Publication | Open Access
The disulfide structure of mouse lysosome-associated membrane protein 1.
27
Citations
24
References
1990
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionProtein SecretionMolecular BiologyDisulfide ArrangementProtein FoldingDisulfide StructureProteomicsSecretory PathwayBiochemistryMembrane BiologyProtein TransportCell BiologyTryptic DigestLysosome BiologyNatural SciencesIntracellular TraffickingVesicle BiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The disulfide structure of mouse lysosome-associated membrane protein 1 has been determined by reverse-phase isolation and sequence analysis of the cysteine-containing tryptic fragments of the reduced and non-reduced deglycosylated protein. Half-cystines were distinguished (a) by their localization within tryptic or chymotryptic peptides that formed reverse-phase peaks unique to the reduced digests and (b) by their 3H-carboxymethylation only after reduction of the protein. The disulfide arrangement of the cysteines was assigned after isolation of disulfide-linked peptide pairs. Each pair chromatographed as a peak present in the nonreduced (but not the corresponding reduced) tryptic digest. NH2-terminal sequencing as well as reduction, alkylation, and rechromatography of the disulfide-linked fragments led to the following assignment of disulfide bonds: Cys11 and Cys50, Cys125 and Cys161, Cys198 and Cys235, and Cys303 and Cys340. This structure creates four 36-38-residue loops that are symmetrically placed within the two halves of the protein's intraluminal domain. The loops formed by the Cys11-Cys50 and Cys198-Cys235 bridges are homologous, and the Cys125-Cys161 and Cys303-cys340 loops form a second set of homologous domains. The conservation of cysteine residues among lysosome-associated membrane proteins 1 and 2 suggests that this disulfide arrangement is common to both members of this family of lysosomal membrane glycoproteins.
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