The first primary structure for a sorbitol dehydrogenase has been determined by analysis of the tetrameric enzyme from sheep liver. The ['4C]carboxymethylated protein was cleaved with CNBr and proteolytic enzymes. Peptides were purified by several methods, often utilizing exclusion chromatography for pre-fractionation and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography for final purification. Different methods of sequence analysis complemented each other, mainly the manual dimethylaminoazobenzene isothiocyanate method and the use of liquidphase sequencer degradations.All eight major CNBr fragments were purified and form the basis of the work. Three minor CNBr fragments derived from an acid cleavage and from a partly resistant Met-Thr bond were also obtained, as well as evidence for a contaminating homologous polypeptide. Most of the tryptic peptides were purified, including all with methionine residues, thus overlapping the CNBr fragments. Combined, all data permit the deduction of a 354-residue amino acid sequence for the polypeptide chain of sorbitol dehydrogenase. The N terminus is acyl-blocked, the C terminus is formed by a proline residue, tryptophan is the least common residue (two, at positions 50 and 301) and there are 10 cysteine residues, including the residue previously shown to be especially reactive (at postion 43). Similarities to 'long' alcohol dehydrogenases have functional implications.Liver sorbitol dehydrogenase was recently found to be similar to zinc-containing alcohol dehydrogenases [I], constituting an apparent structural intermediate [2] between the distantly related alcohol dehydrogenases from yeast and horse liver [3,4]. The results suggested wide and parallel evolutionary relationships between groups of dehydrogenases [5] and emphasized relationships in a metabolic pathway from glucose [6]. The complete primary structure of a sorbitol dehydrogenase is necessary for further correlations.In the present work, the amino acid sequence of the entire protein chain of sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase was determined. The work was centered on purification and analysis of all CNBr fragments, which were overlapped by identification of the methionine-containing tryptic peptides. Throughout, [14C]carboxymethylation of cysteine residues was used to obtain suitable markers in several peptides of all digests. A 354-residue primary structure for the protein chain was deduced. Evidence was obtained for the occurrence of a minor contaminating component which appeared distantly homologous to sorbitol dehydrogenase in one region. Otherwise the preparations are homogeneous, suggesting all subunits in the tetramer to be identical. Results to support the amino acid sequence are given in this study, together with aspects of methodological interest. Further correlations in a protein family of zinc-containing alcohol/polyol dehydrogenases are given in an accompanying paper [7].
Submammalian alcohol dehydrogenase structures can be used to evaluate the origins and functions of the different types of the mammalian enzyme. Two avian forms were recently reported, and we now define the major amphibian alcohol dehydrogenase. The enzyme from the liver of the Green frog Rana perezi was purified, carboxymethylated, and submitted to amino acid sequence determination by peptide analysis of six different digests. The protein has a 375-residue subunit and is a class I alcohol dehydrogenase, bridging the gap toward the original separation of the classes that are observable in the human alcohol dehydrogenase system. In relation to the human class I enzyme, the amphibian protein has residue identities exactly halfway (68%) between those for the corresponding avian enzyme (74%) and the human class III enzyme (62%), suggesting an origin of the alcohol dehydrogenase classes very early in or close to the evolution of the vertebrate line. This conclusion suggests that these enzyme classes are more universal among animals than previously realized and constitutes the first real assessment of the origin of the duplications leading to the alcohol dehydrogenase classes. Functionally, the amphibian enzyme exhibits properties typical for class I but has an unusually low Km for ethanol (0.09 mM) and Ki for pyrazole (0.15 microM) at pH 10.0. This correlates with a strictly hydrophobic substrate pocket and one amino acid difference toward the human class I enzyme at the inner part of the pocket. Coenzyme binding is highly similar, while subunit-interacting residues, as in other alcohol dehydrogenases, exhibit several differences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
A class IV-type, gastric alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) has been purified from frog (Rana perezi) tissues, meaning detection of this enzyme type also in nonmammalian vertebrates. However, the protein is unique among vertebrate ADHs thus far characterized in having preference for NADP ؉ rather than NAD ؉ . Similarly, it deviates structurally from other class IV ADHs and has a phylogenetic tree position outside that of the conventional class IV cluster. The NADP ؉ preference is structurally correlated with a replacement of Asp-223 of all other vertebrate ADHs with Gly-223, largely directing the coenzyme specificity. This residue replacement is expected metabolically to correlate with a change of the reaction direction catalyzed, from preferential alcohol oxidation to preferential aldehyde reduction. This is of importance in cellular growth regulation through retinoic acid formed from retinol/retinal precursors because the enzyme is highly efficient in retinal reduction (k cat /K m ؍ 3.4⅐10 4 mM ؊1 min ؊1 ). Remaining enzymatic details are also particular but resemble those of the human class I/class IV enzymes. However, overall structural relationships are distant (58 -60% residue identity), and residues at substrate binding and coenzyme binding positions are fairly deviant, reflecting the formation of the new activity. The results are concluded to represent early events in the duplicatory origin of the class IV line or of a separate, class IV-type line. In both cases, the novel enzyme illustrates enzymogenesis of classes in the ADH system. The early origin (with tetrapods), the activity (with retinoids), and the specific location of this enzyme (gastric, like the gastric and epithelial location of the human class IV enzyme) suggest important functions of the class IV ADH type in vertebrates.
The structure of a mammalian class IV alcohol dehydrogenase has been determined by peptide analysis of the protein isolated from rat stomach. The structure indicates that the enzyme constitutes a separate alcohol dehydrogenase class, in agreement with the distinct enzymatic properties; the class IV enzyme is somewhat closer to class I (the "classical" liver alcohol dehydrogenase; -68% residue identities) than to the other classes (II, m, and V; -60% residue identities), suggesting that class IV might have originated through duplication of an early vertebrate class I gene. The activity of the class IV protein toward ethanol is even higher than that of the classical liver enzyme. Both Km and kalt values are high, the latter being the highest of any class characterized so far. Structurally, these properties are correlated with replacements at the active site, affecting both substrate and coenzyme binding. In particular, Ala-294 (instead of valine) results in increased space in the middle section of the substrate cleft, Gly-47 (instead of a basic residue) results in decreased charge interactions with the coenzyme pyrophosphate, and Tyr-363 (instead of a basic residue) may also affect coenzyme binding. In combination, these exchanges are compatible with a promotion of the off dissociation and an increased turnover rate. In contrast, residues at the inner part of the substrate cleft are bulky, accounting for low activity toward secondary alcohols and cyclohexanol. Exchanges at positions 259-261 involve minor shifts in glycine residues at a reverse turn in the coenzyme-binding fold. Clearly, class IV is distinct in structure, ethanol turnover, stomach expression, and possible emergence from class I.
Six GSH transferases with neutral/acidic isoelectric points were purified from the cytosol fraction of rat liver. Four transferases are class Mu enzymes related to the previously characterized GSH transferases 3-3, 4-4 and 6-6, as judged by structural and enzymic properties. Two additional GSH transferases are distinguished by high specific activities with 4-hydroxyalk-2-enals, toxic products of lipid peroxidation. The most abundant of these two enzymes, GSH transferase 8-8, a class Alpha enzyme, has earlier been identified in rat lung and kidney. The amino acid sequence of subunit 8 was determined and showed a typical class Alpha GSH transferase structure including an N-acetylated N-terminal methionine residue.
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