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  • Title: Scallop lens Omega-crystallin (ALDH1A9): a novel tetrameric aldehyde dehydrogenase.
    Author: Horwitz J, Ding L, Vasiliou V, Cantore M, Piatigorsky J.
    Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun; 2006 Oct 06; 348(4):1302-9. PubMed ID: 16919242.
    Abstract:
    Scallop eye lens Omega-crystallin is an inactive aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH1A9) related to cytoplasmic ALDH1A1 and mitochondrial ALDH2 that migrates by gel filtration chromatography as a homodimer. Because mammalian ALDH1A1 and ALDH2 are homotetramers, we investigated the native molecular mass of scallop Omega-crystallin by multi-angle laser light scattering. The results indicate that the scallop Omega-crystallin is a tetrameric, not a dimeric protein. Moreover, phylogenetic tree analysis shows that scallop Omega-crystallin clusters with the mitochondrial ALDH2 and ALDH1B1 rather than the cytoplasmic ALDH1A, yet it lacks the mitochondrial N-terminal leader sequence characteristic of the mitochondrial ALDHs. The mitochondrial grouping, enzymatic inactivity, and anomalous gel filtration behavior make scallop cytoplasmic Omega-crystallin an interesting protein for structural studies of evolutionary adaptations to become an enzyme-crystallin.
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