Possible variation in the protein-splicing reaction
Glutamine is the carboxy-terminal residue of the CIV RIR1 intein and of the
P.horikoshii polC intein. Only asparagine has previously been described
at this position. This asparagine plays a key role in the protein-splicing
reaction: it undergoes cyclization, releasing the amino-terminally cleaved
intein from the ligated host flanks in the penultimate step of the reaction. I
suggest that these two inteins, integrated in highly conserved protein
motifs, are active and splice using a variation of the previously described
protein-splicing
reaction in which their carboxy-terminal glutamines
undergo cyclization analogous to that of the intein carboxy-terminal
asparagine forming a glutarimide ring. Such a cyclization is chemically
plausible and has been predicted (Geiger and Clarke 1987, Daniel et
al. 1996). These two inteins probably evolved their peculiar
carboxy-terminal ends independently, as they are not particularly similar by
sequence and are also different in the highly conserved penultimate
residue.
Geiger, T. & Clarke, S. (1987).
Deamidation, isomerization, and racemization at asparaginyl and aspartyl
residues in peptides. Succinimide-linked reactions that contribute to
protein degradation.
J Biol Chem 262, 785-794.
Daniel, R. M., Dines, M. & Petach, H. H. (1996).
The denaturation and degradation of stable enzymes at high temperatures.
Biochem J 317, 1-11.
|
Inteins C-terminal end |
Third step in protein splicing reaction:
branch resolution by intein C-terminal residue cyclization |
| Typical inteins |
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CIV RIR1
Pho polC |
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The C-terminal end of inteins and its cleavage from the ligated host protein.
Top: The sequences found in the C-terminal end of a typical intein (left) and
a scheme for the release of the semi-cleaved intein from the ligated host
flanks (exteins) by asparagine cyclization (right). The sequences are
represented by a logo, where the height of each residue is related to its
frequency. In the scheme, X denotes the side-chain of the residue C-terminal
to the asparagine: a sulfur atom (residue is cysteine) or an oxygen atom
(residue is serine or threonine). Bottom: The C-terminal ends of the two
known inteins with glutamine at the C-end and the mechanism proposed for
their release from the ligated host flanks.
[Inteins home page]
Page last modified July 1998
Shmuel Pietrokovski <pietro@weizmann.ac.il>