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Metabolite Proofreading in Carnosine and Homocarnosine Synthesis.

Authors :
Veiga-da-Cunha, Maria
Chevalier, Nathalie
Stroobant, Vincent
Vertommen, Didier
Van Schaftingen, Emile
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 7/11/2014, Vol. 289 Issue 28, p19726-19736. 11p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Carnosine synthase is the ATP-dependent ligase responsible for carnosine (β-alanyl-histidine) and homocarnosine (Υ-aminobutyryl- histidine) synthesis in skeletal muscle and brain, respectively. This enzyme uses, also at substantial rates, lysine, ornithine, and arginine instead of histidine, yet the resulting dipeptides are virtually absent from muscle or brain, suggesting that they are removed by a "metabolite repair" enzyme. Using a radiolabeled substrate, we found that rat skeletal muscle, heart, and brain contained a cytosolic β-alanyl-lysine dipeptidase activity. This enzyme, which has the characteristics of a metalloenzyme, was purified ≈200-fold from rat skeletal muscle. Mass spectrometry analysis of the fractions obtained at different purification stages indicated parallel enrichment of PM20D2, a peptidase of unknown function belonging to the metallopeptidase 20 family. Western blotting showed coelution of PM20D2 with β-alanyl-lysine dipeptidase activity. Recombinant mouse PM20D2 hydrolyzed β-alanyl-lysine, β-alanyl-ornithine, Υ-aminobutyryl-lysine, and Υ-aminobutyryl-ornithine as its best substrates. It also acted at lower rates on β-alanyl-arginine and Υ-aminobutyryl-arginine but virtually not on carnosine or homocarnosine. Although acting preferentially on basic dipeptides derived from β-alanine or Υ-aminobutyrate, PM20D2 also acted at lower rates on some "classic dipeptides" like β-alanyl-lysine and α-lysyl-lysine. The same activity profile was observed with human PM20D2, yet this enzyme was ~ 100-200-fold less active on all substrates tested than the mouse enzyme. Cotransfection in HEK293T cells of mouse or human PM20D2 together with carnosine synthase prevented the accumulation of abnormal dipeptides (β-alanyl-lysine, β-alanyl-ornithine, Υ-aminobutyryl-lysine), thus favoring the synthesis of carnosine and homocarnosine and confirming the metabolite repair role of PM20D2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
289
Issue :
28
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
97215246
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.576579