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Pyrophosphatases :: isolation & purification

Latest Paper:

Physiol Plant. 2009 Apr ;135 (4):365-78 19340986 (P,S,G,E,B)
Lehrstuhl für Mikrobielle Genetik, Universität Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
CoA is required for many synthetic and degradative reactions in intermediary metabolism and is the principal acyl carrier in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. CoA is synthesized in five steps from pantothenate, and recently, the CoA biosynthetic genes of Arabidopsis have all been identified and characterized. Here, we demonstrate the biochemical and physiological characterization of a pyrophosphatase from Arabidopsis thaliana, called AtCoAse (locus tag At5g45940), cleaving CoA to 4'-phosphopantetheine and 3',5'-adenosine-diphosphate in the presence of Mg2+/Mn2+ ions. The CoA cleaving enzyme isa member of the Nudix hydrolases, pyrophosphatases that hydrolyze nucleoside diphosphates, already described as CoAse and now further characterized in detail by us. Mutagenesis of residues of the so-called Nudix and NuCoA motifs drastically reduced the hydrolase activity. AtCoAse is not absolute specific for CoA, and in the presence of Mn2+ ions, a minor hydrolyzing activity was observed with NADH as substrate. The AtCoAse expression is ubiquitous, strongly in flower and unaffected by abiotic stress. The immunohistochemical localization indicates that the AtCoAse protein is observed in the cytoplasm of distinct cells types from different heterotrophic Arabidopsis tissues, mainly restricted to the vascular elements of the root and shoot and in flower and developing embryo. Transgenic Arabidopsis plants, with increased AtCoAse expression, show altered growth rates and development, expanding their live cycle far away from the wild-type.

Most cited papers:

J Biol Chem. 1994 Dec 2;269 (48):30260-7 7982936 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:111
Department of Physiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455.
Cyclic nucleotides such as cAMP and cGMP are second messengers subserving various signaling pathways. Cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), a recently discovered member of the family, is derived from NAD+ and is a mediator of Ca2+ mobilization in various cellular systems. The synthesis and degradation of cADPR are, respectively, catalyzed by ADP-ribosyl cyclase and cADPR hydrolase. CD38, a differentiation antigen of B lymphocytes, has recently been shown to be a bifunctional enzyme catalyzing both the formation and hydrolysis of cADPR. The overall reaction catalyzed by CD38 is the formation of ADP-ribose and nicotinamide from NAD+, identical to that catalyzed by NADase. The difficulties in detecting the formation of cADPR have led to frequent identification of CD38 as a classical NADase. In this study, we show that both ADP-ribosyl cyclase and CD38, but not NADase, can cyclize nicotinamide guanine dinucleotide (NGD+) producing a new nucleotide. Analyses by high performance liquid chromatography and mass spectroscopy indicate the product is cyclic GDP-ribose (cGDPR) with a structure similar to cADPR except with guanine replacing adenine. Compared to cADPR, cGDPR is a more stable compound showing 2.8 times more resistance to heat-induced hydrolysis. These results are consistent with a catalytic scheme for CD38 where the cyclization of the substrate precedes the hydrolytic reaction. Spectroscopic analyses show that cGDPR is fluorescent and has an absorption spectrum different from both NGD+ and GDPR, providing a very convenient way for monitoring its enzymatic formation. The use of NGD+ as substrate for assaying the cyclization reaction was found to be applicable to pure enzymes as well as crude tissue extracts making it a useful diagnostic tool for distinguishing CD38-like enzymes from degradative NADases.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997 May 13;94 (10):5012-7 9144181 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:42
Department of Biochemistry, Ohio State University, 484 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
Bacteriophage T7 DNA helicase is a ring-shaped hexamer that catalyzes duplex DNA unwinding using dTTP hydrolysis as an energy source. Of the six potential nucleotide binding sites on the hexamer, we have found that three are noncatalytic sites and three are catalytic sites. The noncatalytic sites bind nucleotides with a high affinity, but dTTPs bound to these sites do not dissociate or hydrolyze through many dTTPase turnovers at the catalytic sites. The catalytic sites show strong cooperativity which leads to sequential binding and hydrolysis of dTTP. The elucidated dTTPase mechanism of the catalytic sites of T7 helicase is remarkably similar to the binding change mechanism of the ATP synthase. Based on the similarity, a general mechanism for hexameric helicases is proposed. In this mechanism, an F1-ATPase-like rotational movement around the single-stranded DNA, which is bound through the central hole of the hexamer, is proposed to lead to unidirectional translocation along single-stranded DNA and duplex DNA unwinding.
Mol Cell Biol. 1999 Nov ;19 (11):7712-23 10523660 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:40
Laboratory of Molecular Parasitology, Department of Pathobiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61802, USA.
Inorganic pyrophosphate promoted the acidification of an intracellular compartment in permeabilized procyclic trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma brucei, as measured by acridine orange uptake. The proton gradient generated by pyrophosphate was collapsed by addition of nigericin or NH(4)Cl. Pyrophosphate-driven proton translocation was stimulated by potassium ions and inhibited by KF, by the pyrophosphate analogs imidodiphosphate and aminomethylenediphosphonate (AMDP), and by the thiol reagent p-hydroxymercuribenzoate at concentrations similar to those that inhibit the plant vacuolar H(+)-pyrophosphatase (PPase). The proton translocation activity had a pH optimum around 7.5 and was partially inhibited by 7-chloro-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (10 microM) and unaffected by bafilomycin A(1)(40 nM), concanamycin A (5 nM), sodium o-vanadate (500 microM), oligomycin (1 microM), N-ethylmaleimide (100 microM), and KNO(3). AMDP-sensitive pyrophosphate hydrolysis was detected in both procyclic and bloodstream trypomastigotes. Measurements of acridine orange uptake in permeabilized procyclic trypomastigotes in the presence of different substrates and inhibitors suggested the presence of H(+)-ATPase, H(+)-PPase, and (ADP-dependent) H(+)/Na(+) antiport activity in the same compartment. Separation of bloodstream and procyclic trypomastigote extracts on Percoll gradients yielded fractions that contained H(+)-PPase (both stages) and H(+)/Na(+) exchanger (procyclics) activities but lacked markers for mitochondria, glycosomes, and lysosomes. The organelles in these fractions were identified by electron microscopy and X-ray microanalysis as acidocalcisomes (electron-dense vacuoles). These results provide further evidence for the unique nature of acidocalcisomes in comparison with other, previously described, organelles.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1997 Sep 4;1348 (1-2):45-55 9370315 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:39
G M Carman
Department of Food Science, Cook College, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Rutgers University, New Brunswick 08903, USA. carman@aesop.rutgers.edu
Phosphatidate phosphatase plays a major role in the synthesis of phospholipids and triacylglycerols in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Membrane- and cytosolic-associated forms of the enzyme have been isolated and characterized. These enzymes are Mg2+-dependent and N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive. The expression of a membrane-associated form of phosphatidate phosphatase is regulated by growth phase and inositol supplementation, whereas enzyme activity is regulated by lipids, nucleotides, and by phosphorylation. Phosphatidate phosphatase is coordinately regulated with other phospholipid biosynthetic enzymes including phosphatidylserine synthase. Diacylglycerol pyrophosphate phosphatase is a novel enzyme of phospholipid metabolism which is present in S. cerevisiae, Escherichia coli, and mammalian cells. This enzyme possesses a phosphatidate phosphatase activity which is Mg2+-independent and N-ethylmaleimide-insensitive and is distinct from the Mg2+-dependent and N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive form of phosphatidate phosphatase. Genes encoding for diacylglycerol pyrophosphate phosphatase have been isolated from S. cerevisiae and E. coli. The deduced protein sequences of these genes show homology to the sequence of the mouse PAP2 (Mg2+-independent and N-ethylmaleimide-insensitive phosphatidate phosphatase) protein, especially in a novel phosphatase sequence motif. Rat liver PAP2 displays diacylglycerol pyrophosphate phosphatase activity.
J Biol Chem. 1998 Feb 6;273 (6):3192-7 9452430 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:34
Department of Biology and the McCollum-Pratt Institute, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA.
orf186, a new member of the Nudix hydrolase family of genes, has been cloned and expressed, and the protein has been purified and identified as an enzyme highly specific for compounds of ADP. Its three major substrates are adenosine(5')triphospho(5')adenosine, ADP-ribose, and NADH, all implicated in a variety of cellular regulatory processes, supporting the notion that the function of the Nudix hydrolases is to monitor the concentrations of reactive nucleoside diphosphate derivatives and to help modulate their accumulation during cellular metabolism.
J Biol Chem. 1980 Jun 25;255 (12):5807-15 6103896 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:33
J Elovson
As a preliminary to a study of the biogenesis of individual plasma membrane glycoproteins, the marker enzyme nucleotide pyrophosphatase (NPPase) and a major rat liver plasma membrane sialoprotein, subsequently found to be identical with the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV), were purified 10,000- and 2,000-fold, respectively, from rat liver. Both were amphipathic proteins which formed defined micellar complexes with detergents and aggregated in their absence. Gel filtration, sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate showed the Triton X-100 complex of NPPase to contain a single 150,000-dalton peptide, while that of DPP IV was composed of two 120,000-dalton subunits; each complex also contained about 150,000-dalton Triton X-100. Trypsin cleaved the detergent complexes with release of major hydrophilic fragments which no longer bound detergent micelles; the accompanying change in peptide size was small for NPPase and undetectable for DPP IV, which also retained the dimer structure of its native form. DPP IV was the only major glycoprotein in rat liver plasma membrane which bound strongly to wheat germ agglutinin. Monospecific rabbit antibodies against NPPase and DPP IV precipitated the antigens without affecting their enzymatic activities.
J Bacteriol. 1979 Mar ;137 (3):1100-10 374338 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:33
We have isolated five specialized transducing lambda bacteriophages (lambda dpyrE spoT) carrying the pyrE and spoT genes of Escherichia coli. A fragment from one of these phages was used as the source of DNA to clone the spoT and pyrE genes on a multicopy plasmid, pBR322. Insertions and deletions in this plasmid were obtained. These plasmids were used to transform a minicell-producing strain, and the gene products synthesized were determined. Our experiments demonstrate that the spoT and pyrE genes are separated by about 4 magadaltons and suggest that the spoT gene product is a protein whose molecular weight is 80,000. The strain in which the spoT+ allele is carried on a plasmid produced nine times more spoT gene activity than a normal spoT+ strain when assayed in crude extracts. This strain was used to prepare partially purified gene product, guanosine 5'-diphosphate, 3'-diphosphate pyrophosphatase. The enzyme has the following characteristics.(i) It hydrolyzes pyrophosphate from the 5'-pyrophosphate of guanosine 5'-diphosphate, 3'-diphosphate, yielding GDP and pyrophosphate.(ii) Its activity is strongly stimulated by Mn2+ and slightly stimulated by salt.(iii) Its activity is inhibited by uncharged tRNA. There are also two additional activities in the cell extract which degrade guanosine in 5'-diphosphate, 3'-diphosphate in vitro but which are not specified by the spoT gene.
J Biol Chem. 1979 Apr 25;254 (8):2897-901 285077 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:32
M V Williams, Y Cheng
A new fast assay procedure for increasing deoxyuridine triphosphate nucleotidohydrolase activity was developed. With this assay procedure, this enzyme derived from blast cells of patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia was purified at least 1218-fold. The molecular weight was estimated by gel filtration to be 43,000. The enzyme exhibited optimal activity over a pH range of 7 to 8 and the activation energy was estimated to be 6.5 kcal/mol at pH 7.5. While the enzyme had activity in the absence of added divalent cations, the activity could be inhibited by EDTA but not by phenanthroline. The inhibition caused by EDTA could be reversed by Mg2+ or Zn2+. The enzyme had maximal activity in the presence of Mg2+(40 muM) and Mg2+(4 mM) stabilized the enzyme at 37 degrees C. Cupric ion (0.5 mM) inhibited (50%) enzyme activity in the presence or absence of Mg2+. The substrate for the enzyme was dUTP and the apparent Km was 1 muM. No other deoxyribonucleoside or ribonucleoside triphosphate served as a substrate for the enzyme.
Genes Dev. 1998 Oct 15;12 (20):3206-16 9784495 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:30
Laboratory of Molecular Cell Biology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4255 USA.
The Drosophila nucleosome remodeling factor (NURF) is a protein complex consisting of four polypeptides that facilitates the perturbation of chromatin structure in vitro in an ATP-dependent manner. The 140-kD NURF subunit, imitation switch (ISWI), is related to the SWI2/SNF2 ATPase. Another subunit, NURF-55, is a 55-kD WD repeat protein homologous to the human retinoblastoma-associated protein RbAp48. Here, we report the cloning and characterization of the smallest (38 kD) component of NURF. NURF-38 is strikingly homologous to known inorganic pyrophosphatases. Both recombinant NURF-38 alone and the purified NURF complex are shown to have inorganic pyrophosphatase activity. Inhibition of the pyrophosphatase activity of NURF with sodium fluoride has no significant effect on chromatin remodeling, indicating that these two activities may be biochemically uncoupled. Our results suggest that NURF-38 may serve a structural or regulatory role in the complex. Alternatively, because accumulation of unhydrolyzed pyrophosphate during nucleotide incorporation inhibits polymerization, NURF may also have been adapted to deliver pyrophosphatase to chromatin to assist in replication or transcription by efficient removal of the inhibitory metabolite.

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