The family of toxin-related ecto-ADP-ribosyltransferases in humans and the mouse

被引:147
作者
Glowacki, G
Braren, R
Firner, K
Nissen, M
Kühl, M
Reche, P
Bazan, F
Cetkovic-Cvrlje, M
Leiter, E
Haag, F
Koch-Nolte, F
机构
[1] Univ Hamburg Hosp, Inst Immunol, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany
[2] DNAX Res Inst Mol Biol, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
[3] Jackson Lab, Bar Harbor, ME 04609 USA
关键词
ADP-ribosylation; recombinant proteins; PSI-BLAST; orthologous genes; paralogous gene; cross-species PCR; database searches;
D O I
10.1110/ps.0200602
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
ADP-ribosyltransferases including toxins secreted by Vibrio cholera, Pseudomonas aerurginosa, and other pathogenic bacteria inactivate the function of human target proteins by attaching ADP-ribose onto a critical amino acid residue. Cross-species polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and database mining identified the orthologs of these ADP-ribosylating toxins in humans and the mouse. The human genome contains four functional toxin-related ADP-ribosyltransferase genes (ARTs) and two related intron-containing pseudogenes; the mouse has six functional orthologs. The human and mouse ART genes map to chromosomal regions with conserved link-a e syntery. The individual ART genes reveal highly restricted expression patterns, which are largely conserved in humans and the mouse. We confirmed the predicted extracellular location of the ART proteins by expressing recombinant ARTS in insect cells. Two human and four mouse ARTS contain the active site motif (R-S-EXE) typical of arginine-specific ADP-ribosyltransferases and exhibit the predicted enzyme activities. Two other human ARTS and their murine orthologues deviate in the active site motif and lack detectable enzyme activity. Conceivably, these ARTS may have acquired a new specificity or function. The position-sensitive iterative database search program PSI-BLAST connected the mammalian ARTS with most known bacterial ADP-ribosylating toxins. In contrast, no related open reading frames occur in the four completed genomes of lower eucaryotes (yeast, worm, fly, and mustard weed). Interestingly, these organisms also lack genes for ADP-ribosylhydrolases, the enzymes that reverse protein ADP-ribosylation. This suggests that the two enzyme families that catalyze reversible mono-ADP-ribosylation either were lost from the genomes of these nonchordata eucaryotes or were subject to horizontal gene transfer between kingdoms.
引用
收藏
页码:1657 / 1670
页数:14
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