Publication | Open Access
The sequence of two peptides isolated from the Ca2+-transporting ATPase of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum after cleavage at tryptophan
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Citations
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References
1985
Year
Rabbit Sarcoplasmic ReticulumProteinlipid InteractionProtein SecretionSignal TransductionCa2+-transporting Atpase ProteinBiochemistryMembrane-buried Tryptophan ResiduesProtein FoldingNatural SciencesMedicineMolecular BiologyLong PeptidesProtein TransportCellular BiochemistryChemical BiologyCa2+-transporting AtpaseProtein PhosphorylationProtein Biosynthesis
Cleavage of reduced, carboxymethylated, delipidated CA2+-transporting ATPase protein from rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum with dimethyl sulphoxide/HBr yielded two long peptides (38 and 73 residues), distinct from the known major sequences of the ATPase. The longer peptide contained at least two cysteine residues, which were disulphide-linked in the native protein. It was therefore derived from the B-fragment of the ATPase in which the disulphides had previously been located. It probably formed a loop on the luminal side of the membrane, spanning two membrane-buried tryptophan residues. The N-terminal sequence of this peptide, (Trp)-Phe-Met-Tyr-Ala, forms the basis for an oligodeoxynucleotide probe, the use of which to identify cDNA corresponding to the ATPase is described elsewhere [MacLennan, Brandl, Korczak & Green (1985) Nature (London) 316, 696-700].
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