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Featured researches published by W.Lee Adair.


Cell | 1986

The S. cerevisiae Structural Gene for Chitin Synthase Is Not Required for Chitin Synthesis In Vivo

Christine Ellen Bulawa; Martin Slater; Enrico Cabib; Janice Au-Young; Adriana Sburlati; W.Lee Adair; Phillips W. Robbins

The chitin synthase of Saccharomyces is a plasma membrane-bound zymogen. Following proteolytic activation, the enzyme synthesizes insoluble chitin that has chain length and other physical properties similar to chitin found in bud scars. We isolated mutants lacking chitin synthase activity (chs1) and used these to clone CHS1. The gene has an open reading frame of 3400 bases and encodes a protein of 130 kd. The fission yeast S. pombe lacks chitin synthase and chitin. When a plasmid encoding a CHS1-lacZ fusion protein is introduced into S. pombe, both enzymatic activities are expressed in the same ratio as in S. cerevisiae, demonstrating that CHS1 encodes the structural gene of chitin synthase. Three CHS1 gene disruption experiments were performed. In all cases, strains with the disrupted gene have a recognizable phenotype, lack measurable chitin synthase activity in vitro but are viable, contain normal levels of chitin in vivo, and mate and sporulate efficiently.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1977

Studies on the biosynthesis of dolichyl phosphate: Evidence for the in vitro formation of 2,3-dehydrodolichyl phosphate

Dorothy K. Grange; W.Lee Adair

Abstract A particulate enzyme preparation from hen oviduct is shown to carry out the biosynthesis of a long chain polyprenyl phosphate from isopentenyl pyrophosphate and farnesyl pyrophosphate. The compound has the physical and chemical properties of 2,3-dehydrodolichyl phosphate. The enzyme system is inhibited by EDTA and stimulated by Triton X-100 and dithiothreitol. If the product of the reaction is 2,3-dehydrodolichyl phosphate, it may be derived from 2,3-dehydrodolichyl pyrophosphate, a likely intermediate in the biosynthesis of dolichyl phosphate.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1987

Characterization of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cis-prenyltransferase required for dolichyl phosphate biosynthesis

W.Lee Adair; Nancy Cafmeyer

The prenyltransferase involved in the biosynthesis of dolichyl phosphate has been characterized in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Although the enzyme is predominantly membrane-bound, a significant percentage was found in the soluble fraction. The prenyltransferase preferentially utilizes farnesyl pyrophosphate as the allylic substrate and isopentenyl pyrophosphate as cosubstrate with half-maximal velocities obtained at 25 and 6.7 microM, respectively. The enzymatic activity is sensitive to sulfhydryl reagents and is inhibited by all detergents tested, except 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate at concentrations less than 5 mM. The product of the reaction has been characterized as an alpha-unsaturated polyprenyl pyrophosphate, containing 12-15 isoprene units, approximately two isoprene units shorter than the endogenous yeast dolichyl phosphate. The stereochemistry of addition of isoprene units by the prenyltransferase was shown to be cis by a comparison of the HPLC retention time for a pentadecaprenyl phosphate derived from the in vitro reaction product with that for an authentic mixture of alpha-cis- and alpha-trans-pentadecaprenyl phosphates.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1983

Topography of dolichyl phosphate synthesis in rat liver microsomes transbilayer arrangement of dolichol kinase and long-chain prenyltransferase

W.Lee Adair; Nancy Cafmeyer

The topography of the dolichyl phosphate biosynthetic enzymes within the plane of rat liver microsomes was investigated by the use of two impermeant inhibitors of enzyme activity: trypsin and mercury-dextran. Mercury-dextran was found to inactivate over 50% of the activities of the CTP-dependent dolichol kinase and the long-chain prenyltransferase. Trypsin caused over 90% inactivation of the long-chain prenyltransferase and 60% inactivation of the dolichol kinase. In addition, the CTP-dependent dolichol kinase was inhibited over 90% by CDP applied externally to sealed microsomes. Inactivation of the dolichyl phosphate biosynthetic enzymes by the impermeant probes occurred under conditions where the mannose-6-phosphatase activity was highly latent. It was concluded that the active sites of these two enzymes are located on the external surface of the microsomal membranes and that dolichyl phosphate biosynthesis occurs asymmetrically on the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1977

Microdetermination of dolichol in tissues

R.Kennedy Keller; W.Lee Adair

A method is described for the rapid purification and analysis of tissue dolichol on a nanomole scale. The assay is based on a radioisotope dilution technique in which [3H]dolichyl palmitate is used as tracer and acetylation with [14C]acetic anhydride serves as the quantitating reaction. The acetylation conditions were characterized with respect to time, temperature and concentration of reagents. When this method was applied to pig liver, a value was obtained which fell within the range of previously published results based on a gravimetric assay. In chicken, dolichol levels were found to be high in oviduct and low or absent in red blood cells and plasma.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1982

Subcellular localization and substrate specificity of dolichol kinase from rat liver

R.Kennedy Keller; Grant D. Rottler; Nancy Cafmeyer; W.Lee Adair

When purified subcellular fractions were prepared from rat liver and assayed for dolichol kinase activity using pig liver dolichol as a substrate, the microsomes were found to contain the highest specific activity and greater than 75% of the total activity. With regard to substrate specificity, the microsomal enzyme showed a marked preference for saturation of the alpha-isoprene: dolichol-16 and -19 were 2.5-fold more active than the corresponding polyprenols. For a given class of prenol, the 16 and 19 isoprenologs exhibited similar activity, whereas the 11 isoprenolog appeared less active. The enzyme was twice as active against the naturally occurring polyprenol-16 (alpha-cis-isoprene) compared to synthetic alpha-trans-polyprenol-16. Taken together, the data indicate that the alpha-isoprene specificity follows the order: saturated greater than cis greater than trans. In addition, all-trans-2,3-dihydrosolanesol was not a substrate, suggesting that at least one cis isoprene residue is required.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1987

Cell-cycle dependence of dolichyl phosphate biosynthesis

W.Lee Adair; Nancy Cafmeyer

The cell-cycle dependence of dolichyl phosphate biosynthesis has been investigated in mouse L-1210 cells fractionated by centrifugal elutriation. Dolichyl phosphate levels increased linearly through the cell cycle, reaching a value in late S phase twice that of early G1. The cell-cycle dependences of four dolichyl phosphate metabolizing enzymes have been measured: cis-prenyltransferase, CTP-dependent dolichol kinase, dolichyl phosphatase, and dolichyl pyrophosphatase. The kinase, the cis-prenyltransferase, and the pyrophosphatase showed cell-cycle variations, increasing through G1 to a maximum in S phase while the monophosphatase activity was cell-cycle independent. The rate of accumulation of dolichyl phosphate was not affected by growing the cells in mevalonolactone-supplemented media. The evidence presented is consistent with models in which either the cis-prenyltransferase or the kinase/phosphatase couple (or both) regulates the levels of dolichyl phosphate in the cell.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1986

Characterization of polyisoprenyl phosphate phosphatase activity in rat liver.

R.Kennedy Keller; W.Lee Adair; Nancy Cafmeyer; F.Anthony Simion; Becca Fleischer; Sidney Fleischer

The polyisoprenyl phosphate dephosphorylating activity of rat liver has been investigated with regard to substrate specificity, subcellular distribution, and transmembrane orientation. Total liver microsomes were employed as a source of enzymatic activity against a variety of 32P-labeled substrates. Susceptibility to dephosphorylation followed the order solanesyl phosphate greater than alpha-cis-polyprenyl 19-phosphate = alpha-trans-polyprenyl 19-phosphate = dihydrosolanesyl phosphate greater than (S)-dolichyl 19-phosphate = (R)-dolichyl 19-phosphate = (R,S)-dolichyl 11-phosphate. There appeared to be no major effect of chain length from 11 to 20 isoprenes. Data obtained from inhibition studies using solanesyl [32P]phosphate as substrate were consistent with the substrate specificity studies and suggested that a single activity is responsible. With dolichyl [32P]phosphate as substrate, the phosphatase specific activity of the subcellular fractions prepared from rat liver was found to follow the sequence Golgi = smooth endoplasmic reticulum greater than plasma membrane greater than lysosomes = rough endoplasmic reticulum greater than nuclei greater than mitochondria. Transmembrane topography studies, using enzyme latency as a criterion, were consistent with an orientation of the active site facing the cytoplasm.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

The role of N-6-isopentenyl adenine in tumor cell growth

W.Lee Adair; Susan L. Brennan

When cell extracts from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells were assayed for isopentenyl adenine content and correlation with cell growth stage by radioimmunoassay, concentrations of low statistical significance were obtained. High performance liquid chromatographic analysis of cell extracts showed undetectable levels of isopentenyl adenine or 8-hydroxy-isopentenyl adenine, a known metabolite. Thus these substances do not seem to be required for cell division in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 1989

Characterization of dolichyl diphosphate phosphatase from rat liver

W.Lee Adair; Nancy Cafmeyer

Dolichyl diphosphate phosphatase (DolPPase) has been characterized in rat liver. Subcellular distribution studies indicate that the enzyme is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum. The in vitro enzymatic activity is stimulated by EDTA, due to release of inhibition by trivalent cations found in the assay tubes. All di- and trivalent cations tested were inhibitory, with the trivalent ions Al3+ and Fe3+ showing greater than 70% inhibition at a concentration of 10 microM. The assay requires the presence of a detergent for optimal activity, with Triton X-100 giving maximum activity at 0.1%. The substrate specificity of DolPPase toward polyprenyl diphosphates has been determined and indicates that there is little preference of the enzyme for substrates of different chain length, and either stereochemical orientation or degree of saturation of the alpha-isoprene unit. Km values of 11-14 microM were obtained for all substrates tested. Preliminary studies on the transmembrane topology of the DolPPase using latency assays, indicate that the active site of the enzyme may reside on the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum.

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Nancy Cafmeyer

University of South Florida

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R.Kennedy Keller

University of South Florida

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Grant D. Rottler

University of South Florida

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Susan L. Brennan

University of South Florida

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Adriana Sburlati

National Institutes of Health

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Christine Ellen Bulawa

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Dorothy K. Grange

University of South Florida

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Enrico Cabib

National Institutes of Health

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