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Title: Molybdenum co-factor biosynthesis: the Arabidopsis thaliana cDNA cnx1 encodes a multifunctional two-domain protein homologous to a mammalian neuroprotein, the insect protein Cinnamon and three Escherichia coli proteins. Author: Stallmeyer B, Nerlich A, Schiemann J, Brinkmann H, Mendel RR. Journal: Plant J; 1995 Nov; 8(5):751-62. PubMed ID: 8528286. Abstract: The molybdenum co-factor (Moco) is an essential part of all eukaryotic molybdoenzymes. It is a molybdopterin and reveals the same principal structure in eubacteria, archaebacteria and eukaryotes. This paper reports the isolation of cnx1, a cDNA clone of Arabidopsis thaliana which complements the Escherichia coli Moco mutant mogA. The mapping data of this cDNA correlate well with the mapping position of the A. thaliana molybdenum co-factor locus chl6. As mutants in chl6 are known to be repairable by high concentrations of molybdate, the defective gene is very likely to be involved in the last step of Moco biosynthesis, that is, the insertion of molybdenum into molybdopterin. The protein encoded by cnx1 shows a two-domain structure: the N-terminal domain is homologous to the E. coli Moco protein MoeA, the C-terminal domain is homologous to the E. coli Moco proteins MoaB and MogA, respectively. These homologies show that part of the prokaryotic Moco biosynthetic pathway accomplished by monofunctional proteins in E. coli, is performed by a single multifunctional protein in eukaryotes. In addition Cnx1 is homologous to the eukaryotic proteins Gephyrin, a rat neuroprotein, and Cinnamon, a Drosophila protein with a function in Moco biosynthesis. These proteins also show a two-domain structure but the order of the domains is inversed as compared with Cnx1. Southern analysis indicates the existence of at least one further member, in addition to the cnx1 gene, of this novel gene family in the Arabidopsis genome.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]