Cloning and sequence analysis of DNA complementary to porcine cerebral messenger RNA encoding the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor predict the complete amino-acid sequence of this protein. Expression of the complementary DNA produced functional muscarinic receptor in Xenopus oocytes. The muscarinic receptor is homologous with the beta-adrenergic receptor and rhodopsin in both amino-acid sequence and suggested transmembrane topography.
A group of membrane-associated guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G-proteins) are essential for transducing signals generated at cell-surface receptors into changes in cellular function and metabolism. These proteins are a complex of three subunits designated alpha, beta and gamma. The alpha-subunit is responsible for binding guanine nucleotides and seems to be characteristic of each protein. Transducin, a member of this protein family, mediates visual transduction by coupling the signal of photolysed rhodopsin with activation of a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase. We have now cloned and sequenced the complementary DNA encoding the alpha-subunit of bovine retinal transducin and from this we have deduced the complete amino-acid sequence. The transducin alpha-subunit shares several homologous amino-acid sequences with ras gene products. The homologous segments correspond mostly to the regions thought to be involved in the guanine nucleotide binding and GTPase activity of ras proteins and to the ADP-ribosylation sites of the transducin alpha-subunit.
The complete amino acid sequence of the porcine cardiac muscarinic acetylcholine receptor has been deduced by cloning and sequencing the cDNA. The tissue location of the RNA hybridizing with the cDNA suggests that this muscarinic receptor species represents the M2 subtype.
SUMO-1 is a ubiquitin-like protein functioning as an important reversible protein modifier. To date there is no report on a SUMO-1 hydrolase/isopeptidase catalyzing the release of SUMO-1 from its precursor or SUMO-1-ligated proteins in mammalian tissues. Here we found multiple activities that cleave the SUMO-1 moiety from two model substrates, 125 I-SUMO-1-␣NH-HSTVG-SMHISPPEPESEEEEEHYC and/or GST-SUMO-1-35 SRanGAP1 conjugate, in bovine brain extracts. Of them, a major SUMO-1 C-terminal hydrolase had been partially purified by successive chromatographic operations. The enzyme had the ability to cleave SUMO-1 not only from its precursor but also from a SUMO-1-ligated RanGAP1 but did not exhibit any significant cleavage of the ubiquitin-and NEDD8-precursor. The activity of SUMO-1 hydrolase was almost completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, but not by phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, EDTA, and ubiquitin-aldehyde known as a potent inhibitor of deubiquitinylating enzymes. Intriguingly, the apparent molecular mass of the isolated SUMO-1 hydrolase was approximately 30 kDa, which is significantly smaller than the recently identified yeast Smt3/SUMO-1 specific protease Ulp1. These results indicate that there are multiple SUMO-1 hydrolase/isopeptidases in mammalian cells and that the 30-kDa small SUMO-1 hydrolase plays a central role in processing of the SUMO-1-precursor.
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