343 research outputs found

    The 2006 Human Liver Proteome Project (HLPP) Workshops

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    In 2006, scientists participating to the Human Liver Proteome Project (HLPP) launched by the Human Proteome Organisation (HUPO) convened on two occasions to present and discuss their progress. A workshop was held over two days in May in Bilbao, Spain, and a brief 3-hour meeting was held in October in conjunction with the 5th HUPO World Congress in Long Beach, California. Highlights included progress on the construction of the human normal liver proteome expression profile and of subcellular proteomes, establishment of a liver ORFeome bank and of a liver antibody bank, identifications of protein-protein interaction maps in the liver, application of a robust strategy for quantitative proteomics and the characterization of fatty liver diseases using mouse models

    Folding of dimeric methionine adenosyltransferase III: identification of two folding intermediates

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    Methionine adenosyl transferase (MAT) is an essential enzyme that synthesizes AdoMet. The liver-specific MAT isoform, MAT III, is a homodimer of a 43.7-kDa subunit that organizes in three nonsequential alpha-beta domains. Although MAT III structure has been recently resolved, little is known about its folding mechanism. Equilibrium unfolding and refolding of MAT III, and the monomeric mutant R265H, have been monitored using different physical parameters. Tryptophanyl fluorescence showed a three-state folding mechanism. The first unfolding step was a folding/association process as indicated by its dependence on protein concentration. The monomeric folding intermediate produced was the predominant species between 1.5 and 3 m urea. It had a relatively compact conformation with tryptophan residues and hydrophobic surfaces occluded from the solvent, although its N-terminal region may be very unstructured. The second unfolding step monitored the denaturation of the intermediate. Refolding of the intermediate showed first order kinetics, indicating the presence of a kinetic intermediate within the folding/association transition. Its presence was confirmed by measuring the 1,8-anilinonaphtalene-8-sulfonic acid binding in the presence of tripolyphosphate. We propose that the folding rate-limiting step is the formation of an intermediate, probably a structured monomer with exposed hydrophobic surfaces, that rapidly associates to form dimeric MAT III

    Hysteretic behavior of methionine adenosyltransferase III. Methionine switches between two conformations of the enzyme with different specific activity

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    Methionine adenosyltransferase III (MATIII) catalyzes S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthesis and, as part of its reaction mechanism, it also hydrolyzes tripolyphosphate. Tripolyphosphatase activity was linear over time and had a slightly sigmoidal behavior with an affinity in the low micromolar range. On the contrary, AdoMet synthetase activity showed a lag phase that was independent of protein concentration but decreased at increasing substrate concentrations. Tripolyphosphatase activity, which appeared to be slower than AdoMet synthesis, was stimulated by preincubation with ATP and methionine so that it matched AdoMet synthetase activity. This stimulation process, which is probably the origin of the lag phase, represents the slow transition between two conformations of the enzyme that could be distinguished by their different tripolyphosphatase activity and sensitivity to S-nitrosylation. Tripolyphosphatase activity appeared to be the rate-determining reaction in AdoMet synthesis and the one inhibited by S-nitrosylation. The methionine concentration necessary to obtain half-maximal stimulation was in the range of physiological methionine fluctuations. Moreover, stimulation of MAT activity by methionine was demonstrated in vivo. We propose that the hysteretic behavior of MATIII, in which methionine induces the transition to a higher specific activity conformation, can be considered as an adaptation to the specific functional requirements of the liver

    Energy integration of high pressure processes using gas turbines and internal combustion engines

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    High pressure processes (e.g. sustainable hydrothermal manufacturing of nanomaterials [1], supercritical water oxidation (SCWO) [2] and biomass hydrolysis [3]) require high operational conditions. Water at high pressure and temperature conditions improves kinetic, selectivity and efficiency of these processes but entail high-energy operational expenditure. Use of fluids at high operational conditions makes necessary to supply heat of high quality, as well as power. Because of this, it is necessary to study reasonable solutions for energy recovery and integration in order to achieve the energy self-sufficiency of the process and, if possible, the net power production and with a viable efficiency [4]. In this work, the energy integration of supercritical water oxidation process is being studied. One solution that has been recently proposed is the integration of supercritical processes with energy production in cogeneration or Combined Heat and Power (CHP) cycles. Cogeneration is defined as the simultaneous production of various forms of energy – being the most frequent heat and shaft work, i.e., power – from one power source. The implementation of CHP processes is often joined to the use of gas turbines (GT) [3, 5]. SCWO process produces a high pressure reactor outlet stream, being these mainly composed of water, nitrogen and carbon dioxide and can be thermally integrated if there is a necessity of heat in other parts of the process. At the same time, it is possible to use this effluent to implement a steam injection in the gas turbine, which will improve the efficiency of the global process. This mechanism links the process of SCWO with the cogeneration process (Fig. 1). Steam injection is a technique which can increase the ability of a plant to generate extra power without burning extra fuel and requiring moderate capital investment. In its most basic form, steam injection works by increasing the global mass flow rate through the gas turbine without increasing the mass of air compressed. Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract

    Biochemical basis for the dominant inheritance of hypermethioninemia associated with the R264H mutation of the MAT1A gene. A monomeric methionine adenosyltransferase with tripolyphosphatase activity

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    Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT) catalyzes the synthesis of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet), the main alkylating agent in living cells. Additionally, in the liver, MAT is also responsible for up to 50% of methionine catabolism. Humans with mutations in the gene MAT1A, the gene that encodes the catalytic subunit of MAT I and III, have decreased MAT activity in liver, which results in a persistent hypermethioninemia without homocystinuria. The hypermethioninemic phenotype associated with these mutations is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. The only exception is the dominant mild hypermethioninemia associated with a G-A transition at nucleotide 791 of exon VII. This change yields a MAT1A-encoded subunit in which arginine 264 is replaced by histidine. Our results indicate that in the homologous rat enzyme, replacement of the equivalent arginine 265 by histidine (R265H) results in a monomeric MAT with only 0.37% of the AdoMet synthetic activity. However the tripolyphosphatase activity is similar to that found in the wild type (WT) MAT and is inhibited by PP(i). Our in vivo studies demonstrate that the R265H MAT I/III mutant associates with the WT subunit resulting in a dimeric R265H-WT MAT unable to synthesize AdoMet. Tripolyphosphatase activity is maintained in the hybrid MAT, but is not stimulated by methionine and ATP, indicating a deficient binding of the substrates. Our data indicate that the active site for tripolyphosphatase activity is functionally active in the monomeric R265H MAT I/III mutant. Moreover, our results provide a molecular mechanism that might explain the dominant inheritance of the hypermethioninemia associated with the R264H mutation of human MAT I/III

    Methionine Adenosyltransferase Purified from Rat Liver

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    Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT III), also known as S-adeno-sylmethionine synthetase, was purified from rat liver and crystallized. X-ray diffraction data were collected using a microfocused synchrotron radiation. The crystallization conditions were extensively optimized but final crystal size was never larger than 303 pm3. Due to their small size crystals had no detectable diffraction on either rotating anode source or the Deresbury SRS beamline 9.6 (GB). Finally, four data sets were collected on Grenoble ESRF (France) undulator microfocus beamline ID13 to resolution of 3.2-3.6 Ă…. Crystals belong to the cubic space group F432 with cell dimension a = 246 Ă…. Attempts are under way to solve the structure by molecular replacement, using recombinant MAT I rat liver structure as a search model
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