Characterization of sea urchin transglutaminase, a protein regulated by guanine/adenine nucleotides

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Abstract

Transglutaminases (TGs) are calcium-dependent enzymes that catalyze the transamidation of glutamine residues to form intermolecular isopeptide bonds. Nine distinct TGs have been identified in mammals, and three of them (types 2, 3, and 5) are regulated by GTP/ATP and are able to hydrolyze GTP, working as bifunctional enzymes. We have isolated a cDNA clone encoding a TG from a cDNA library prepared from the blastula stage of sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus (PlTG). The cDNA sequence has an open reading frame coding for a protein of 738 amino acids, including a Cys active site and two other residues critical for catalytic activity, His and Asp. We have studied its expression pattern by in situ hybridization and have also demonstrated that the in vitro expressed PlTG had GTP- and ATP-hydrolyzing activity; moreover, GTP inhibited the transamidating activity of this enzyme as it does that of human TG2, TG3, and TG5.

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Zanetti, L., Ristoratore, F., Bertoni, A., & Cariello, L. (2004). Characterization of sea urchin transglutaminase, a protein regulated by guanine/adenine nucleotides. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(47), 49289–49297. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M405926200

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