| Literature DB >> 8626552 |
A Lepier1, R Gräf, M Azuma, H Merzendorfer, W R Harvey, H Wieczorek.
Abstract
A prominent 16-kDa protein copurifies with the V-ATPase isolated from both posterior midgut and Malpighian tubules of Manduca sexta larvae and thus was believed to represent a V-ATPase subunit. [14C]N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide labeling and its position on SDS-electrophoresis gels revealed that this protein was different from the 17-kDa proteolipid. A cDNA clone encoding a highly hydrophilic protein with a calculated molecular mass of 13,692 Da was obtained by immunoscreening. Monospecific antibodies, affinity-purified to the 13-kDa recombinant protein expressed in Escherichia coli, specifically recognized the 16-kDa protein of the purified V-ATPase, confirming that a cDNA encoding this protein had been cloned. In vitro translation of the cRNA showed that the cloned 13-kDa subunit behaved like a 16-kDa protein on SDS-electrophoresis gels. The cloned protein showed 37% amino acid sequence identity to the 13-kDa V-ATPase subunit Vma10p recently cloned from yeast and some similarity to subunit b of bacterial F-ATPases. In contrast to the Vma10p protein, which behaved like a V0 subunit, the M. sexta 13-kDa protein behaved like a V1 subunit, since it could be stripped from the membrane by treatment with the chaotropic salt KI and by cold inactivation. When KI dissociated V-ATPase subunits were reassociated by dialysis that removed the KI, a soluble, 450-kDa complex of the M. sexta V-ATPase could be purified by gel chromatography. This V1 complex consisted of subunits A, B, E, and the 13-kDa subunit, confirming that the cloned protein is a new V-ATPase subunit and a member of the peripheral V1 complex of the V-ATPase. We designate this new V1 component subunit G.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8626552 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.271.14.8502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157