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Journal of Bacteriology, May 1999, p. 2872-2877, Vol. 181, No. 9
Department of Molecular Biology and
Biochemistry1 and Department of
Biological Chemistry,2 University of
California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92697-3900
Received 7 December 1998/Accepted 31 March 1999
Isoaspartyl sites, in which an aspartic acid residue is linked to
its C-flanking neighbor via its
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Isoaspartate in Ribosomal Protein S11 of
Escherichia coli
-carboxyl side chain, are generally
assumed to be an abnormal modification arising as proteins age. The
enzyme protein L-isoaspartate methyltransferase (PIMT), present in many bacteria, plants, and animals, catalyzes the conversion of isoaspartate to normal
-linked aspartyl bonds and is thought to
serve an important repair function in cells. Having introduced a
plasmid into Escherichia coli that allows high-level
expression of rat PIMT, we explored the possibility that the rat enzyme
reduces isoaspartate levels in E. coli proteins, a result
predicted by the repair hypothesis. The present study demonstrates that
this is indeed the case; E. coli cells expressing rat PIMT
had significantly lower isoaspartate levels than control cells,
especially in stationary phase. Moreover, the distribution of
isoaspartate-containing proteins in E. coli differed
dramatically between logarithmic- and stationary-phase cultures. In
stationary-phase cells, a number of proteins in the molecular mass
range of 66 to 14 kDa contained isoaspartate, whereas in
logarithmic-phase cells, nearly all of the detectable isoaspartate resided in a single 14-kDa protein which we identified as ribosomal protein S11. The near stoichiometric levels of isoaspartate in S11,
estimated at 0.5 mol of isoaspartate per mol of S11, suggests that this
unusual modification may be important for S11 function.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-3900. Phone: (949) 824-6866. Fax: (949) 824-8551. E-mail: dwaswad{at}uci.edu.
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