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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 34, 23844-23849, August 20, 1999
From the Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, National
Institute of Infectious Diseases, Toyama 1-23-1, Shinjuku-ku,
Tokyo 162-8640, Japan
Phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) in
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells is synthesized through the action of
PtdSer synthase (PSS) I and II, which catalyzes the exchange of
L-serine with the base moiety of phosphatidylcholine
and phosphatidylethanolamine, respectively. The PtdSer synthesis in a
CHO cell mutant, PSA-3, which lacks PSS I but has normal PSS II
activity, was almost completely inhibited by the addition of PtdSer to
the culture medium, like that in the wild-type CHO-K1 cells. In
contrast, the PtdSer synthesis in a PSS II-overproducing stable
transformant of CHO-K1, K1/wt-pssB, was reduced by only
35% upon addition of PtdSer. The serine exchange activity in a
membrane fraction of K1/wt-pssB cells was not inhibited by
PtdSer at all, whereas those of PSA-3 and CHO-K1 cells were inhibited
by >95%. These results indicated that PSS II activity in PSA-3 and
CHO-K1 cells is inhibited by exogenous PtdSer and that overproduction
of PSS II leads to the loss of normal control of PSS II activity by
exogenous PtdSer. Although overproduced PSS II in
K1/wt-pssB cells was not normally controlled by exogenous PtdSer, K1/wt-pssB cells cultivated without exogenous
PtdSer exhibited a normal PtdSer biosynthetic rate similar to that in
CHO-K1 cells. In contrast to K1/wt-pssB cells, another
stable transformant of CHO-K1, K1/R97K-pssB, which
overproduces R97K mutant PSS II, exhibited a ~4-fold higher PtdSer
biosynthetic rate compared with that in CHO-K1 cells. These results
suggested that for maintenance of a normal PtdSer biosynthetic rate,
the activity of overproduced wild-type PSS II in K1/wt-pssB
cells is depressed by an as yet unknown post-translational mechanisms
other than those for the exogenous PtdSer-mediated inhibition and that
Arg-97 of PSS II is critical for this depression of overproduced PSS II
activity. When the cDNA-directed wild-type and R97K mutant PSS II
activities were expressed at nonoverproduction levels in a PSS I- and
PSS II-defective mutant of CHO-K1 cells, expression of the mutant PSS
II activity but not that of the wild-type PSS II activity induced the
PtdSer-resistant PtdSer biosynthesis. This suggested that Arg-97 of PSS
II is critical also for the exogenous PtdSer-mediated inhibition of PSS II.
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