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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 265, Issue 4, 2060-2069, 02, 1990
DM Burns, V Horn, J Paluh and C Yanofsky
During evolution of fungi, the separate tryptophan synthetase alpha and
beta polypeptides of bacteria appear to have been fused in the order
alpha-beta rather than the beta-alpha order that would be predicted from
the order of the corresponding structural genes in all bacteria. We have
fused the tryptophan synthetase polypeptides of Escherichia coli in both
orders, alpha-beta and beta-alpha, with and without a short connecting
(con) sequence, to explore possible explanations for the domain arrangement
in fungi. We find that proteins composed of any of the four fused
polypeptides, beta-alpha, beta-con-alpha, alpha-beta, and alpha-con-beta,
are highly active enzymatically. However, only the alpha-beta and
alpha-con-beta proteins are as active as the wild type enzyme. All four
fusion proteins appear to be less soluble in vivo than the wild type
enzyme; this abnormal characteristic is minimal for the alpha-con-beta
enzyme. The alpha and beta domains of the four fusion polypeptides were not
appreciably more heat labile than the wild type polypeptides. Competition
experiments with mutant tryptophan synthetase alpha protein, and the fusion
proteins suggest that in each fusion protein the joined alpha and beta
domains have a functional tunnel connecting their alpha and beta active
sites. Three tryptophan synthetase beta'-alpha fusion proteins were
examined in which the carboxyl-terminal segment of the wild type beta
polypeptide was deleted and replaced by a shorter, unnatural sequence. The
resulting deletion fusion proteins were enzymatically inactive and were
found predominantly in the cell debris. Evaluation of our findings in
relation to the three-dimensional structure of the tryptophan synthetase
enzyme complex of Salmonella typhimurium (5) and the results of mutational
analyses with E. coli suggest that tryptophan synthetase may have evolved
via an alpha-beta rather than a beta-alpha fusion because in beta-alpha
fusions the amino-terminal helix of the alpha chain cannot assume the
conformation required for optimal enzymatic activity.
Evolution of the tryptophan synthetase of fungi. Analysis of experimentally fused Escherichia coli tryptophan synthetase alpha and beta chains
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, California 94305-5020.
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