1972
DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1972.tb01883.x
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Sequence of the Murein · Lipoprotein and the Attachment Site of the Lipid

Abstract: The primary structure of a covalent lipoglycoprotein (murein . lipoprotein) from the cell wall of Escherichia coli is presented. The amino acid sequence consists of57 residues. The lipid is attached to the N-terminal serine and the murein is bound to the 6-amino group of the C-terminal lysine of the lipoprotein. The repetitive design of the sequence suggcsts a very conservative evolution in which a structural gene coding for 15 amino acids was duplicated once and then only half of this gene, thus coding for 7 … Show more

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Cited by 125 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…The amino acid composition of the free lipoprotein was found to be the same as the amino acid composition calculated from the amino acid sequence of the murein-bound lipoprotein [8,9] except for the presence of 0.25 mol diaminopimelate and an excess of about 0.5 mol glutamic acid per mole protein. In confirmation of the data obtained by Hirashima et al [3], there were no traces of muramic acid or glucosamine, and the diaminopimelate and the excess glutamate may be due to the action of an unknown protease during isolation.…”
Section: Amino Acid Composition and C-terminal End Or Free Lipoproteinsupporting
confidence: 51%
“…The amino acid composition of the free lipoprotein was found to be the same as the amino acid composition calculated from the amino acid sequence of the murein-bound lipoprotein [8,9] except for the presence of 0.25 mol diaminopimelate and an excess of about 0.5 mol glutamic acid per mole protein. In confirmation of the data obtained by Hirashima et al [3], there were no traces of muramic acid or glucosamine, and the diaminopimelate and the excess glutamate may be due to the action of an unknown protease during isolation.…”
Section: Amino Acid Composition and C-terminal End Or Free Lipoproteinsupporting
confidence: 51%
“…The commonly used designation 'major' proteins for the proteins discussed here is somewhat misleading in that the 10 000 daltons lipoprotein studied in detail by Braun and collaborators [21] clearly also constitutes a major outer membrane protein. The mutants described here do not lack the lipoprotein.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They studied Lpp in E. coli. It had been known for some time that Lpp existed in two distinct forms -one covalently bound to the peptidoglycan, and a 'free' population that did not interact with peptidoglycan (Braun & Rehn, 1969;Braun & Bosch, 1972). The novel observation made by Cowles et al (2011) was the discovery that the 'free' population of Lpp spans the outer membrane, with one end of its trimeric structure exposed to the extracellular space.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%