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The N-terminal membrane anchor domain of the membrane-bound prostacyclin synthase involved in the substrate presentation of the coupling reaction with cyclooxygenase. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how the cyclooxygenase (COX) and prostaglandin I(2) synthase (PGIS) work together to produce prostacyclin (PGI(2)) from arachidonic acid (AA) in a membrane environment.
  • It was found that membrane-bound PGIS is more efficient in converting the product from COX compared to PGIS that is solubilized with detergent.
  • The research highlighted the importance of the N-terminal domain of PGIS for the effective presentation of substrate to its active site, especially at low concentrations of AA, and showed that a different protein's domain could not substitute this function.

Article Abstract

To mimic the native conditions, the cyclooxygenase (COX)/prostaglandin I(2) synthase (PGIS) coupling reaction system was used to determine the coordination of PGIS with COX for the biosynthesis of prostacyclin (PGI(2)) using arachidonic acid (AA) as a substrate in a membrane-bound environment. The membrane-bound PGIS exhibited a faster isomerization of PGH(2) produced by COX to PGI(2) than the detergent-solubilized PGIS. To determine whether the N-terminal domain of PGIS responds to the facilitation of PGH(2) movement (presentation) from COX to the active site of PGIS, the first 20 residues of PGIS (Delta20-PGIS) were deleted and expressed in COS-7 cells. Delta20-PGIS retained membrane-bound properties and exhibited a slower substrate presentation property. Furthermore, a chimeric molecule (PGIS/TXAS(8-27)) with the replacement of the first 20 residues of PGIS by the corresponding membrane anchor region (residues 8-27) of thromboxane A(2) synthase was created to evaluate the mechanism influencing the biosynthesis of PGI(2) in coordination with COX. The chimera revealed a multiple fold delay in the PGH(2) presentation in low range concentrations of AA (0.3-3muM) at 30s reactions. However, the delay could be recovered by a longer incubation time in high range concentrations of AA (>10muM), but not in low range concentrations of AA. These results demonstrated that the N-terminal domain of PGIS plays a role in the facilitation of the substrate presentation to the PGIS active site in low concentrations of AA, which may be a physiological condition. The TXAS N-terminal domain could not replace the function of the corresponding domain of PGIS, indicating that the facilitation of the substrate presentation is specific.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.abb.2004.12.018DOI Listing

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