Adenylyl cyclase Rv1264 from Mycobacterium tuberculosis has an autoinhibitory N-terminal domain

被引:53
作者
Linder, JU [1 ]
Schultz, A [1 ]
Schultz, JE [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tubingen, Fak Chem & Pharm, Abt Pharmazeut Biochem, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany
关键词
All Open Access; Hybrid Gold;
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M200235200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Mycobacterium tuberculosis contains 15 class III adenylyl cyclase genes. The gene Rv1264 is predicted to be composed of two distinct protein modules. The C terminus seems to code for a catalytic domain belonging to a subfamily of adenylyl. cyclase isozymes mostly found in Gram-positive bacteria. The expressed protein was shown to function as a homodimeric adenylyl cyclase (1 mumol of cAMP.mg(-1).min(-1)). In analogy to the structure of the mammalian adenylyl cyclase catalyst, six amino acids were targeted by point mutations and found to be essential for catalysis. The N-terminal region represents a novel protein domain, the occurrence of which is restricted to several adenylyl cyclases present in Gram-positive bacteria. The purified full-length enzyme was 300-fold less active than the catalytic domain alone. Thus, the N-terminal domain appeared to be autoinhibitory. The N-terminal domain contains three prominent polar amino acid residues (Asp(107), Arg(132), and Arg(191)) that are invariant in all seven sequences of this domain currently available. Mutation of Asp(107) to Ala relaxed the inhibition and resulted in a 6-fold increase in activity of the Rv1264 holoenzyme, thus supporting the role of this domain as a potential novel regulator of adenylyl cyclase activity.
引用
收藏
页码:15271 / 15276
页数:6
相关论文
共 16 条
[1]   Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs [J].
Altschul, SF ;
Madden, TL ;
Schaffer, AA ;
Zhang, JH ;
Zhang, Z ;
Miller, W ;
Lipman, DJ .
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1997, 25 (17) :3389-3402
[2]  
BARZU O, 1994, PROG NUCLEIC ACID RE, V49, P241
[3]  
DANCHIN A, 1993, FEMS MICROBIOL LETT, V114, P145, DOI 10.1016/0378-1097(93)90511-Y
[4]   Adenylyl cyclase Rv1625c of Mycobacterium tuberculosis:: a progenitor of mammalian adenylyl cyclases [J].
Guo, YL ;
Seebacher, T ;
Kurz, U ;
Linder, JU ;
Schultz, JE .
EMBO JOURNAL, 2001, 20 (14) :3667-3675
[5]   Functional classification of cNMP-binding proteins and nucleotide cyclases with implications for novel regulatory pathways in Mycobacterium tuberculosis [J].
McCue, LA ;
McDonough, KA ;
Lawrence, CE .
GENOME RESEARCH, 2000, 10 (02) :204-219
[6]   A PYRUVATE-STIMULATED ADENYLATE-CYCLASE HAS A SEQUENCE RELATED TO THE FES/FPS ONCOGENES AND TO EUKARYOTIC CYCLASES [J].
PETERS, EP ;
WILDERSPIN, AF ;
WOOD, SP ;
ZVELEBIL, MJJM ;
SEZER, O ;
DANCHIN, A .
MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 1991, 5 (05) :1175-1181
[7]   Eukaryotic-like adenylyl cyclases in Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv -: Cloning and characterization [J].
Reddy, SK ;
Kamireddi, M ;
Dhanireddy, K ;
Young, L ;
Davis, A ;
Reddy, PT .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2001, 276 (37) :35141-35149
[8]   HIGHLY SENSITIVE ADENYLATE CYCLASE ASSAY [J].
SALOMON, Y ;
LONDOS, C ;
RODBELL, M .
ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY, 1974, 58 (02) :541-548
[9]   IDENTIFICATION OF COMMON MOLECULAR SUBSEQUENCES [J].
SMITH, TF ;
WATERMAN, MS .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1981, 147 (01) :195-197
[10]   Exchange of substrate and inhibitor specificities between adenylyl and guanylyl cyclases [J].
Sunahara, RK ;
Beuve, A ;
Tesmer, JJG ;
Sprang, SR ;
Garbers, DL ;
Gilman, AG .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1998, 273 (26) :16332-16338