Giang D K, Cravatt B F
Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology and Department of Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1998 Mar 20;273(12):6595-8. doi: 10.1074/jbc.273.12.6595.
N-terminal myristoylation is a cotranslational lipid modification common to many signaling proteins that often serves an integral role in the targeting and/or function of these proteins. Myristoylation is catalyzed by an enzyme activity, N-myristoyltransferase (NMT), which transfers myristic acid from myristoyl coenzyme A to the amino group of a protein's N-terminal glycine residue. While a single human NMT cDNA has been isolated and characterized (hNMT-1), biochemical evidence has indicated the presence of several distinct NMTs in vivo, often varying in either apparent molecular weight and/or subcellular distribution. We now report the cloning and characterization of a second, genetically distinct human NMT (hNMT-2), as well as the isolation of the respective mouse NMT homologue for each human enzyme. The mouse and human versions of each NMT are highly homologous, displaying greater than 95% amino acid sequence identity. Comparisons between the NMT-1 and NMT-2 proteins revealed reduced levels of sequence identity (76-77%), indicating that NMT-1 and NMT-2 comprise two distinct families of N-myristoyltransferases. Transient transfection of either the hNMT-1 or hNMT-2 cDNA into COS-7 cells resulted in the expression of high levels of NMT enzyme activity. Both hNMT-1 and hNMT-2 were found to myristoylate several commonly studied peptide substrates with similar, but distinguishable, relative selectivities. Western analysis revealed that while hNMT-2 appeared as a single 65-kDa protein in transfected COS-7 cells, hNMT-1 was processed to provide four distinct protein isoforms ranging from 49 to 68 kDa in size. Collectively, these studies demonstrate a heretofore unappreciated level of genetic complexity underlying the enzymology of N-terminal myristoylation and suggest that the specific inhibition or regulation of either NMT in vivo may in turn allow for the selective control of particular myristoylation-dependent cellular functions.
N 端肉豆蔻酰化是许多信号蛋白常见的共翻译脂质修饰,通常在这些蛋白的靶向和/或功能中起不可或缺的作用。肉豆蔻酰化由一种酶活性——N-肉豆蔻酰转移酶(NMT)催化,该酶将肉豆蔻酸从肉豆蔻酰辅酶 A 转移到蛋白质 N 端甘氨酸残基的氨基上。虽然已分离并鉴定出单个人类 NMT cDNA(hNMT-1),但生化证据表明体内存在几种不同的 NMT,其表观分子量和/或亚细胞分布通常有所不同。我们现在报告第二种基因上不同的人类 NMT(hNMT-2)的克隆和鉴定,以及每种人类酶各自的小鼠 NMT 同源物的分离。每种 NMT 的小鼠和人类版本高度同源,氨基酸序列同一性大于 95%。NMT-1 和 NMT-2 蛋白之间的比较显示序列同一性水平降低(76 - 77%),表明 NMT-1 和 NMT-2 构成两个不同的 N-肉豆蔻酰转移酶家族。将 hNMT-1 或 hNMT-2 cDNA 瞬时转染到 COS-7 细胞中导致高水平 NMT 酶活性的表达。发现 hNMT-1 和 hNMT-2 都能使几种常用的肽底物发生肉豆蔻酰化,具有相似但可区分的相对选择性。蛋白质免疫印迹分析显示,虽然 hNMT-2 在转染的 COS-7 细胞中表现为单一的 65 kDa 蛋白,但 hNMT-1 经过加工后产生四种不同的蛋白异构体,大小从 49 kDa 到 68 kDa 不等。总的来说,这些研究证明了 N 端肉豆蔻酰化酶学背后迄今未被认识到的遗传复杂性水平,并表明体内对任何一种 NMT 的特异性抑制或调节可能进而允许对特定的肉豆蔻酰化依赖性细胞功能进行选择性控制。