Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.1.1.4 (leucyl-tRNA synthetase)
297 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Altered leucyl-tRNA synthetase from a mammalian cell culture temperature-sensitive mutant, tsHl, was compared with enzyme from normal wild type Chinese hamster ovary cells. The mutant enzyme had a Km for leucine four times larger than that of wild type and enzyme levels 3-10% that of wild type. The presence of tRNA was necessary during in vitro heating of the mutant enzyme to allow expression of thermolability while the presence of tRNA protected wild type enzyme against thermal inactivation. The tsHl enzyme was stable when heated alone or in the presence of tRNA, leucine, and ATP simultaneously. The mutant's enzymes aminoacylated tRNALeu, tRNAVal, and tRNAIle with fidelity in vitro as determined by cochromatography of the amino-acyl-tRNA isoacceptors on RPC-5 reversed phase chromatography. The mutant failed to show any defect other than the direct formation of leucyl tRNALeu by leucyl-tRNA synthetase.
...
PMID:Altered leucyl-transfer RNA synthetase from a mammalian cell culture mutant. 1 33

A procedure for the large-scale isolation of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from E. cole MRE 600 is described: The enzyme was purified about 320-fold to homogeneity by precipitation with cetyl-trimethyl-ammonium bromide, two consecutive chromatographies on DEAE-cellulose and three on hydroxyapatite with an over-all yield of 4%. The molecular weight of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from E. coli MRE 600 was found to be 99 000 daltons. Bindings studies by ultracentrifugation and equilibrium partition showed that the enzyme binds leucine, leucyl-adenylate and tRNA Leu, each in a 1 : 1 stoichiometry. For ATP only a very weak binding to the enzyme could be observed, which did not allow the evaluation of the complex stoichiometry. The presence of ATP was not required for the binding of leucine or tRNA to leucyl-tRNA synthetase from E. coli MRE 600.
...
PMID:Isolation and binding properties of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli MRE 600. 37 93

No analogous nucleoside triphosphate was found which acts as well as ATP in binding to and supporting catalysis of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli MRE 600. However, there are numerous nucleotides which are able to replace ATP, but with lower efficiency. The 6-amino group of the adenine ring and the 2'-hydroxyl group of the ribose ring are essential for binding and catalytic activity. Alterations in the triphosphate moiety of the molecule can cause drastic changes in Km and/or Vmax, whereas alterations of the imidazole ring and substitutions at the 8-position of the adenine ring cause only minor losses of catalytic activity.
...
PMID:ATP-analogues as substrates for the leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli MRE 600. 78 30

The mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (mLRS) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is involved in both mitochondrial protein synthesis and pre-mRNA splicing. We have created mutations in the regions HIGH, GWD and KMSKS, which are involved in ATP-, amino acid- and tRNA-binding respectively, and which have been conserved in the evolution of group I tRNA synthetases. The mutants GRD and NMSKS have no discernible phenotype. The mutants AWD and ARD act as null alleles and lead to the production of 100% cytoplasmic petites. The mutants HIGN, NIGH and KMSNS are unable to grow on glycerol even in the presence of an intronless mitochondrial genome and accumulate petites to a greater extent than the wild-type but less than 40%. Experiments with an imported bI4 maturase indicate that the lesion in these mutations primarily affects the synthetase and not the splicing functions.
...
PMID:In vitro mutagenesis of the mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase of S. cerevisiae reveals residues critical for its in vivo activities. 161 70

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

Inorganic pyrophosphate inhibits the aminoacylation of tRNALeu by the leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Neurospora crassa giving very low Kapp.i, PPi values of 3-20 microM. The inhibition by pyrophosphate, together with earlier kinetic data, suggest a reaction mechanism where leucine, ATP and tRNA are bound to the enzyme in almost random order, and pyrophosphate is dissociated before the rate-limiting step. A kinetic analysis of this mechanism shows that the measured Kapp.i values do not give the real dissociation constant but it is about 0.4 mM. Other dissociation constants are 90 microM for leucine, 2.2 mM for ATP and 1 microM for tRNALeu. At the approximate conditions of the living cell (2 mM ATP, 100 microM leucine and 150 microM PPi) the leucyl-tRNA synthetase is about 85% inhibited by pyrophosphate.
...
PMID:Pyrophosphate-caused inhibition of the aminoacylation of tRNA by the leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Neurospora crassa. 302 54

A simple and practical procedure for the synthesis of P1,P4-di(adenosine 5'-) tetraphosphate from ATP by the catalysis of leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Bacillus stearothermophilus is described. Km for leucine was 6.7 microM and for ATP was 3.3 mM. The reaction yielded not only diadenosine tetraphosphate, but various byproducts such as P1,P3-(diadenosine 5'-) triphosphate, ADP and AMP. By coupling the reaction with an ATP regeneration system by acetate kinase and adenylate kinase with acetylphosphate as a phosphate donor, diadenosine tetraphosphate was prepared as a sole product at a high yield (96%).
...
PMID:Synthesis of P1,P4-di(adenosine 5'-) tetraphosphate by leucyl-tRNA synthetase, coupled with ATP regeneration. 360 15

The structural accessibility of tryptophan residues in leucyl-tRNA synthetase from cow mammary gland has been studied using chemical modifications by N-bromosuccinimide and 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide. The modifications were monitored by UV absorbance and intrinsic fluorescence of the enzyme's tryptophan residues. Under native conditions, at pH 7,8, only two exposed tryptophan residues are modified in each subunit of the dimeric enzyme. Under denaturing conditions, in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride solution, internal tryptophan residues are also modified as a consequence of unfolding of the native tertiary structure of the enzyme. Modifications of tryptophan residues resulted in inactivation of leucyl-tRNA synthetase both in aminoacylation and ATP-PPi exchange reactions. In the specific complex of leucyl-tRNA synthetase with the cognate tRNALeu one of exposed tryptophan residues is protected by tRNALeu and is not modified by the above reagents.
...
PMID:[Chemical modification of tryptophan residues of leucyl tRNA synthetase by N-bromosuccinimide and 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide]. 392 94

1. Leucyl- and threonyl-tRNA synthetases were partially purified up to 100-fold and 30-fold respectively from cotyledons of Aesculus hippocastanum and were largely separated from the other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Valyl-tRNA synthetase was purified 25-fold from cotyledons of Aesculus californica. 2. Some properties are reported for the three enzymes when assayed by the [(32)P]pyrophosphate-ATP exchange technique. 3. beta-(Methylenecyclopropyl)alanine, isoleucine, azaleucine, norleucine and gamma-hydroxynorvaline acted as alternative substrates for the leucyl-tRNA synthetase; the enzyme's affinity for beta-(methylenecyclopropyl)-alanine and for isoleucine was about 80-fold less than that exhibited for leucine. 4. alpha-Cyclopropylglycine and alpha-cyclobutylglycine acted as alternative substrates for the valyl-tRNA synthetase.
...
PMID:Properties and substrate specificity of the leucyl-, the threonyl- and the valyl-transfer-ribonucleic acid synthetases from Aesculus species. 549 5


1 2 3 Next >>