6 research outputs found

    Molecular analysis of the peroxisomal targeting of guinea-pig alanine Glyoxylate aminotransferase

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN030616 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Intracellular localization of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase overexpressed in an endothelial cell line

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    Methylarginines are endogenous inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and have been implicated in the regulation of the nitric oxide pathway in health and disease. Cellular concentrations of free methylarginines are determined in part by the activity of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH). There are two isoforms of DDAH which have distinct tissue distributions with some relationship to NOS isoforms. We have determined the intracellular localization of both DDAH isoforms by overexpression of epitope-tagged DDAH in an immortalized endothelial cell line. Immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and immunoblotting indicate that both isoforms are predominantly cytosolic with no specific association with organelles or the plasma membrane. These data suggest that the key role for DDAH may be to ensure that under normal conditions the levels of methylarginines are kept low throughout the whole cell

    Peroxisomal import of human alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase requires ancillary targeting information remote from its C terminus

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    Although human alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGT) is imported into peroxisomes by a Pex5p-dependent pathway, the properties of its C-terminal tripeptide (KKL) are unlike those of any other type 1 peroxisomal targeting sequence (PTS1). We have previously suggested that AGT might possess ancillary targeting information that enables its unusual PTS1 to work. In this study, we have attempted to locate this information and to determine whether or not it is a characteristic of all vertebrate AGTs. Using the two-hybrid system, we show that human AGT interacts with human Pex5p in mammalian cells, but not yeast cells. Using (immuno)fluorescence microscopic analysis of the distribution of various constructs expressed in COS cells, we show the following. 1) The putative ancillary peroxisomal targeting information (PTS1A) in human AGT is located entirely within the smaller C-terminal structural domain of 110 amino acids, with the sequence between Val-324 and Ile-345 being the most likely candidate region. 2) The PTS1A is present in all mammalian AGTs studied (human, rat, guinea pig, rabbit, and cat), but not amphibian AGT (Xenopus). 3) The PTS1A is necessary for peroxisomal import of human, rabbit, and cat AGTs, but not rat and guinea pig AGTs. We speculate that the internal PTS1A of human AGT works in concert with the C-terminal PTS1 by interacting with Pex5p indirectly with the aid of a yet-to-be-identified mammal-specific adaptor molecule. This interaction might reshape the tetratricopeptide repeat domain allosterically, enabling it to accept KKL as a functional PTS1

    Fungal hydrogenosomes contain mitochondrial heat-shock proteins

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    At least three groups of anaerobic eukaryotes lack mitochondria and instead contain hydrogenosomes, peculiar organelles that make energy and excrete hydrogen. Published data indicate that ciliate and trichomonad hydrogenosomes share common ancestry with mitochondria, but the evolutionary origins of fungal hydrogenosomes have been controversial. We have now isolated full-length genes for heat shock proteins 60 and 70 from the anaerobic fungus Neocallimastix patriciarum, which phylogenetic analyses reveal share common ancestry with mitochondrial orthologues. In aerobic organisms these proteins function in mitochondrial import and protein folding. Homologous antibodies demonstrated the localization of both proteins to fungal hydrogenosomes. Moreover, both sequences contain amino-terminal extensions that in heterologous targeting experiments were shown to be necessary and sufficient to locate both proteins and green fluorescent protein to the mitochondria of mammalian cells. This finding, that fungal hydrogenosomes use mitochondrial targeting signals to import two proteins of mitochondrial ancestry that play key roles in aerobic mitochondria, provides further strong evidence that the fungal organelle is also of mitochondrial ancestry. The extraordinary capacity of eukaryotes to repeatedly evolve hydrogen-producing organelles apparently reflects a general ability to modify the biochemistry of the mitochondrial compartment

    Metabolism of Oxalate in Humans: A Potential Role Kynurenine Aminotransferase/Glutamine Transaminase/Cysteine Conjugate Betalyase Plays in Hyperoxaluria

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