Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520
2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Methanococcus maripaludis
and
Methanocaldococcus jannaschii
produce cysteine for protein synthesis using a tRNA-dependent pathway. These methanogens charge tRNA
Cys
with
l
-phosphoserine, which is also an intermediate in the predicted pathways for serine and cystathionine biosynthesis. To establish the mode of phosphoserine production in
Methanococcales
, cell extracts of
M. maripaludis
were shown to have phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase and phosphoserine aminotransferase activities. The heterologously expressed and purified phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase from
M. maripaludis
had enzymological properties similar to those of its bacterial homologs but was poorly inhibited by serine. While bacterial enzymes are inhibited by micromolar concentrations of serine bound to an allosteric site, the low sensitivity of the archaeal protein to serine is consistent with phosphoserine's position as a branch point in several pathways. A broad-specificity class V aspartate aminotransferase from
M. jannaschii
converted the phosphohydroxypyruvate product to phosphoserine. This enzyme catalyzed the transamination of aspartate, glutamate, phosphoserine, alanine, and cysteate. The
M. maripaludis
homolog complemented a
serC
mutation in the
Escherichia coli
phosphoserine aminotransferase. All methanogenic archaea apparently share this pathway, providing sufficient phosphoserine for the tRNA-dependent cysteine biosynthetic pathway.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
41 articles.
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