The nucleotide-dependent tetramerization of purified native URA7-encoded CTP synthetase (EC 6.3.4.2, UTP: ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)) from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was characterized. CTP synthetase existed as a dimer in the absence of ATP and UTP. In the presence of saturating concentrations of ATP and UTP, the CTP synthetase protein existed as a tetramer. Increasing concentrations of ATP and UTP caused a dosedependent conversion of the dimeric species to a tetramer. The kinetics of enzyme tetramerization correlates with the kinetics of enzyme activity. The tetramerization of CTP synthetase was dependent on UTP and Mg 2؉ ions. ATP facilitated the UTP-dependent tetramerization of CTP synthetase by a mechanism that involved the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of UTP catalyzed by the enzyme. The glutaminase reaction that is catalyzed by the enzyme was not required for enzyme tetramerization. CTP, a potent inhibitor of CTP synthetase activity, did not inhibit the ATP/UTP-dependent tetramerization of the enzyme. Phosphorylation of the purified native CTP synthetase with protein kinase A and protein kinase C facilitated the nucleotide-dependent tetramerization. Dephosphorylation of native CTP synthetase with alkaline phosphatase prevented the nucleotide-dependent tetramerization of the enzyme. This correlated with the inactivation of CTP synthetase activity. Rephosphorylation of the dephosphorylated enzyme with protein kinase A and protein kinase C resulted in a partial restoration of the nucleotidedependent tetramerization of the enzyme. This tetramerization correlated with the partial restoration of CTP synthetase activity. Taken together, these results indicated that enzyme tetramerization was required for CTP synthetase activity and that enzyme phosphorylation played an important role in the tetramerization and regulation of the enzyme.The nucleotide CTP is required for the synthesis of RNA, DNA, phospholipids, and sialoglycoproteins (1). CTP is synthesized from UTP via the reaction catalyzed by the cytosolicassociated enzyme CTP synthetase (EC 6.3.4.2, UTP: ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)) (2, 3) (Fig. 1). In eukaryotic cells, the regulation of CTP synthetase activity plays an important role in the balance of nucleotide pools (4 -9) and in the synthesis of membrane phospholipids (10, 11). Moreover, unregulated CTP synthetase activity is a common property of leukemic cells (12) and rapidly growing tumors found in liver (13), colon (14), and lung (15). Overall, these observations emphasize the importance of studies to understand the regulation of CTP synthetase activity.Our laboratory utilizes the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model eukaryote to study the regulation of CTP synthetase activity. The yeast enzyme is encoded by the URA7 (7) and URA8 (8) genes. The URA7-(9) and URA8-encoded (16) CTP synthetases have been purified to apparent homogeneity and characterized with respect to their enzymological and kinetic properties. These CTP synthetases exhibit positive cooperative kinetics with respect to UT...
CTP synthetase [EC 6.3.4.2, UTP:ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)] from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae catalyzes the ATP-dependent transfer of the amide nitrogen from glutamine to the C-4 position of UTP to form CTP. In this work, we demonstrated that CTP synthetase utilized dUTP as a substrate to synthesize dCTP. The dUTP-dependent activity was linear with time and with enzyme concentration. Maximum dUTP-dependent activity was dependent on MgCl(2) (4 mM) and GTP (K(a) = 14 microM) at a pH optimum of 8.0. The apparent K(m) values for dUTP, ATP, and glutamine were 0.18, 0.25, and 0.41 mM, respectively. dUTP promoted the tetramerization of CTP synthetase, and the extent of enzyme tetramerization correlated with dUTP-dependent activity. dCTP was a poor inhibitor of dUTP-dependent activity, whereas CTP was a potent inhibitor of this activity. The enzyme catalyzed the synthesis of dCTP and CTP when dUTP and UTP were used as substrates together. CTP was the major product synthesized when dUTP and UTP were present at saturating concentrations. When dUTP and UTP were present at concentrations near their K(m) values, the synthesis of dCTP increased relative to that of CTP. The synthesis of dCTP was favored over the synthesis of CTP when UTP was present at a concentration near its K(m) value and dUTP was varied from subsaturating to saturating concentrations. These data suggested that the dUTP-dependent synthesis of dCTP by CTP synthetase activity may be physiologically relevant.
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