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Comparative Study
. 2001 Feb 13;40(6):1844-9.
doi: 10.1021/bi002094v.

N-terminal intramolecularly conserved histidines of three domains in Gonyaulax luciferase are responsible for loss of activity in the alkaline region

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Comparative Study

N-terminal intramolecularly conserved histidines of three domains in Gonyaulax luciferase are responsible for loss of activity in the alkaline region

L Li et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

Gonyaulax luciferase is a single-chain ( approximately 137 kDa) polypeptide comprising 111 N-terminal amino acids followed by three contiguous homologous domains (377 amino acids each). Each domain has luciferase activity, accounting for the earlier observation that proteolytic fragments ( approximately 35 kDa) of luciferase are active. The activity of the full-length native enzyme is maximal at pH 6.3, dropping to near zero at pH 8; the activity of fragments also peaks at pH 6.3 but remains high at 8. While the activity loss at higher pH might be thought to be associated with the conformation of the full-length protein, we show here that this is a property of individual domains. The three intramolecularly homologous domains, separately cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli as fusion proteins, exhibit pH-activity curves similar to that of the full-length enzyme. For each domain the removal of approximately 50 N-terminal amino acids resulted in an increase in the ratio of luciferase activity at pH 8 relative to that at pH 6.3, such that their pH-activity profiles mimicked that of the proteolytic fragments reported earlier. Replacement of N-terminal histidines by alanine by site-directed mutagenesis identified four that are involved in the loss of activity at high pH. This system illustrates an unusual, possibly unique mechanism for pH regulation of enzyme activity, which has been postulated to be responsible for the control of the characteristic flashes of bioluminescence.

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