research article
A new class of phosphotransferases phosphorylated on an aspartate residue in an amino-terminal DXDX(T/V) motif.
Abstract
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- info:eu-repo/semantics/article
- Amino Acid Sequence
- Aspartic Acid
- Bacterial Proteins
- Borohydrides
- Conserved Sequence
- Databases, Factual
- Humans
- Hydrolases
- Lactobacillus
- Mass Spectrometry
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
- Peptide Fragments
- Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases
- Phosphorylation
- Phosphotransferases
- Phosphotransferases (Phosphomutases)
- Recombinant Proteins
- Sequence Alignment
- Trypsin