Peroxidasin is a novel protein combining peroxidase and extracellular matrix motifs. Hemocytes differentiate early from head mesoderm, make peroxidasin and later phagocytose apoptotic cells. As hemocytes spread throughout the embryo, they synthesize extracellular matrix and peroxidasin, incorporating it into completed basement membranes. Cultured cells secrete peroxidasin; it occurs in larvae and adults. Each 1512 residue chain of the three‐armed, disulfide‐linked homotrimer combines a peroxidase domain with six leucine‐rich regions, four Ig loops, a thrombospondin/procollagen homology and an amphipathic alpha‐helix. The peroxidase domain is homologous with human myeloperoxidase and eosinophil peroxidase. This heme protein catalyzes H2O2‐driven radioiodinations, oxidations and formation of dityrosine. We propose that peroxidasin functions uniquely in extracellular matrix consolidation, phagocytosis and defense.
A multiprotein, high molecular weight complex active in both U-insertion and U-deletion as judged by a pre-cleaved RNA editing assay was isolated from mitochondrial extracts of Leishmania tarentolae by the tandem af®nity puri®cation (TAP) procedure, using three different TAP-tagged proteins of the complex. This editing-or E-complex consists of at least three protein-containing components interacting via RNA: the RNA ligase-containing L-complex, a 3¢ TUTase (terminal uridylyltransferase) and two RNA-binding proteins, Ltp26 and Ltp28. Thirteen approximately stoichiometric components were identi®ed by mass spectrometric analysis of the core L-complex: two RNA ligases; homologs of the four Trypanosoma brucei editing proteins; and seven novel polypeptides, among which were two with RNase III, one with an AP endo/exonuclease and one with nucleotidyltransferase motifs. Three proteins have no similarities beyond kinetoplastids. Keywords: editosome/RNA editing/TAP/TUTase Introduction Uridine insertion/deletion RNA editing is a post-transcriptional RNA modi®cation phenomenon that occurs in the mitochondrion of kinetoplastid protists . The mechanism involves the initial hybridization to an mRNA of a complementary guide RNA (gRNA) which guides a speci®c endonuclease cleavage at the ®rst editing site . This is followed by either deletion of the unpaired uridines from the cleavage fragment or the 3¢ addition to the mRNA 5¢ cleavage fragment, hybridization of the added Us to the guiding nucleotides in the gRNA, and religation of the two mRNA cleavage fragments. Each gRNA speci®es the 3¢ to 5¢ editing of a small number of sites and, in the case of a multiple gRNA-mediated editing domain, creates the anchor sequence for hybridization of the adjacent upstream gRNA, thus producing an overall 3¢ to 5¢ progression of editing. A minimal non-progressive editing activity at one or two sites has been demonstrated in vitro using crude or partially puri®ed mitochondrial extract, and the reaction was shown to involve high molecular weight RNP complexes (Byrne et al., 1996;Cruz-Reyes and Sollner-Webb, 1996;Kable et al., 1996;Seiwert et al., 1996). The mechanism described above was proposed >12 years ago , and was veri®ed experimentally in 1996 for both Trypanosoma brucei and Leishmania tarentolae (Byrne et al., 1996;Cruz-Reyes and Sollner-Webb, 1996;Seiwert et al., 1996). However, progress in the identi®cation of speci®c proteins involved in editing has been hampered by their low abundance and by the low ef®ciency of the in vitro editing assays. A seven polypeptide complex from T.brucei mitochondria that supported in vitro insertion and deletion editing was isolated by two chromatographic steps and was proposed to represent a core editing complex (Rusche et al., 1997). An~20 polypeptide complex with similar activities was isolated in another laboratory by a similar fractionation (Panigrahi et al., 2001a,b).The genes for several of the major components of these complexes have been identi®ed, but only a few proteins so far have been ascribed ...
A stable 100-kD complex from mitochondria of Leishmania tarentolae containing two RNA-binding proteins, Ltp26 and Ltp28, was identified by cross-linking to unpaired 4-thiouridine nucleotides in a partially duplex RNA substrate. The genes were cloned and expressed and the complex was reconstituted from recombinant proteins in the absence of RNA or additional factors. The Ltp26 and Ltp28 proteins are homologs of gBP27 and gBP29 from Crithidia fasciculata and gBP25 and gBP21 from Trypanosoma brucei, respectively. The purified Ltp26/Ltp28 complex, the individual recombinant proteins, and the reconstituted complex are each capable of catalyzing the annealing of complementary RNAs, as was previously shown for gBP21 from T. brucei. A high-molecular-weight RNP complex consisting of the Ltp26/Ltp28 complex and several 55-60-kD proteins together with guide RNA could be purified from mitochondrial extract of L. tarentolae transfected with Ltp28-TAP. This complex also interacted in a less stable manner with the RNA ligase-containing L-complex and with the 3 TUTase. The Ltp26/Ltp28 RNP complex is a candidate for catalyzing the annealing of guide RNA and pre-edited mRNA in the initial step of RNA editing.
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