Expression of human fibroblast growth factor 2 mRNA is post-transcriptionally controlled by a unique destabilizing element present in the 3'-untranslated region between alternative polyadenylation sites. (33/2141)

Fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) belongs to a family of 18 genes coding for either mitogenic differentiating factors or oncogenic proteins, the expression of which must be tightly controlled. We looked for regulatory elements in the 5823-nucleotide-long 3'-untranslated region of the FGF-2 mRNA that contains eight potential alternative polyadenylation sites. Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction revealed that poly(A) site utilization was cell type-dependent, with the eighth poly(A) site being used (95%) in primary human skin fibroblasts, whereas proximal sites were used in the transformed cell lines studied here. We used a cell transfection approach with synthetic reporter mRNAs to localize a destabilizing element between the first and second poly(A) sites. Although AU-rich, the FGF-2-destabilizing element had unique features: it involved a 122-nucleotide direct repeat, with both elements of the repeat being required for the destabilizing activity. These data show that short stable FGF-2 mRNAs are present in transformed cells, whereas skin fibroblasts contain mostly long unstable mRNAs, suggesting that FGF-2 mRNA stability cannot be regulated in transformed cells. The results also provide evidence of a multilevel post-transcriptional control of FGF-2 expression; such a stringent control prevents FGF-2 overexpression and permits its expression to be enhanced only in relevant physiological situations.  (+info)

Amplification of the cyclic AMP response to forskolin in pheochromocytoma PC12 cells through adenosine A(2A) purinoceptors. (34/2141)

In this study, we present evidence on the ability of endogenous adenosine to modulate adenylyl cyclase activity in intact PC12 cells. The adenosine receptor antagonists PD 115199, xanthine amine congener, 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine, 8-(p-sulfophenyl)theophylline, and 3,7-dimethyl-1-propargylxanthine inhibited 10 microM forskolin-induced cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation, with IC(50) values of 2.76 +/- 1.16 nM, 17.4 +/- 1.08 nM, 443 +/- 1. 03 nM, 2.00 +/- 1.01 microM, and 2.25 +/- 1.05 microM, respectively. Inhibition by 2.5 nM PD 115199 was only partially reversed by increasing forskolin concentrations up to 100 microM. The addition of PD 115199 with or 60 min after forskolin caused a comparable inhibition of forskolin effect over the next hour. Both exogenous adenosine (0.1 microM) and its precursor, AMP (10 and 100 microM), significantly enhanced forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation, whereas inosine was ineffective. Forskolin activity was also potentiated by the hydrolysis-resistant adenosine receptor agonists 5'-N-ethylcarboxamido adenosine and CGS 21680 (8.9- and 12.2-fold increase, respectively). Adenosine deaminase (1 U/ml) and 8-SPT (25 microM), which nearly abolished the response to 1 microM adenosine, also reduced cAMP accumulation caused by AMP (-78 and -54%, respectively). These results demonstrate that in PC12 cells, activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin is highly dependent on the occupancy of A(2A) adenosine receptors and that AMP potentially contributes to the amplification of forskolin response.  (+info)

DNA ligase III is recruited to DNA strand breaks by a zinc finger motif homologous to that of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Identification of two functionally distinct DNA binding regions within DNA ligase III. (35/2141)

Mammalian DNA ligases are composed of a conserved catalytic domain flanked by unrelated sequences. At the C-terminal end of the catalytic domain, there is a 16-amino acid sequence, known as the conserved peptide, whose role in the ligation reaction is unknown. Here we show that conserved positively charged residues at the C-terminal end of this motif are required for enzyme-AMP formation. These residues probably interact with the triphosphate tail of ATP, positioning it for nucleophilic attack by the active site lysine. Amino acid residues within the sequence RFPR, which is invariant in the conserved peptide of mammalian DNA ligases, play critical roles in the subsequent nucleotidyl transfer reaction that produces the DNA-adenylate intermediate. DNA binding by the N-terminal zinc finger of DNA ligase III, which is homologous with the two zinc fingers of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, is not required for DNA ligase activity in vitro or in vivo. However, this zinc finger enables DNA ligase III to interact with and ligate nicked DNA at physiological salt concentrations. We suggest that in vivo the DNA ligase III zinc finger may displace poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase from DNA strand breaks, allowing repair to occur.  (+info)

An iso-random Bi Bi mechanism for adenylate kinase. (36/2141)

An iso-random Bi Bi mechanism has been proposed for adenylate kinase. In this mechanism, one of the enzyme forms can bind the substrates MgATP and AMP, whereas the other form can bind the products MgADP and ADP. In a catalytic cycle, the conformational changes of the free enzyme and the ternary complexes are the rate-limiting steps. The AP(5)A inhibition equations derived from this mechanism show theoretically that AP(5)A acts as a competitive inhibitor for the forward reaction and a mixed noncompetitive inhibitor for the backward reaction.  (+info)

The pur7 gene from the puromycin biosynthetic pur cluster of Streptomyces alboniger encodes a nudix hydrolase. (37/2141)

Pur7 is the product of a gene from the puromycin biosynthetic pur cluster of Streptomyces alboniger. It was expressed in Escherichia coli as a recombinant protein fused to a His tag and then was highly purified through a Ni(2+) column. It showed a 3'-amino-3'-dATP pyrophosphohydrolase (nudix) activity which produced 3'-amino-3'-dAMP and pyrophosphate. This is consistent with the presence of a nudix box in its amino acid sequence. As observed with other nudix hydrolases, Pur7 has an alkaline pH optimum and a requirement for Mg(2+). Among a large variety of other nucleotides tested, only 3'-amino-3'-dTTP was a Pur7 substrate, although at lower reaction rates than 3'-amino-3'-dATP. These findings suggest that Pur7 has a high specificity for the 3' amino group at the ribofuranoside moiety of these two substrates. The K(m) and V(max) values for these dATP and dTTP derivatives were 120 microM and 17 microM/min and 3.45 mM and 12.5 microM/min, respectively. Since it is well known that 3'-amino-3'-dATP is a strong inhibitor of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, whereas 3'-amino-3'-dAMP is not, Pur7 appears to be similar to other nudix enzymes in terms of being a housecleaning agent that permits puromycin biosynthesis to proceed through nontoxic intermediates. Finally, the identification of this activity has allowed a revision of the previously proposed puromycin biosynthetic pathway.  (+info)

Insights into editing from an ile-tRNA synthetase structure with tRNAile and mupirocin. (38/2141)

Isoleucyl-transfer RNA (tRNA) synthetase (IleRS) joins Ile to tRNA(Ile) at its synthetic active site and hydrolyzes incorrectly acylated amino acids at its editing active site. The 2.2 angstrom resolution crystal structure of Staphylococcus aureus IleRS complexed with tRNA(Ile) and Mupirocin shows the acceptor strand of the tRNA(Ile) in the continuously stacked, A-form conformation with the 3' terminal nucleotide in the editing active site. To position the 3' terminus in the synthetic active site, the acceptor strand must adopt the hairpinned conformation seen in tRNA(Gln) complexed with its synthetase. The amino acid editing activity of the IleRS may result from the incorrect products shuttling between the synthetic and editing active sites, which is reminiscent of the editing mechanism of DNA polymerases.  (+info)

A histidine thiol 100 kDa, tetrameric acid phosphatase from lentil, Lens esculenta, seeds with the characteristics of protein tyrosine phosphatases. (39/2141)

A non-specific acid phosphatase (APase) hydrolysing L-tyrosine-O-phosphate and 3'-AMP was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from mature lentil seeds with apparent native molecular mass of 100 kDa and subunit molecular mass of 24 kDa. These activities appear to reside on the same protein which shows a single band in native and SDS-PAGE. The pH optimum is 5.5, while the K(m) (mM) and V(max) (micromoles/min/mg protein) for p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP) are 0.7 and 9.2 and for L-tyrosine-O-phosphate 1.4 and 10.1, respectively, at 30 degrees C and for 3'-AMP, 2 and 4.4 at 37 degrees C. The protein also hydrolyses other phosphomonoesters to a lesser extent. L-Tyrosine-O-phosphate, 3'-AMP and pNPP hydrolysis is potently inhibited by micromolar orthovanadate and also to nearly the same extent by sodium fluoride, potassium tartrate and metal ions. Histidine and cysteine are likely to be involved in the catalysis. Thermal inactivation studies indicate that the active site conformations for pNPP and 3'-AMP hydrolytic activities are different. The enzyme shows the characteristics of the animal protein tyrosine phosphatase.  (+info)

Polyadenylation occurs at multiple sites in maize mitochondrial cox2 mRNA and is independent of editing status. (40/2141)

Polyadenylation of nucleus-encoded transcripts has a well-defined role in gene expression. The extent and function of polyadenylation in organelles and prokaryotic systems, however, are less well documented. Recent reports of polyadenylation-mediated RNA destabilization in Escherichia coli and in vascular plant chloroplasts prompted us to look for polyadenylation in plant mitochondria. Here, we report the use of reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction to map multiple polyadenylate addition sites in maize mitochondrial cox2 transcripts. The lack of sequence conservation surrounding these sites suggests that polyadenylation may occur at many 3' termini created by endoribonucleolytic and/or exoribonucleolytic activities, including those activities involved in 3' end maturation. Endogenous transcripts could be efficiently polyadenylated in vitro by using maize mitochondrial lysates with an activity that added AMP more efficiently than GMP. Polyadenylated substrates were tested for stability in maize mitochondrial S100 extracts, and we found that, compared with nonpolyadenylated RNAs, the polyadenylated substrates were less stable. Taken together with the low abundance of polyadenylated RNAs in maize mitochondria, our results are consistent with a degradation-related process. The fact that polyadenylation does not dramatically destabilize plant mitochondrial transcripts, at least in vitro, is in agreement with results obtained for animal mitochondria but differs from those obtained for chloroplasts and E. coli. Because fully edited, partially edited, and unedited transcripts were found among the cloned polyadenylated cox2 cDNAs, we conclude that RNA editing and polyadenylation are independent processes in maize mitochondria.  (+info)