Ana Iriarte
University of Missouri–Kansas City
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Featured researches published by Ana Iriarte.
Biochemical Journal | 2002
Arthur J. L. Cooper; Sam A. Bruschi; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
Rat liver mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (a homodimer) was shown to catalyse a beta-lyase reaction with three nephrotoxic halogenated cysteine S-conjugates [ S -(1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl)-L-cysteine, S -(1,2-dichlorovinyl)-L-cysteine and S -(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)-L-cysteine], and less effectively so with a non-toxic cysteine S-conjugate [benzothiazolyl-L-cysteine]. Transamination competes with the beta-lyase reaction, but is not favourable. The ratio of beta elimination to transamination in the presence of S -(1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl)-L-cysteine and 2-oxoglutarate is >100. Syncatalytic inactivation by the halogenated cysteine S-conjugates is also observed. The enzyme turns over approx. 2700 molecules of halogenated cysteine S-conjugate on average for every monomer inactivated. Kidney mitochondria are known to be especially sensitive to toxic halogenated cysteine S-conjugates. Evidence is presented that 15-20% of the cysteine S-conjugate beta-lyase activity towards S -(1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl)-L-cysteine in crude kidney mitochondrial homogenates is due to mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase. The possible involvement of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase in the toxicity of halogenated cysteine S-conjugates is also discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Antonio Artigues; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
The cytosolic (cAAT) and mitochondrial (mAAT) isozymes of eukaryotic aspartate aminotransferase share a high degree of sequence identity and almost identical three-dimensional structure. The rat liver proteins can be refolded and reassembled into active dimers after unfolding at low pH. However, refolding of the mitochondrial form after unfolding at pH 2.0 is arrested in the presence of hsp70, whereas this chaperone does not affect the refolding of the cytosolic isozyme unfolded under similar conditions. To elucidate the nature of the differential interaction between hsp70 and the two transaminase forms, we have characterized their refolding from their acid-unfolded states. The recovery of activity of the cytosolic enzyme is monophasic and can be adequately described by a single first-order reaction. By contrast, two sequential first-order rate-limiting steps can be detected for the refolding and reactivation of the mitochondrial protein. The overall refolding pathway of mAAT includes a very fast collapse to an intermediate with 80% of the secondary structure of the active dimer. This is followed by a slow isomerization to form assembly-competent monomers that rapidly associate to form an inactive dimer and a final structural rearrangement of the dimer to the native conformation. Analysis of the interaction of hsp70 with intermediates along the folding pathway of mAAT shows that the polypeptide loses its ability to bind to the chaperone after it has proceeded through the first isomerization/fast dimerization steps. Thus it appears that only the first collapsed intermediate states in the folding of mAAT bind hsp70. By contrast a faster refolding of cAAT from this collapsed state could explain, at least in part, the inability of hsp70 to bind this isozyme.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Joseph R. Mattingly; Claudia Torella; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez–Carrion
The partially homologous mitochondrial (mAAT) and cytosolic (cAAT) aspartate aminotransferase have nearly identical three-dimensional structures but differ in their folding rates in cell-free extracts and in their affinity for binding to molecular chaperones. In its native state, each isozyme is protease-resistant. Using limited proteolysis as an index of their conformational states, we have characterized these proteins (a) during the early stages of spontaneous refolding; (b) as species trapped in stable complexes with the chaperonin GroEL; or (c) as newly translated polypeptides in cell-free extracts. Treatment of the refolding proteins with trypsin generates reproducible patterns of large proteolytic fragments that are consistent with the formation of defined folding domains soon after initiating refolding. Binding to GroEL affords considerable protection to both isozymes against proteolysis. The tryptic fragments are similar in size for both isozymes, suggesting a common distribution of compact and flexible regions in their folding intermediates. cAAT synthesized in cell-free extracts becomes protease-resistant almost instantaneously, whereas trypsin digestion of the mAAT translation product produces a pattern of fragments qualitatively akin to that observed with the protein refolding in buffer. Analysis of the large tryptic peptides obtained with the GroEL-bound proteins reveals that the cleavage sites are located in analogous regions of the N-terminal portion of each isozyme. These results suggest that (a) binding to GroEL does not cause unfolding of AAT, at least to an extent detectable by proteolysis; (b) the compact folding domains identified in AAT bound to GroEL (or in mAAT fresh translation product) are already present at the early stages of refolding of the proteins in buffer alone; and (c) the two isozymes seem to bind in a similar fashion to GroEL, with the more compact C-terminal portion completely protected and the more flexible N-terminal first 100 residues still partially accessible to proteolysis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Juan A. Oses-Prieto; Antonio Artigues; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
The refolding of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (mAAT; EC 2.6.1.1) has been studied following unfolding in 6 m guanidine hydrochloride for different periods of time. Whereas reactivation of equilibrium-unfolded mAAT is sigmoidal, reactivation of the short term unfolded protein displays a double exponential behavior consistent with the presence of fast and slow refolding species. The amplitude of the fast phase decreases with increasing unfolding times (k ≈ 0.75 min–1 at 20 °C) and becomes undetectable at equilibrium unfolding. According to hydrogen exchange and stopped-flow intrinsic fluorescence data, unfolding of mAAT appears to be complete in less than 10 s, but hydrolysis of the Schiff base linking the coenzyme pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) to the polypeptide is much slower (k ≈ 0.08 min–1). This implies the existence in short term unfolded samples of unfolded species with PLP still attached. However, since the disappearance of the fast refolding phase is about 10-fold faster than the release of PLP, the fast refolding phase does not correspond to folding of the coenzyme-containing molecules. The fast refolding phase disappears more rapidly in the pyridoxamine and apoenzyme forms of mAAT, both of which lack covalently attached cofactor. Thus, bound PLP increases the kinetic stability of the fast refolding unfolding intermediates. Conversion between fast and slow folding forms also takes place in an early folding intermediate. The presence of cyclophilin has no effect on the reactivation of either equilibrium or short term unfolded mAAT. These results suggest that proline isomerization may not be the only factor determining the slow refolding of this cofactor-dependent protein.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Fernando Doñate; Alejandro J. Yañez; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
The possible contribution of the mature portion of a mitochondrial precursor protein to its interaction with membrane lipids is unclear. To address this issue, we examined the interaction of the precursor to mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (pmAAT) and of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the 29-residue presequence peptide (mAAT-pp) with anionic phospholipid vesicles. The affinity of mAAT-pp and pmAAT for anionic vesicles is nearly identical. Results obtained by analyzing the effect of mAAT-pp or full-length pmAAT on either the permeability or microviscosity of the phospholipid vesicles are consistent with only a shallow insertion of the presequence peptide in the bilayer. Analysis of the quenching of Trp-17 fluorescence by brominated phospholipids reveals that this presequence residue inserts to a depth of approximately 9 Å from the center of the bilayer. Furthermore, in membrane-bound pmAAT or mAAT-pp, both Arg-8 and Arg-28 are accessible to the solvent. These results suggest that the presequence segment lies close to the surface of the membrane and that the mature portion of the precursor protein has little effect on the affinity or mode of binding of the presequence to model membranes. In the presence of vesicles, mAAT-pp adopts considerable α-helical structure. Hydrolysis by trypsin after Arg-8 results in the dissociation of the remaining 21-residue C-terminal peptide fragment from the membrane bilayer, suggesting that the N-terminal portion of the presequence is essential for membrane binding. Based on these results, we propose that the presequence peptide may contain dual recognition elements for both the lipid and import receptor components of the mitochondrial membrane.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1993
Alejandro M. Reyes; Nicole Bravo; Heide C. Ludwig; Ana Iriarte; Juan C. Slebe
Treatment of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase with N-ethylmaleimide was shown to abolish the inhibition by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, which also protected the enzyme against this chemical modification [Reyes, A., Burgos, M. E., Hubert, E., and Slebe, J. C. (1987),J. Biol. Chem.262, 8451–8454]. On the basis of these results, it was suggested that a single reactive sulfhydryl group was essential for the inhibition. We have isolated a peptide bearing the N-ethylmaleimide target site and the modified residue has been identified as cysteine-128. We have further examined the reactivity of this group and demonstrated that when reagents with bulky groups are used to modify the protein at the reactive sulfhydryl [e.g., N-ethylmaleimide or 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate)], most of the fructose 2,6-bisphosphate inhibition potential is lost. However, there is only partial or no loss of inhibition when smaller groups (e.g., cyanate or cyanide) are introduced. Kinetic and ultraviolet difference spectroscopy-binding studies show that the treatment of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase with N-ethylmaleimide causes a considerable reduction in the affinity of the enzyme for fructose 2,6-bisphosphate while affinity for fructose 1,6-bisphosphate does not change. We can conclude that modification of this reactive sulfhydryl affects the enzyme sensitivity to fructose 2,6-bisphosphate inhibition by sterically interfering with the binding of this sugar bisphosphate, although this residue does not seem to be essential for the inhibition to occur. The results also suggest that fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate may interact with the enzyme in a different way.
Techniques in Protein Chemistry | 1997
Antonio Artigues; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
Publisher Summary The structure of hsp70 consists of a variable C-terminal peptide-binding domain and a well-conserved N-terminal ATPase domain. Among the few consensus features identified in peptides binding to hsp70 with high affinity is the presence of internal hydrophobic residues, which agrees with the proposed role of this chaperone in binding to hydrophobic regions of unfolded proteins normally hidden in the native structure. However, a huge variety of synthetic peptides, including organellar targeting sequences, containing basic residues also bind to hsp70. With the exception of the presequence-containing peptides, and in agreement with the generally accepted mechanism of hsp70 action, the peptides that bind with high affinity to hsp70 comprise sequences that are hidden in the native state of the protein. These peptides contain central hydrophobic and basic carboxyl terminal amino acids, but few acidic residues. More interestingly, a sequence homology comparison of the cytosolic and mitochondrial protein sequences shows that the mitochondrial peptides binding to hsp70 correspond to regions of major sequence dissimilarity between the two isozymes. The cytosolic (cAAT) and mitochondrial (mAAT) isozymes of aspartate aminotransferase share a significant degree of sequence homology, and almost identical crystallographic structures. The mitochondrial isozyme is synthesized in the cytosol as a precursor protein (pmAAT) with a 29-residue presequence peptide that is required for targeting and importing into mitochondria.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 2000
Serge Scherrer; Ana Iriarte; Marino Martinez-Carrion
The mitochondrial (mAAT) and cytosolic (cAAT) homologous isozymes of aspartate aminotransferase are two relatively large proteins that in their nonnative states interact very differently with GroEL. MgATP alone can increase the rate of GroEL-assisted reactivation of cAAT, yet the presence of GroES is mandatory for mAAT. Addition of an excess of a denatured substrate accelerates reactivation of cAAT in the presence of GroEL, but has no effect on mAAT. These competition studies suggest that the more stringent substrate mAAT forms a thermodynamically stable complex with GroEL, while rebinding affects the slow reactivation kinetics of cAAT with GroEL alone. However, the competitor appears to accelerate the release of cAAT from GroEL, most likely by displacing bound cAAT from the GroEL cavity. Moreover, cAAT, but not mAAT, shows a time-dependent increase in protease resistance while bound to GroEL at low temperature. These results suggest that folding and release of cAAT from GroEL in the absence of cofactors may occur stepwise with certain interactions being broken and reformed until the protein escapes binding. The distinct behavior of these two isozymes most likely results from differences in the structure of the nonnative states that bind to GroEL.
Methods in Enzymology | 1995
Marino Martinez-Carrion; Antonio Artigues; Alan Berezov; Maria L. Bianconi; Alejandro M. Reyes; Ana Iriarte
Publisher Summary This chapter illustrates the application of the methods in the investigation of the folding mechanism and stability of complex oligomeric proteins that are designed to exist both in solution and, at one stage of their transitory life, in association with membrane lipids. The chapter describes findings regarding (1) the stability of various forms of the cytosolic and mitochondrial isozymes of aspartate aminotransferase, (2) the preparation and use of selected mutant/chimeric forms of these enzymes to address specific questions regarding the structural elements responsible for their different properties, and (3) the integration of the thermodynamic information obtained with proteins in solution and that of the protein bound to phospholipid membrane to provide some understanding of the contribution of lipid interaction to the loosening of the structure required for efficient membrane translocation of the mitochondrial representative. The application of a combination of physical techniques, differential scanning calorimetry and fluorescence spectroscopy, to dissect the relative contribution of selected structural elements to the thermodynamic stability of two homologous isozymes and their precursor forms is described. With the aspartate aminotransferase isozymes, they provide information as to the consequences of selected differences in protein structure, whether naturally occurring or introduced in the laboratory through protein engineering techniques, to the stability and folding abilities of the proteins.
Archive | 2000
Blanca Lain; C. A. Tanase; Ana Iriarte; A. E. Johnson; Marino Martinez-Carrion
To investigate the possible interaction of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (mAAT) with cytosolic components, a photoreactive probe was incorporated co-translationally into mAAT chains synthesized in a cell-free extract. Irradiation of the translation reaction results in the appearance of four crosslinked species containing radioactive mAAT with apparent molecular weights ranging from 70 to 200 kDa. These results suggest that newly synthesized mAAT is associated with as yet unknown factors from the cell extract. Fractionation of a fresh translation reaction by gel filtration chromatography confirms that indeed a large fraction of mAAT translation product is present as high molecular weight species.