Open Access
The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 1997-05-01
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 1.705
CiteScore: 7.6
Impact factor: 3.9
ISSN: 00219258, 1083351X
PubMed ID:
9139678
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Cell Biology
Abstract
Mammalian adenylyl cyclases have two homologous cytoplasmic domains (C1 and C2), and both domains are required for the high enzymatic activity. Mutational and genetic analyses of type I and soluble adenylyl cyclases suggest that the C2 domain is catalytically active and the C1 domain is not; the role of the C1 domain is to promote the catalytic activity of the C2 domain. Two amino acid residues, Asn-1025 and Arg-1029 of type II adenylyl cyclase, are conserved among the C2 domains, but not among the C1 domains, of adenylyl cyclases with 12 putative transmembrane helices. Mutations at each amino acid residue alone result in a 30–100-fold reduction in K cat of adenylyl cyclase. However, the same mutations do not affect theK m for ATP, the half-maximal concentration (EC50) for the C2 domain of type II adenylyl cyclase to associate with the C1 domain of type I adenylyl cyclase and achieve maximal enzyme activity, or the EC50for forskolin to maximally activate enzyme activity with or without Gsα. This indicates that the mutations at these two residues do not cause gross structural alteration. Thus, these two conserved amino acid residues appear to be crucial for catalysis, and their absence from the C1 domains may account for its lack of catalytic activity. Mutations at both amino acid residues together result in a 3,000-fold reduction in K cat of adenylyl cyclase, suggesting that these two residues have additive effects in catalysis. A second site suppressor of the Asn-1025 to Ser mutant protein has been isolated. This suppressor has 17-fold higher activity than the mutant and has a Pro-1015 to Ser mutation.
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59
Total citations:
59
Citations from 2025:
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(1.69%)
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GOST
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Yan S. et al. The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase // Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1997. Vol. 272. No. 19. pp. 12342-12349.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
Copy
Yan S., Huang Z., Shaw R. M., Tang W. The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase // Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1997. Vol. 272. No. 19. pp. 12342-12349.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1074/jbc.272.19.12342
UR - https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.19.12342
TI - The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase
T2 - Journal of Biological Chemistry
AU - Yan, Shui-Zhong
AU - Huang, Zhi-Hui
AU - Shaw, Robin M.
AU - Tang, Weijen
PY - 1997
DA - 1997/05/01
PB - American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
SP - 12342-12349
IS - 19
VL - 272
PMID - 9139678
SN - 0021-9258
SN - 1083-351X
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{1997_Yan,
author = {Shui-Zhong Yan and Zhi-Hui Huang and Robin M. Shaw and Weijen Tang},
title = {The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase},
journal = {Journal of Biological Chemistry},
year = {1997},
volume = {272},
publisher = {American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology},
month = {may},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.19.12342},
number = {19},
pages = {12342--12349},
doi = {10.1074/jbc.272.19.12342}
}
Cite this
MLA
Copy
Yan, Shui-Zhong, et al. “The Conserved Asparagine and Arginine Are Essential for Catalysis of Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclase.” Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 272, no. 19, May. 1997, pp. 12342-12349. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.19.12342.