| Literature DB >> 9918669 |
K F Geoghegan1, H B Dixon, P J Rosner, L R Hoth, A J Lanzetti, K A Borzilleri, E S Marr, L H Pezzullo, L B Martin, P K LeMotte, A S McColl, A V Kamath, J G Stroh.
Abstract
Several proteins expressed in Escherichia coli with the N-terminus Gly-Ser-Ser-[His]6- consisted partly (up to 20%) of material with 178 Da of excess mass, sometimes accompanied by a smaller fraction with an excess 258 Da. The preponderance of unmodified material excluded mutation, and the extra masses were attributed to posttranslational modifications. As both types of modified protein were N-terminally blocked, the alpha-amino group was modified in each case. Phosphatase treatment converted +258-Da protein into +178-Da protein. The modified His tags were isolated, and the mass of the +178-Da modification estimated as 178.06 +/- 0.02 Da by tandem mass spectrometry. As the main modification remained at +178 Da in 15N-substituted protein, it was deemed nitrogen-free and possibly carbohydrate-like. Limited periodate oxidations suggested that the +258-Da modification was acylation with a 6-phosphohexonic acid, and that the +178-Da modification resulted from its dephosphorylation. NMR spectra of cell-derived +178-Da His tag and synthetic alpha-N-d-gluconoyl-His tag were identical. Together, these results suggested that the +258-Da modification was addition of a 6-phosphogluconoyl group. A plausible mechanism was acylation by 6-phosphoglucono-1,5-lactone, produced from glucose 6-phosphate by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49). Supporting this, treating a His-tagged protein with excess d-glucono-1,5-lactone gave only N-terminal gluconoylation. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 9918669 DOI: 10.1006/abio.1998.2990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Biochem ISSN: 0003-2697 Impact factor: 3.365