Publication | Closed Access
Quantitation of prenylcysteines by a selective cleavage reaction.
122
Citations
11
References
1991
Year
Chemical BiologyProtein ChemistryAldo-keto ReductaseAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistrySelective Cleavage ReactionNatural SciencesPrenylcysteine ContentMolecular BiologyPrenylated ProteinsProtein EngineeringAllylic Thioether BondMetabolismMedicineEnzymatic ModificationProtein Synthesis
The allylic thioether bond of the prenylcysteines of prenylated proteins has been shown to be cleaved by 2-naphthol under alkaline conditions to yield substituted naphthopyrans. These products are readily resolved from interfering materials by HPLC and have a strongly absorbing chromophore. Thus, this reaction is suitable for quantitative analysis of prenyl substituents of proteins, and we have examined a number of tissues for their content of prenylcysteines. These amino acids are present in mammalian tissues at a concentration of 0.36-1.4 nmol/mg of protein, with a ratio of geranylgeranylcysteine to farnesylcysteine in the range of 4 to 10. Prenylcysteines were also found in the cytosolic fraction of two mouse tissues at about one-third the concentration of the whole organ. The level of these modified amino acids was found to be significantly less in a yeast, a fungus, a brown alga, a higher plant, and an insect. Again, geranylgeranylcysteine is predominant. Prenylcysteines were absent from Escherichia coli but present in an archaebacterium. The prenylcysteine content of mammalian tissue is about 1% of that of cholesterol and about equal to that of ubiquinones and dolichols. Calculations indicate that about 0.5% of all proteins are prenylated.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1