| Literature DB >> 1458593 |
R Amthauer1, K Kodukula, S Udenfriend.
Abstract
Placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) has been used as a model for studying the biosynthesis of the phosphatidylinositol-glycan (PI-G)-protein linkage in intact cells and in cell-free systems. However, for the study of processing in cell-free systems, a small protein devoid of glycosylation sites is preferable. A PLAP-derived cDNA was engineered that codes for a nascent protein (mini-PLAP) of 28 kDa in which the NH2- and COOH-termini are retained but most of the interior of PLAP is deleted. In vitro translation of mini-PLAP mRNA in the presence of rough microsomal membranes yields mature PI-G-tailed mini-PLAP. Processing of nascent mutant proteins occurs only when a small amino acid is located at the site of cleavage and PI-G attachment (omega site). Mutations adjacent and COOH-terminal to the omega site have revealed that the omega + 1 site is promiscuous in its requirements but that only glycine and alanine are effective at the omega + 2 site. Rough microsomal membranes from T cells deficient in PI-G biosynthesis do not support processing of mini-PLAP; addition of exogenous PI-G restores activity. Translocation of the proprotein, most likely requiring ATP and GTP, precedes COOH-terminal processing.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1458593
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Chem ISSN: 0009-9147 Impact factor: 8.327