• Title/Summary/Keyword: cyclic AMP receptor protein

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Mutant cAMP Receptor Protein Binds to DNA without DNA Bending (DNA 벤딩(휨) 없이 돌연변이 cAMP 수용체 단백질의 결합)

  • Gang, Jong-Back
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.16 no.7 s.80
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    • pp.1225-1228
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    • 2006
  • Cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) complexed with cAMP binds to DNA and induces sharp DNA bending around ${\sim}90$ degree. Previous publication (5), however, reported that mutant CRP:cGMP complex showed high migration rate relative to mutant CRP:cAMP complex on native polyacrylamide gel. To confirm DNA structural change in the presence of CRP and cyclic nucleotide, molar cyclization factor $(j_M)$ [13] was measured with 6 constructed DNA fragments. Nonlinear regression analysis of $j_M$ data indicated that mutant CRP did not induce DNA bending in the presence of cGMP but bent DNA in the presence of cAMP without any helical twist change in DNA.

Stability and Structural Change of cAMP Receptor Protein at Low and High cAMP Concentrations

  • GANG JONGBACK;CHUNG HYE-JIN;PARK GWI-GUN;PARK YOUNG-SEO;CHOI SEONG-JUN
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.15 no.6
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    • pp.1392-1396
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    • 2005
  • Proteolytic digestion and CD measurement of wild-type and mutant cyclic AMP receptor proteins (CRPs) were performed either in the presence or absence of cyclic nucleotide. Results indicated that transition of a structural change to the hinge region by the binding of cAMP to the anti site was required for the binding of cAMP to the syn site near the hinge region and, although the occupancy of cAMP in the anti site increased the protein stability, CRP adopted more a stable conformation by the binding of cAMP to the syn site.

Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein Adopts the Highly Stable Conformation at Millimolar cAMP Concentration (높은 cAMP 농도에서 cAMP 수용성 단백질의 열 안정화)

  • Kang, Jong-Baek;Choi, Young
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.13 no.5
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    • pp.751-755
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    • 2003
  • Cyclic AMP receptor proteins(CRP) activate many genes in Escherichia coli by binding of cAMP with not fully known mechanism. CRP existed as apo-CRP in the absence of cAMP, $CRP;(cAMP)_2$$_2$ at low(micromolar) cAMP concentration, or $CRP;(cAMP)_4$ at high(millimolar) concentration of cAMP. This study is designed to measure the thermal stability of S83G CRP, which substituted glycine for serine at amino acid 83 position, with CD spectrapolarimeter at 222nm by the constant elevation of temperature from $20^{\circ]C\; to\; 90^{\circ}C\; at\; 1^{\circ}C/min$. The non-linear regression analysis showed that melting temperatures were 68.4, 72.0, and $82.3^{\circ}C$ for no cAMP, 0.1mM cAMP, and 5mM cAMP, respectively. Result showed the strong thermal stability of CRP by binding of additional cAMP molecules to region between the hinge region and helix-turn-helix(HTH) motif at 5mM cAMP concentration.

Inhibitory Mechanism of Propranolol on the Effects of VIP in Peripheral Blood T-lymphocytes of Rat (흰쥐 말초혈액 T-림프구에서 Vasoactive Intestinal Polypeptide의 효과에 대한 Propranolol의 억제 기전)

  • Ahn, Young-Soo;Choo, Sung-Yee;Kang, Dong-Won;Lee, Sang-Hun
    • The Korean Journal of Pharmacology
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.219-231
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    • 1995
  • Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide(VIP) and ${\beta}-adrenergic$ agonists have immunomodultory effects on the peripheral blood T-lymphocytes of rat through their own receptors. Both of them utilize the same signal transduction pathway. That is, the stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein(G protein) mediates the receptor-adenylyl cyclase coupling, producing intracellular increase of cyclic adenosine monophosphate(cAMP). In the previous experiment, propranolol, a ${\beta}-adrenergic$ receptor blocker, inhibited the VIP-induced protein phosphorylation in lymphocytes. However, propranolol could not block the effect induced by forskolin. Therefore, this study was designed to elucidate the mechanism of the inhibitory action of propranolol on the effects of VIP. Using peripheral blood lymphocytes of rats, the effect of propranolol on the receptor binding characteristics of VIP was observed. And the effects of propranolol were compared to the effects of timolol on the cAMP increase induced by isoproterenol, VIP or forskolin. The results obtained are as follows. 1) Receptor binding study showed no significant differences in the affinity or density of VIP receptor between the control and propranolol-pretreated groups. 2) VIP-induced increase of cAMP was inhibited by propranolol, but not by timolol. 3) Both propranolol and timolol suppressed the isoproterenol-induced cAMP increase. 4) Propranolol also inhibited the histamine-induced cAMP increase. 5) Propranolol did not inhibit the increase of cAMP stimulated by forskolin. 6) Lidocaine did not block the VIP-induced cAMP increase. These results show that the inhibitory mechanism of propranolol is not related to ${\beta}-adrenergic$ receptor or its membrane stabilizing effect, and it is suggested that propranolol can block the effects of VIP by inhibiting the intermediate step between the VIP receptor and adenylyl cyclase.

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Stability and Structure of S128A Mutant cAMP Receptor Protein

  • Choi, Young;Gang, JongBack
    • Journal of Integrative Natural Science
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.222-226
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    • 2011
  • Cyclic AMP receptor protein(CRP) is involved in the activation of many genes corresponding to catabolite enzymes in Escherichia coli. In this study, mutant CRP(S128A) was used to elucidate the effect of Ser 128 on the cAMP-induced structural change. Based on the protease digestion and thermal analysis, serine 128 in CRP affects the cAMP binding capability and then structural change of CRP protein. In addition, CD spectra in near UV region revealed that S128A CRP retained the sensitive conformation to thermal effect relative to that of wild-type CRP, in spite of identical Tm values in the absence of cAMP.

Thermal Denaturation of the Apo-cyclic AMP Receptor Protein and Noncovalent Interactions between Its Domains

  • Won, Hyung-Sik;Seo, Min-Duk;Ko, Hyun-Suk;Choi, Wahn Soo;Lee, Bong-Jin
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.61-66
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    • 2008
  • Cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) is allosterically activated by cAMP and functions as a global transcription regulator in enteric bacteria. Structural information on CRP in the absence of cAMP (apo-CRP) is essential to fully understand its allosteric behavior. In this study we demonstrated interdomain interactions in apo-CRP, using a comparative thermodynamic approach to the intact protein and its isolated domains, which were prepared either by limited proteolysis or using recombinant DNA. Thermal denaturation of the intact apo-CRP, monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, revealed an apparently single cooperative transition with a slight asymmetry. Combined with circular dichroism and fluorescence analysis, the thermal denaturation of apo-CRP could be interpreted as a coupled process involving two individual transitions, each attributable to a structural domain. When isolated individually, both of the domains exhibited significantly altered thermal behavior, thus pointing to the existence of non-covalent interdomain interactions in the intact apo-CRP. These observations suggest that the allosteric conformational change of CRP upon binding to cAMP is achieved by perturbing or modifying pre-existing interdomain interactions. They also underline the effectiveness of a comparative approach using calorimetric and structural probes for studying the thermodynamics of a protein.

Regulation of Cyclic AMP-Response Element Binding Protein Zhangfei (CREBZF) Expression by Estrogen in Mouse Uterus

  • Jang, Hoon
    • Development and Reproduction
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.95-104
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    • 2018
  • CREBZF (cAMP-response element binding protein zhangfei) is a member of ATF/CREB family, and which regulates various cellular functions by suppressing major factors with direct interaction. In this study, we have examined the expression of CREBZF on mouse endometrium during uterus estrous cycles and estrogen (E2) treatment. In uterus, CREBZF mRNA expression was higher than other organs and mRNA and protein of CREBZF was increased in proestrus phase and decreased in estrus phase. The expression of CREBZF in 3-weeks old mouse uterus was reduced by E2 injection in endometrium. In addition, the expression of progesterone receptor, a marker of E2 in ovariectomized mice was found to be strongly expressed in stroma, while CREBZF was only expressed in epithelium. Also, we conformed that E2-suppressed CREBZF was restored by co-injection of ICI 182,780, an estrogen receptor antagonist. Overall, these results suggest that CREBZF is regulated by estrogen and involved in ER signaling pathway in mouse uterus.

The Binding Affinities of Two Binding Sites(CRP1 and CRP2 Sites) by Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein at Lactose Operon (락토스 오페론에서 Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein에 의한 두 결합 부위(CRP1과 CRP2)의 결합 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kang, Jong-Baek;Kwon, Gun
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.13 no.5
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    • pp.746-750
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    • 2003
  • Lactose operon contains two CRP binding sites at promoter(CRP1 site) and operator(CRP2 site) regions at lac operon. CRP protein can bind to both sites with the different binding affinity. CRP1 site, major CRP binding site, acts the transcription activation with the fully unknown mechanism by binding of CRP. In this study, the binding affinities of CRP1 site and CRP2 site were measured with the fluorescein-labeled oligomers, which contain CRP1 site and the three different spacing sequences between GTGA and TCAC at CRP2 site. Results showed that CRP:cAMP complex bound to CRP1 site 3 times more strongly than CRP2 site and the base spacing between GTGA and TCAC was not the only factor to affect the binding affinity of CRP to CRP2 site.

Application of Temperature Gradient Gel Electrophoresis To cAMP Receptor Protein (온도 기울기 전기영동장치의 CAMP 수용성 단백질에 응용)

  • Gang, Jong-Back;Cho, Hyun-Young
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.309-314
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    • 2004
  • Cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) is involved in the transcriptional regulation of more than 100 genes in E. coli. CRP dimer is converted into active form via the sequential conformation change of cAMP binding pocket, hinge region and HTH DNA binding motif by binding of cAMP. The temperature gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) was applied to CRP protein to know whether it was an efficient technique to study the conformational transitions and the thermal stability. TGGE showed the unfolding process of wild-type and S83G CRP proteins with the temperature gradient set from 29 to 71$^{\circ}C$ on nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel. Melting temperature (Tm) was 57$\pm$1 and 55$\pm$1$^{\circ}C$ for wild-type and S83G CRP, respectively in acidic buffer[89.8 mM Glycine and 24 mM Boric acid (pH 5.8)].

3',5'-Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate (cAMP) as a Signal and a Regulatory Compound in Bacterial Cells (원핵세포에서 신호물질 및 조절인자로서의 3',5'-Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate의 역할)

  • Chun, Se-Jin;Seok, Young-Jae;Lee, Kyu-Ho
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.289-298
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    • 2006
  • 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) is an important molecule, which mediates diverse cellular processes. For example, it is involved in regulation of sugar uptake/catabolism, DNA replication, cell division, and motility in various acterial species. In addition, cAMP is one of the critical regulators for syntheses of virulence factors in many pathogenic bacteria. It is believed that cAMP acts as a signal for environmental changes as well as a regulatory factor for gene expressions. Therefore, intracellular concentration of cAMP is finely modulated by according to its rates of synthesis (by adenylate cyclase), excretion, and degradation (by cAMP phosphodiesterase). In the present review, we discuss the bacterial physiological characteristics governed by CAMP and the molecular mechanisms for gene regulation by cAMP. Furthermore, the effect of cAMP on phosphotransferase system is addressed.