gamma-Glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) was purified from a Pseudomonas sp. strain A14. The purified enzyme was found to be composed of two nonidentical subunits with molecular weights of 39,000 and 22,000 and had a pI of > 8.6. The partial N-terminal amino acid sequences of both subunits and some proteolytic fragments were determined. Using mixed oligonucleotides designed from the partial amino acid sequences as hybridization probes, one cosmid clone which contained the GGT gene was isolated from a Pseudomonas sp. strain A14 cosmid genome library, and the DNA sequence of the GGT gene was determined. The nucleotide sequence and the protein sequence analysis revealed that GGT was synthesized as a precursor protein of 575 amino acids and then processed to mature enzyme, presumably after removal of a signal peptide. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequence of Pseudomonas GGT with published results for Escherichia coli K-12 and rat kidney GGTs shows that the protein sequence of Pseudomonas GGT is 51% and 33% identical to the E. coli and rat GGT sequences, respectively. Higher similarity is observed among the small subunits, which have been thought to have a binding site for the gamma-glutamyl residue. Expression of the cloned Pseudomonas GGT gene in E. coli was subjected to Western blot analysis using antibody raised against the purified GGT. This suggested that processing of the precursor protein to its subunits is temperature-dependent, because the amount of mature GGT protein was increased when the culture was performed at low temperature.
ABSTRACT. Intravascular accumulation of blood cells after brain ischemia-reperfusion can cause obstruction of cerebral blood flow and tissue hypoxia/ischemia as a consequence. In the present study, we examined temporal and topographic changes of tissue hypoxia/ ischemia after occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) for 60 min in rats with immunohistochemical staining for hypoxia (2-nitroimidazole hypoxia marker: hypoxyprobe-1 adducts). Our results showed that tissue hypoxia expressed as positive staining for hypoxyprobe-1 adducts preceded neuronal degeneration. Platelets and granulocytes were detected close to the hypoxyprobe-1 adducts positive area. These results suggested that the hypoxic environment could persist even after reperfusion of MCA, because of vascular obstruction with accumulation of platelets and granulocytes.
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