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. 1992 Sep 1;208(2):459-66.
doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1992.tb17208.x.

Conversion, by limited proteolysis, of an archaebacterial citrate synthase into essentially a citryl-CoA hydrolase

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Conversion, by limited proteolysis, of an archaebacterial citrate synthase into essentially a citryl-CoA hydrolase

U Lill et al. Eur J Biochem. .
Free article

Abstract

1. Limited proteolysis of citrate synthase from Sulfolobus solfataricus by trypsin reduced the rate of the overall reaction (acetyl-CoA + oxaloacetate + H2O----citrate + CoASH) to 4% but did not affect the hydrolysis of citryl-CoA. Experimental results indicate that a connecting link between the enzyme's ligase and hydrolase activity becomes impaired specifically on treatment with trypsin. Other proteolytic enzymes like chymotrypsin and subtilisin inactivated catalytic functions of citrate synthase, ligase and hydrolase, equally well. 2. Tryptic hydrolysis occurs at the N-terminal region of citrate synthase, but a study by SDS/PAGE revealed no difference in molecular mass between native and proteolytically nicked citrate synthase. The peptide removed from the enzyme by trypsin, therefore, contains less than about 15 amino acid residues. 3. The Km values of the substrates for both native and nicked enzyme were identical, as was the state of aggregation (dimeric) of the two enzyme species. These could be separated by affinity chromatography on Blue-Sepharose and differentiated by their isoelectric points (pI = 6.68 +/- 0.08 and pI = 6.37 +/- 0.03 for native citrate synthase and the large tryptic peptide, respectively) as well as by the N-terminus which is blocked in the native enzyme only. 4. Edman degradation of the large tryptic fragment yielded the N-terminal sequence GLEDVYIKSTSLTYIDGVNGVLRY, which is 71% identical to the N-terminal region (positions 9-32) of citrate synthase from Thermoplasma acidophilum. 5. The conversion of citrate synthase into essentially a citryl-CoA hydrolase is considered the consequence of a conformational change thought to occur on tryptic removal of the N-terminal small peptide.

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