PMID: 6106022Oct 10, 1980Paper

Two glutamine synthetases from Bacillus caldolyticus, an extreme thermophile. Isolation, physicochemical and kinetic properties.

The Journal of Biological Chemistry
F C WedlerS G Rhee

Abstract

Two distinctly different glutamine synthetase enzymes (EI and EII) have been isolated from the extreme thermophile Bacillus caldolyticus, grown on chemically defined medium at 70 degrees C. Purification to homogeneity mainly involves affinity chromatography and heat treatment with substrate protection. Biosynthesis of total enzyme activity can be repressed by at least 8-fold by high ammonia, with synthesis of EI being repressed more strongly than EII. A variety of chemical and biochemical tests failed to provide evidence for regulation of EI or EII by covalent modification, e.g. proteolysis, phosphorylation, or adenylylation. Neither of the thermophiic enzymes will cross-react with antibodies for the Escherichia coli or Bacillus subtilis glutamine synthetases. Both enzymes are composed of 12 subunits, each approximately 51,000 daltons. However, EI and EII differ significantly in their amino acid composition, isoelectric points (5.2 and 5.5, respectively), rates of migration on polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels at pH 6.8, and kinetic properties, EI is more active with Mg(II) than with Mn(II), but EII is more active with Mn(II) than Mg(II). Cd(II) activates EII more than EI, and only EI shows activity with Co(II). For both enzy...Continue Reading

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