When incubated with their substrates, human phosphomannomutase and L-3-phosphoserine phosphatase are known to form phosphoenzymes with chemical characteristics of an acyl-phosphate. The phosphorylated residue in phosphomannomutase has now been identified by mass spectrometry after reduction of the phosphoenzyme with tritiated borohydride and trypsin digestion. It is the first aspartate in a conserved DVDGT motif. Replacement of either aspartate of this motif by asparagine or glutamate resulted in complete inactivation of the enzyme. The same mutations performed in the DXDST motif of L-3-phosphoserine phosphatase also resulted in complete inactivation of the enzyme, except for the replacement of the second aspartate by glutamate, which reduced the activity by only about 40%. This suggests that the first aspartate of the motif is also the phosphorylated residue in L-3-phosphoserine phosphatase. Data banks contained seven other phosphomutases or phosphatases sharing a similar, totally conserved DXDX(T/V) motif at their amino terminus. One of these (beta-phosphoglucomutase) is shown to form a phosphoenzyme with the characteristics of an acyl-phosphate. In conclusion, phosphomannomutase and L-3-phosphoserine phosphatase belong to a new phosphotransferase family with an amino-terminal DXDX(T/V) motif that serves as an intermediate phosphoryl acceptor.
Human tissues contain two types of phosphomannomutase, PMM1 and PMM2. Mutations in the PMM2 gene are responsible for the most common form of carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome [Matthijs, Schollen, Pardon, Veiga-da-Cunha, Jaeken, Cassiman and Van Schaftingen (1997) Nat. Genet. 19, 88-92]. The protein encoded by this gene has now been produced in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, and its properties have been compared with those of recombinant human PMM1. PMM2 converts mannose 1-phosphate into mannose 6-phosphate about 20 times more rapidly than glucose 1-phosphate to glucose 6-phosphate, whereas PMM1 displays identical Vmax values with both substrates. The Ka values for both mannose 1,6-bisphosphate and glucose 1,6-bisphosphate are significantly lower in the case of PMM2 than in the case of PMM1. Like PMM1, PMM2 forms a phosphoenzyme with the chemical characteristics of an acyl-phosphate. PMM1 and PMM2 hydrolyse different hexose bisphosphates (glucose 1,6-bisphosphate, mannose 1,6-bisphosphate, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate) at maximal rates of approximately 3.5 and 0.3% of their PMM activity, respectively. Fructose 1,6-bisphosphate does not activate PMM2 but causes a time-dependent stimulation of PMM1 due to the progressive formation of mannose 1,6-bisphosphate from fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and mannose 1-phosphate. Experiments with specific antibodies, kinetic studies and Northern blots indicated that PMM2 is the only detectable isozyme in most rat tissues except brain and lung, where PMM1 accounts for about 66 and 13% of the total activities, respectively.
Carbohydrate‐deficient glycoprotein syndrome type I (CDGI) is most often due to phosphomannomutase deficiency; paradoxically, the human phosphomannomutase gene PMM1 is located on chromosome 22, whereas the CDGI locus is on chromosome 16. We show that phosphomannomutases present in rat or human liver share with homogeneous recombinant PMM1 several kinetic properties and the ability to form an alkali‐ and NH2OH‐sensitive phosphoenzyme with a subunit mass of ≈30 000 M
r. However, they have a higher affinity for the activator mannose‐1,6‐bisphosphate than PMM1 and are not recognized by anti‐PMM1 antibodies, indicating that they represent a related but different isozyme. Phosphomannomutases belong to a novel mutase family in which the active residue is a phosphoaspartyl or a phosphoglutamyl.
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