation of phosphatase following incubation of the cells at 39.5 degrees C.
...
PMID:A novel role for aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in the regulation of polypeptide chain initiation. 254 69
We have isolated and characterized the nuclear gene for the mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
(
LeuRS
) of Neurospora crassa and have established that a defect in this structural gene is responsible for the leu-5 phenotype. We have purified mitochondrial
LeuRS
protein, determined its N-terminal sequence, and used this sequence information to identify and isolate a full-length genomic DNA clone. The 3.7-kilobase-pair region representing the structural gene and flanking regions has been sequenced. The 5' ends of the mRNA were mapped by S1 nuclease protection, and the 3' ends were determined from the sequence of cDNA clones. The gene contains a single short intron, 60 base pairs long. The methionine-initiated open reading frame specifies a 52-amino-acid mitochondrial targeting sequence followed by a 942-amino-acid protein. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses mapped the mitochondrial
LeuRS
structural gene to linkage group V, exactly where the leu-5 mutation had been mapped before. We show that the leu-5 strain has a defect in the structural gene for mitochondrial
LeuRS
by restoring growth under restrictive conditions for this strain after transformation with a wild-type copy of the mitochondrial
LeuRS
gene. We have cloned the mutant allele present in the leu-5 strain and identified the defect as being due to a Thr-to-Pro change in mitochondrial
LeuRS
. Finally, we have used immunoblotting to show that despite the apparent lack of mitochondrial
LeuRS
activity in leu-5 extracts, the leu-5 strain contains levels of mitochondrial
LeuRS
protein to similar to those of the wild-type strain.
...
PMID:Nuclear gene for mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase of Neurospora crassa: isolation, sequence, chromosomal mapping, and evidence that the leu-5 locus specifies structural information. 257 23
The temperature-sensitive (ts) Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell mutant tsH1 contains a thermolabile
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
. Upon incubation at the nonpermissive temperature of 39.5 degrees C, the enzyme became reversibly inhibited over a period of minutes, and the cells lost viability over a period of many hours. However, killing of tsH1 by acute heating at 45 degrees C was identical to that of wild-type (SC) cells. In addition, the heat-induced inhibition of protein synthesis was similar for both cell types, as measured after acute heating at 45 degrees C. Furthermore, both killing and inhibition of protein synthesis showed thermotolerance in both cell types. In contrast to the effects at 45 degrees C, at 39.5 degrees C, neither the inhibition of
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity nor the killing of tsH1 expressed thermotolerance. Also, treatment of tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C did not induce thermotolerance to killing at 45 degrees C. The inhibition of
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity in tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C was further distinguished from the 45 degrees C-induced inhibition of protein synthesis in SC cells by a much more rapid reversal of the inhibition of
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity. Also, the rate of reversal of the inhibition of protein synthesis by 45 degrees C in SC cells was decreased by increased heat dose. Such was not true for the 39.5 degrees C inhibition of
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
activity in tsH1. The data indicate that there exist two distinct types of thermal inhibition--one slowly reversible type which was observed during and after heating at 45 degrees C and both induced and expressed thermotolerance, and a second, rapidly reversible type, which was evident only during heating of tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C and neither induced nor expressed thermotolerance.
...
PMID:Rapidly reversible enzyme inhibition in a temperature-sensitive mammalian cell mutant lacks thermotolerance. 274 60
The Chinese hamster ovary cell line CHO-tsH1 is a temperature-sensitive
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
mutant that shows temperature-dependent regulation of the amino acid transport responsible for accumulating leucine, System L. At nonpermissive temperatures, CHO-tsH1 cells are unable to grow because they are unable to incorporate leucine into protein. As a result, System L activity is increased. We have isolated mutants from CHO-tsH1 that have constitutively de-repressed System L activity. These mutants are temperature-resistant as a result of increased intracellular steady-state accumulations of System L-related amino acids, which compensates for the defective synthetase activity. In this study, we have subjected one of these regulatory mutant cell lines (C11B6) to a tritium-suicide selection, in which L-[3H]leucine was used as a toxic substrate. Three mutant cell lines, C4B4, C5D9, and C9D9 that showed reduced System L transport activity were isolated. The decreases in the initial rates of System L transport activity lead to reduced steady-state accumulations of System L-related amino acids. In contrast to the parental cell line, C11B6, the transport-defective mutants are temperature-sensitive because the reduced intracellular pool of leucine can no longer compensate for the defective synthetase activity.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of Chinese hamster ovary cell mutants defective in amino acid transport System L. 277 68
Respiratory deficient mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae previously assigned to complementation group G59 are pleiotropically deficient in respiratory chain components and in mitochondrial ATPase. This phenotype has been shown to be a consequence of mutations in a nuclear gene coding for mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
. The structural gene (MSL1) coding for the mitochondrial enzyme has been cloned by transformation of two different G59 mutants with genomic libraries of wild type yeast nuclear DNA. The cloned gene has been sequenced and shown to code for a protein of 894 residues with a molecular weight of 101,936. The amino-terminal sequence (30-40 residues) has a large percentage of basic and hydroxylated residues suggestive of a mitochondrial import signal. The cloned MSL1 gene was used to construct a strain in which 1 kb of the coding sequence was deleted and substituted with the yeast LEU2 gene. Mitochondrial extracts obtained from the mutant carrying the disrupted MSL1::LEU2 allele did not catalyze acylation of mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA even though other tRNAs were normally charged. These results confirmed the correct identification of MSL1 as the structural gene for mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
. Mutations in MSL1 affect the ability of yeast to grow on nonfermentable substrates but are not lethal indicating that the cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetase is encoded by a different gene. The primary sequence of yeast mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
has been compared to other bacterial and eukaryotic synthetases. Significant homology has been found between the yeast enzyme and the methionyl- and isoleucyl-tRNA synthetases of Escherichia coli. The most striking primary sequence homology occurs in the amino-terminal regions of the three proteins encompassing some 150 residues. Several smaller domains in the more internal regions of the polypeptide chains, however, also exhibit homology. These observations have been interpreted to indicate that the three synthetases may represent a related subset of enzymes originating from a common ancestral gene.
...
PMID:Homology of yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase and isoleucyl- and methionyl-tRNA synthetases of Escherichia coli. 282 65
The cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetases of Neurospora crassa wild type (grown at 37 degrees C) and mutant (grown at 28 degrees C) were purified approximately 1770-fold and 1440-fold respectively. Additional enzyme preparations were carried out with mutant cells grown for 24 h at 28 degrees C and transferred then to 37 degrees C for 10-70 h of growth. The mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
of the wild type was purified approximately 722-fold. The mitochondrial mutant enzyme was found only in traces. The cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetase from the mutant (grown at 37 degrees C) in vivo is subject of a proteolytic degradation. This leads to an increased pyrophosphate exchange, without altering aminoacylation. Proteolysis in vitro by trypsin or subtilisin of isolated cytoplasmic wild-type and mutant leucyl-tRNA synthetases, however, did not establish and difference in the degradation products and in their catalytic properties. Comparing the cytoplasmic wild-type and mutant enzymes (grown at 28 degrees C) via steady-state kinetics did not show significant differences between these synthetases either. The rate-determining step appears to be after the transfer of the aminoacyl group to the tRNA, e.g. a conformational change or the release of the product. Besides leucine only isoleucine is activated by the enzymes with a discrimination of approximately 1:600; however, no Ile-tRNALeu is released. Similarly these enzymes, when tested with eight ATP analogs, cannot be distinguished. For both enzymes six ATP analogs are neither substrates nor inhibitors. Two analogs are substrates with identical kinetic parameters. The mitochondrial wild-type
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
is different from the cytoplasmic enzyme, as particularly exhibited by aminoacylating Escherichia coli tRNALeu but not N. crassa cytoplasmic tRNALeu. The presence of traces of the analogous mitochondrial mutant enzyme could be demonstrated. Therefore, the difference between wild-type and mutant leu-5 does not rest in the catalytic properties of the cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetases. Differences in other properties of these enzymes are not excluded. In contrast the activity of the mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
of the mutant is approximately 1% of that of the wild-type enzyme.
...
PMID:Biochemical comparison of the Neurospora crassa wild type and the temperature-sensitive and leucine-auxotroph mutant leu-5. Purification of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetases and comparison of the enzymatic activities and the degradation patterns. 294 98
The cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetases were purified from a wild-type Neurospora crassa and from a temperature-sensitive leucine-auxotroph (leu-5) mutant. A detailed steady-state kinetic study of the aminoacylation of the tRNALeu from N. crassa by the purified synthetases was carried out. These enzymes need preincubation with dithioerythritol and spermine before the assay in order to become fully active. The Kappm value for leucine was lowered by high ATP concentrations and correspondingly the Kappm,ATP was lowered by high leucine concentrations. The Kappm,Leu was lowered by high pH, a pK value of 6.7 (at 30 degrees C) was calculated for the ionizable group affecting the Km. At the concentrations of 2 mM ATP, 20 microM leucine, 0.3 microM tRNALeu, and pH 7 the apparent Km values were Kappm,ATP = 1.3 mM, Kappm,Leu = 49 microM and Kappm,tRNA = 0.15 microM. No essentially altered cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetase was produced by the temperature-sensitive mutant strain when kept at 37 degrees C. In none of these experiments could we find any difference between the wild-type enzyme and the enzyme from the mutant strain (whether grown at permissive temperature, 28 degrees C, or grown at permissive temperature for 24 h followed by growth at 37 degrees C). We therefore think that the small difference in the Km value for leucine of the wild-type and mutant enzyme, established in some earlier investigations, is not due to a difference in the kinetic properties of the enzyme molecules but to an external influence. The almost total lack of the mitochondrial
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
in the mutant strain besides the leucine autotrophy remains the only difference between the wild-type and mutant strains.
...
PMID:Biochemical comparison of the Neurospora crassa wild-type and the temperature-sensitive leucine-auxotroph mutant leu-5. Detailed kinetic comparison of the leucyl-tRNA synthetases. 294 99
We describe the cloning and the DNA sequence of an amber suppressor allele of the Escherichia coli leuX (supP) gene. The suppressor allele codes for a tRNA with anticodon CUA, presumably derived by a single base change from a CAA anticodon. The mature coding sequence of the leuX gene is preceded by a putative Pribnow box sequence (TATAAT) and followed by a termination signal. The sequence of the leuX-coded tRNA is compared with the sequences of the four remaining tRNALeu isoacceptors of E. coli and with two tRNALeu species from bacteriophage T4 and T5. The conserved nucleotides in these seven tRNAs recognized by E. coli
leucyl-tRNA synthetase
are located mainly in the aminoacyl stem and in the D-stem/loop region.
...
PMID:Leucine tRNA family of Escherichia coli: nucleotide sequence of the supP(Am) suppressor gene. 298 2
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