7 research outputs found

    Characterization of intermediates in the process of plant peroxisomal protein import.

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    A hybrid protein in which the immunoglobulin G-binding domain of Staphylococcus aureus protein A replaced the N-terminal 43 amino acids of glycolate oxidase (a peroxisomal protein) was affinity purified after expression in Escherichia coli and used to study peroxisomal protein import in vitro. The fusion protein, which co-purifies with the bacterial chaperones dnaK and groEL, binds to glyoxysomes and is partially translocated in an ATP-dependent reaction which is independent of eukaryotic cytosol. Both binding and translocation are dependent upon the amount of glyoxysomes present. The partially translocated species has a transmembrane location and is extractable by salt, indicating that it is held in the membrane by ionic interactions. In the absence of ATP, the fusion protein binds to the surface of the glyoxysomes and competes the binding of authentic matrix proteins. The surface-bound protein can be chased to the transmembrane species upon the addition of ATP. These results indicate that the surface-bound form is a true translocation intermediate. The availability of this fusion protein in milligram quantities offers the possibility to use the intermediate formed in the absence of ATP and the transmembrane species to probe interactions with the peroxisome import machinery

    Cysteine Methylation Controls Radical Generation in the Cfr Radical AdoMet rRNA Methyltransferase

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    The 'radical S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet)' enzyme Cfr methylates adenosine 2503 of the 23S rRNA in the peptidyltransferase centre (P-site) of the bacterial ribosome. This modification protects host bacteria, notably methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), from numerous antibiotics, including agents (e.g. linezolid, retapamulin) that were developed to treat such organisms. Cfr contains a single [4Fe-4S] cluster that binds two separate molecules of AdoMet during the reaction cycle. These are used sequentially to first methylate a cysteine residue, Cys338; and subsequently generate an oxidative radical intermediate that facilitates methyl transfer to the unreactive C8 (and/or C2) carbon centres of adenosine 2503. How the Cfr active site, with its single [4Fe-4S] cluster, catalyses these two distinct activities that each utilise AdoMet as a substrate remains to be established. Here, we use absorbance and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to investigate the interactions of AdoMet with the [4Fe-4S] clusters of wild-type Cfr and a Cys338 Ala mutant, which is unable to accept a methyl group. Cfr binds AdoMet with high (∼ 10 µM) affinity notwithstanding the absence of the RNA cosubstrate. In wild-type Cfr, where Cys338 is methylated, AdoMet binding leads to rapid oxidation of the [4Fe-4S] cluster and production of 5'-deoxyadenosine (DOA). In contrast, while Cys338 Ala Cfr binds AdoMet with equivalent affinity, oxidation of the [4Fe-4S] cluster is not observed. Our results indicate that the presence of a methyl group on Cfr Cys338 is a key determinant of the activity of the enzyme towards AdoMet, thus enabling a single active site to support two distinct modes of AdoMet cleavage

    The Photorespiratory Pathway of Leaf Peroxisomes

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