Literature DB >> 8195186

Control of cationic amino acid transport and retroviral receptor functions in a membrane protein family.

M P Kavanaugh1, H Wang, Z Zhang, W Zhang, Y N Wu, E Dechant, R A North, D Kabat.   

Abstract

A partial cDNA sequence indicated that the T lymphocyte early-activation gene (Tea) encodes a protein related to the dual-function ecotropic retrovirus receptor/cationic amino acid transporter (ecoR/CAT1), and RNA blots suggested highest Tea expression in T lymphocytes and liver (MacLeod, C.L., Finley, K., Kakuda, D. Kozad, C.A., and Wilkinson, M.F. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 7, 3663-3674). The sequence of full-length Tea cDNA from liver (3683 bases) predicts a 657-amino-acid protein (CAT2 alpha) with 12-14 transmembrane domains. A long (515 base) region with six initiation codons and termination codons precedes the translation start codon. The liver Tea cDNA is identical to Tea cDNA from T lymphocytes (encoding CAT2 beta) with the exception of an apparent alternatively spliced sequence encoding a hydrophilic loop of 43 amino acids. The liver-specific sequence contains unique consensus sites for phosphorylation by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and by protein kinase C. Injection of Xenopus oocytes with CAT2 alpha or CAT2 beta messenger RNA resulted in expression of Na(+)-independent cationic amino acid transport that was detected by current measurements under voltage-clamp. Although the amino acid sequences of the isoforms differ in only 21 of 43 residues with the majority of substitutions being conservative, the apparent affinity of CAT2 beta for arginine uptake was 70-fold higher than the CAT2 alpha isoform (Km 38 microM versus 2.7 mM). Neither isoform functioned as a receptor for ecotropic or amphotropic murine retroviruses. However, CAT1-CAT2 chimeric proteins that contain the first three putative extracellular loops of ecoR/CAT1 functioned as ecotropic receptors despite a diminished capacity to bind the viral envelope glycoprotein. The chimeric proteins also functioned as basic amino acid transporters with substrate affinities corresponding to the CAT2 isoform constituting the carboxyl-terminal portion. These results demonstrate that domains of these transporters can function in chimeric combinations to control viral receptor and transport functions.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8195186

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  21 in total

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Authors:  E I Closs; J-P Boissel; A Habermeier; A Rotmann
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6.  Endogenous retrovirus particles and their repercussion effects on the growth behaviour of continuous hybridoma cultivation processes.

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7.  Regulation of CAT: Cationic amino acid transporter gene expression.

Authors:  C L Macleod; D K Kakuda
Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 3.520

8.  CATs, a family of three distinct mammalian cationic amino acid transporters.

Authors:  E I Closs
Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 3.520

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10.  A putative thiamine transport protein is a receptor for feline leukemia virus subgroup A.

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