The ppa gene for inorganic pyrophosphatase is essential for the growth of Escherichia coli. A recombinant with a chromosomal ppa::Kanr lesion and a temperature-sensitive replicon with a ppa+ gene showed a temperature-sensitive growth phenotype, and a mutant with the sole ppa+ gene under control of the lac promoter showed inducer-dependent growth. When the lacp-ppa mutant was subcultured without inducer, the pyrophosphatase level decreased, the PPi level increased, and growth stopped. Cellular PPi reached 16 mM about 6 h after growth arrest without loss of cell viability.
Lysyl-tRNA synthetase is a member of the class II aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and catalyses the specific aminoacylation of tRNA(Lys). The crystal structure of the constitutive lysyl-tRNA synthetase (LysS) from Escherichia coli has been determined to 2.7 A resolution in the unliganded form and in a complex with the lysine substrate. A comparison between the unliganded and lysine-bound structures reveals major conformational changes upon lysine binding. The lysine substrate is involved in a network of hydrogen bonds. Two of these interactions, one between the alpha-amino group and the carbonyl oxygen of Gly 216 and the other between the carboxylate group and the side chain of Arg 262, trigger a subtle and complicated reorganization of the active site, involving the ordering of two loops (residues 215-217 and 444-455), a change in conformation of residues 393-409, and a rotation of a 4-helix bundle domain (located between motif 2 and 3) by 10 degrees. The result of these changes is a closing up of the active site upon lysine binding.
The role of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in the in vivo synthesis of adenylylated bis(5'-nucleosidyl) tetraphosphates (Ap4N) was studied by measuring the concentration of these nucleotides in Escherichia coli cells overproducing lysyl-, methionyl-phenylalanyl-, or valyl-tRNA synthetase. Overproduction of each aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (20-to 80-fold) was accompanied by a significant increase in intracellular Ap4N concentration (3-to 14-fold). As expected, nonadenylylated bis(5'-nucleosidyl) tetraphosphate concentration was not changed by synthetase overproduction. It was also verified that overproduction of an inactive methionyl-tRNA synthetase mutant did not modify Ap4N concentration. Ap4N accumulation during heat shock occurred in all strains studied.
Diadenosine-5',5'''-P1,P4-tetraphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase (diadenosinetetraphosphatase) from Escherichia coli strain EM20031 has been purified 5000-fold from 4 kg of wet cells. It produces 2.4 mg of homogeneous enzyme with a yield of 3.1%. The enzyme activity in the reaction of ADP production from Ap4A is 250 s-1 [37 degrees C, 50 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, pH 7.8, 50 microM Ap4A, 0.5 microM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and 50 microM CoCl2]. The enzyme is a single polypeptide chain of Mr 33K, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis and high-performance gel permeation chromatography. Dinucleoside polyphosphates are substrates provided they contain more than two phosphates (Ap4A, Ap4G, Ap4C, Gp4G, Ap3A, Ap3G, Ap3C, Gp3G, Gp3C, Ap5A, Ap6A, and dAp4dA are substrates; Ap2A, NAD, and NADP are not). Among the products, a nucleoside diphosphate is always formed. ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP, dATP, dGTP, dCTP, and dTTP are not substrates; Ap4 is. Addition of Co2+ (50 microM) to the reaction buffer containing 0.5 microM EDTA strongly stimulates Ap4A hydrolysis (stimulation 2500-fold). With 50 microM MnCl2, the stimulation is 900-fold. Ca2+, Fe2+, and Mg2+ have no effect. The Km for Ap4A is 22 microM with Co2+ and 12 microM with Mn2+. The added metals have similar effects on the hydrolysis of Ap3A into ADP + AMP. However, in the latter case, the stimulation by Co2+ is small, and the maximum stimulation brought by Mn2+ is 9 times that brought by Co2+. Exposure of the enzyme to Zn2+ (5 microM), prior to the assay or within the reaction mixture containing Co2+, causes a marked inhibition of Ap4A hydrolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
In Escherichia coli, lysyl-tRNA synthetase activity is encoded by either a constitutive lysS gene or an inducible one, lysU. The two corresponding enzymes could be purified at homogeneity from a delta lysU and a delta lysS strain, respectively. Comparison of the pure enzymes, LysS and LysU, indicates that, in the presence of saturating substrates, LysS is about twice more active than LysU in the ATP-PPi exchange as well as in the tRNALys aminoacylation reaction. Moreover, the dissociation constant of the LysU-lysine complex is 8-fold smaller than that of the LysS-lysine complex. In agreement with this difference, the activity of LysU is less sensitive than that of LysS to the addition of cadaverine, a decarboxylation product of lysine and a competitive inhibitor of lysine binding to its synthetase. This observation points to a possible useful role of LysU, under physiological conditions causing cadaverine accumulation in the bacterium. Remarkably, these conditions also induce lysU expression. Homogeneous LysU and LysS were also compared in Ap4A synthesis. LysU is only 2-fold more active than LysS in the production of this dinucleotide. This makes unlikely that the heat-inducible LysU species could be preferentially involved in the accumulation of Ap4A inside stressed Escherichia coli cells. This conclusion could be strengthened by determining the concentrations of Ap4N (N = A, C, G, or U) in a delta lysU as well as in a lysU+ strain, before and after a 1-h temperature shift at 48 degrees C. The measured concentration values were the same in both strains.
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are capable of converting 5'-ATP into 5',5'-diadenosine tetraphosphate. The reaction reflects the reversal of enzyme-bound aminoacyl-adenylate by ATP instead of PPi. In the case of a few prokaryotic as well as eukaryotic aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, the initial rate of diadenosine tetraphosphate synthesis can be greatly enhanced upon adding small amounts of zinc. This observation enables us to establish a relationship between diadenosine tetraphosphate, a nucleotide possibly involved in controlling cell proliferation, and a metallic cofactor, which is believed to play a role in tumour growth.
Starting from homogenates of sheep liver, extensive co-purification of seven aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases to high specific activities was achieved by a three-step procedure involving fractional precipitation by poly(ethy1ene glycol) 6000, gel filtration on 6 % agarose and chromatography on Sepharose-bound tRNA.The purified material is composed of nine major protein components as revealed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and has an apparent molecular weight of about lo6 estimated by gel filtration on 6 % agarose. It contains aminoacyltRNA synthetase activities specific for methionine, lysine, arginine, leucine, isoleucine, glutamine and glutamic acid. The rigorous co-elution of these seven enzymes at each chromatographic step suggests, but does not conclusively prove, that they are physically associated within the same complex.The enzyme composition of the high-molecular-weight complex purified from sheep liver is identical to that of the complex previously isolated from human placenta by Denney in 1977 (Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 183,[156][157][158][159][160][161][162][163][164][165][166][167].
When cultures of skeletal muscle cells of the chick embryo are subjected to repetitive, electrical stimulation, the contractions increase the amount of protein produced by these cells. The increase is greater for contractile proteins such as myosin heavy chain than for total cellular protein. This demonstrates that in a culture system of skeletal muscle cells that have differentiated in the absence of innervation, one can elicit the protein synthetic response associated with skeletal muscle hypertrophy in vivo.
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