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. 1978 Feb;133(2):802-10.
doi: 10.1128/jb.133.2.802-810.1978.

Structural features of normal and complemented forms of the Neurospora isopropylmalate isomerase

Structural features of normal and complemented forms of the Neurospora isopropylmalate isomerase

V E Reichenbecher Jr et al. J Bacteriol. 1978 Feb.

Abstract

The isopropylmalate isomerase (EC 4.2.1.33) of Neurospora crassa is a globular protein consisting of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular weight of about 90,000. The isomerase cannot easily be freed of a contaminating protease which cleaves the enzyme into two major fragments, one of approximately 56,000 and the other 37,000 daltons. This suggests that the folded polypeptide chain may contain some hinge point or loop exposed on the surface which makes it susceptible to proteolytic attack. Most of the isomerase activity extracted from the wild-type strain is in monomer form. However, a small fraction of the activity in crude extracts is found in multimeric aggregates, and the active isomerase extracted from complementing leu-2 heterokaryons consists entirely of dimers and higher multimers. These observations suggest that, though active as a monomer, a significant fraction of the normal enzyme might be organized in multimeric form within the cell.

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