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Cloning and expression of the human N-acetylglutamate synthase gene

Authors :
Norma M. Allewell
Xiaolin Yu
Rene Gallegos
Mendel Tuchman
Ljubica Caldovic
Hiroki Morizono
Michael H. Malamy
Maria Panglao
Dashuang Shi
Source :
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 299:581-586
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS, E.C. 2.3.1.1) is a mitochondrial enzyme catalyzing the formation of N-acetylglutamate (NAG), an essential allosteric activator of carbamylphosphate synthase I (CPSI), the first enzyme of the urea cycle. Patients with NAGS deficiency develop hyperammonemia because CPSI is inactive without NAG. The human NAGS cDNA was isolated from a liver library based on its similarity to mouse NAGS. The deduced amino acid sequence contains an N-terminal putative mitochondrial targeting signal of 49 amino acids (63% identity with mouse NAGS) followed by a "variable domain" of 45 amino acids (35% identity) and a "conserved domain" of 440 amino acids (92% identity). A cDNA sequence containing the "conserved domain" complements an NAGS-deficient Escherichia coli strain and the recombinant protein has arginine-responsive NAGS catalytic activity. The NAGS gene is expressed in the liver and small intestine; the intestinal transcript is smaller in size than liver transcript.

Details

ISSN :
0006291X
Volume :
299
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f629eca674192fd1f89d7c21889112f