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J Biol Chem, Vol. 273, Issue 27, 17199-17205, July 3, 1998
From the Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, National
Institute of Infectious Diseases, Toyama 1-23-1, Shinjuku-ku,
Tokyo 162, Japan
Phosphatidylserine (PS) in mammalian
cells is synthesized through the exchange of free
L-serine with the base moiety of phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). The serine base exchange in Chinese
hamster ovary (CHO) cells is catalyzed by at least two enzymes, PS
synthase (PSS) I and II. A PSS I-lacking mutant of CHO-K1 cells, PSA-3,
which exhibits ~2-fold lower serine base exchange activity than
CHO-K1, is defective in the conversion of phosphatidylcholine to PS but
has the ability to convert PE to PS. The PSA-3 mutant requires
exogenous PS or PE for cell growth. In the present study, from PSA-3
mutant cells, we isolated a mutant, named PSB-2, with a further
decrease in the serine base exchange activity. The activity in the
homogenate of PSB-2 mutant cells was ~10% that of PSA-3 mutant cells
and ~5% that of CHO-K1 cells. The PSB-2 mutant exhibited an ~80%
reduction in the PSS II mRNA level relative to that in PSA-3 mutant
and CHO-K1 cells. These results showed that the PSB-2 mutant is
defective in PSS II. Like the PSA-3 mutant, the PSB-2 mutant grew well
in medium supplemented with PS. However, in the medium supplemented
with PE, the PSB-2 mutant was incapable of growth, in contrast to the
PSA-3 mutant. In the medium with exogenous PE, the PSB-2 mutant was
defective in PS biosynthesis, whereas the PSA-3 mutant synthesized a
normal amount of PS. A metabolic labeling experiment with exogenous
[32P]PE revealed that the PSB-2 mutant was defective in
the conversion of exogenous PE to PS. This defect and the growth and PS
biosynthetic defects of the PSB-2 mutant cultivated with exogenous PE
were complemented by the PSS II cDNA. In addition, the cDNA of
the other PS synthase, PSS I, was shown not to complement the defect in
the conversion of exogenous PE to PS of the PSB-2 mutant, implying that
PSS I negligibly contributes to the conversion of PE to PS in CHO-K1
cells. These results indicated that PSS II is critical for the growth
and PS biosynthesis of PSA-3 mutant cells cultivated with exogenous PE
and suggested that most of the PS formation from PE in CHO-K1 cells is
catalyzed by PSS II.
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