Publication | Open Access
Hydroxylation of aspartic acid in domains homologous to the epidermal growth factor precursor is catalyzed by a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase.
91
Citations
30
References
1989
Year
Aspartic AcidLipid PeroxidationVitamin KChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationRedox BiologyOxidative StressBiosynthesis3-Hydroxyaspartic AcidSynthetic PeptideRedox SignalingAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryBiocatalysisPharmacologyBiomolecular Engineering2-Oxoglutarate-dependent DioxygenaseCellular EnzymologyNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisProtein EngineeringCellular BiochemistryMedicineExtracellular Matrix
3-Hydroxyaspartic acid and 3-hydroxyasparagine are two rare amino acids that are present in domains homologous to the epidermal growth factor precursor in vitamin K-dependent plasma proteins as well as in proteins that do not require vitamin K for normal biosynthesis. They are formed by posttranslational hydroxylation of aspartic acid and asparagine, respectively. The first epidermal growth factor-like domain in factor IX (residues 45-87) was synthesized with aspartic acid in position 64, replacing 3-hydroxyaspartic acid. It was used as substrate in a hydroxylase assay with rat liver microsomes as the source of enzyme and reaction conditions that satisfy the requirements of 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases. The synthetic peptide stimulated the 2-oxoglutarate decarboxylation in contrast to synthetic, modified epidermal growth factor (Met-21 and His-22 deleted and Glu-24 replaced by Asp) and synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 60-71 in human factor IX. This indicates that the hydroxylase is a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase with a selective substrate requirement.
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