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Publication : Guinea pig and bovine zeta-crystallins have distinct functional characteristics highlighting replacements in otherwise similar structures.

First Author  Rao PV Year  1997
Journal  Biochemistry Volume  36
Issue  18 Pages  5353-62
PubMed ID  9154917 Mgi Jnum  J:40210
Mgi Id  MGI:87552 Doi  10.1021/bi9622985
Citation  Rao PV, et al. (1997) Guinea pig and bovine zeta-crystallins have distinct functional characteristics highlighting replacements in otherwise similar structures. Biochemistry 36(18):5353-62
abstractText  zeta-Crystallin, a major cytosolic protein of guinea pig lens, has been characterized as an NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.5.5) [Rao et al. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 97-103]. A bovine lens homolog with 83% sequence identity was found to have very different functional characteristics. While the bovine lens zeta-crystallin exhibits similar physicochemical properties, such as molecular weight, hydropathy profile, and predicted secondary structure, and exhibits strong immunological cross-reactivity with the guinea pig and human lens zeta-crystallins, it shows minimal quinone oxidoreductase activity. On the other hand, bovine lens zeta-crystallin, but not guinea pig zeta-crystallin, showed a strong binding affinity to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) that could be competed with NADPH, the specific cofactor of zeta-crystallin. NADH and dextran sulfate did not affect this characteristic of bovine zeta-crystallin and the enzyme showed no binding affinity for the heparin-Ultragel A4R. Two-dimensional electrophoresis of bovine lens zeta-crystallin showed a distinct pattern of posttranslational charge modification as compared to the guinea pig protein. Alignment of eight zeta-crystallin sequences, and computer modelling of the bovine and human forms based on the crystallographically analyzed Escherichia coli form, suggest that if loss of a functional residue accounts for the lowered catalytic activity of the bovine protein, Tyr 52 of the E. coli enzyme, and the equivalent Tyr present in all known mammalian forms except the bovine, is the likely candidate. In the bovine form this tyrosine is replaced by histidine.
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