Two adjacent N-terminal glutamines of BM-40 (Osteonectin, SPARC) act as amine acceptor sites in transglutaminasec-catalyzed modification

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Abstract

The extracellular matrix protein BM-40 (osteonectin, SPARC) has recently been shown to be a major target for transglutaminase-catalyzed cross-linking in differentiating cartilage. In the present study we demonstrate that recombinant human BM-40 can be modified with [3H]putrescine in a 1:1 molar ratio by transglutaminasec (tissue transglutaminase). Residues Gln3 and Gln4 were identified as major amine acceptor sites. This was confirmed with several mutant proteins, including deletions in the N-terminal domain I of BM-40, site-directed mutagenesis of the reactive glutamines, and fusion of the seven-amino acid-long N-terminal sequence (APQQEAL) to an unrelated protein. The results showed that the N-terminal target site is sufficient for modification by transglutaminase but at a low level. For high efficiency amine incorporation an intact domain I is required. The conservation of at least one of the transglutaminase target glutamines in the known vertebrate BM-40 sequences and their absence in an invertebrate homologue point to an important, but yet unknown, role of this modification in vertebrates.

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Hohenadl, C., Mann, K., Mayer, U., Timpl, R., Paulsson, M., & Aeschlimann, D. (1995). Two adjacent N-terminal glutamines of BM-40 (Osteonectin, SPARC) act as amine acceptor sites in transglutaminasec-catalyzed modification. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 270(40), 23415–23420. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.270.40.23415

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