Cloning and expression of the unique Ca2+-ATPaSe from Flavobacterium odoratum

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Abstract

The 60-KDa Ca2+-ATPaSe from Flavobacterium odoratum is kinetically and mechanistically similar to other P-type ATPases, suggesting its use as a model system for structure-function studies of ion transport. A portion of the gene was amplified by polymerase chain reaction of genomic DNA with degenerate oligonucleotide primers, one based on the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified protein and the other based on a consensus sequence for the phosphorylation site of P-type ATPases. This gene fragment was used to screen a λ library of F. odoratum 29979 DNA. Clone "C" is 3.3 kilobases in length and contains one complete and part of a second open reading frame, the first of which encodes a 58-kDa protein containing the exact N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified protein. We have named this gene cda, for calcium-dependent ATPase. Escherichia coli, transformed with clone C, demonstrates high levels of calcium-dependent and vanadate-sensitive ATP hydrolysis activity, forms a 60-kDa phosphointermediate, and cross-reacts with antibodies to the purified Ca2+-ATPase. The gene has almost no sequence homology to even the highly conserved regions characteristic of P-type ATPases but does possess significant homology to a protein with alkaline phosphatase activity (PhoD) from Zymomonas mobilis. The putative phosphorylation site is a Walker A (P-loop) ATP binding sequence and is modified relative to P-type ATPases, suggesting that the F. odoratum Ca2+-ATPaSe may represent an ancestral link between the F- and the P-type ATPases or perhaps a new class of ATPases.

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Peiffer, W. E., Desrosiers, M. G., & Menick, D. R. (1996). Cloning and expression of the unique Ca2+-ATPaSe from Flavobacterium odoratum. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271(9), 5095–5100. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.9.5095

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