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Title: Yeast homoserine kinase. Characteristics of the corresponding gene, THR1, and the purified enzyme, and evolutionary relationships with other enzymes of threonine metabolism. Author: Mannhaupt G, Pohlenz HD, Seefluth AK, Pilz U, Feldmann H. Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1990 Jul 20; 191(1):115-22. PubMed ID: 2165904. Abstract: THR1, the gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, encoding homoserine kinase, one of the threonine biosynthetic enzymes, has been cloned by complementation. The nucleotide sequence of a 3.1-kb region carrying this gene reveals an open reading frame of 356 codons, corresponding to about 40 kDa for the encoded protein. The presence of three canonical GCN4 regulatory sequences in the upstream flanking region suggests that the expression of THR1 is under the general amino acid control. In parallel, the enzyme was purified by four consecutive column chromatographies, monitoring homoserine kinase activity. In SDS gel electrophoresis, homoserine kinase migrates like a 40-kDa protein; the native enzyme appears to be a homodimer. The sequence of the first 15 NH2-terminal amino acids, as determined by automated Edman degradation, is in accordance with the amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence. Computer-assisted comparison of the yeast enzyme with the corresponding activities from bacterial sources showed that several segments among these proteins are highly conserved. Furthermore, the observed homology patterns suggest that the ancestral sequences might have been composed from separate (functional) domains. A block of very similar amino acids is found in the homoserine kinases towards the carboxy terminus that is also present in many other proteins involved in threonine (or serine) metabolism; this motif, therefore, may represent the binding site for the hydroxyamino acids. Limited similarity was detected between a motif conserved among the homoserine kinases and consensus sequences found in other mono- or dinucleotide-binding proteins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]