Article

Carp hepatopancreatic DNase I: biochemical, molecular, and immunological properties.

Department of Legal Medicine, Gunma University School of Medicine, Maebashi, Gunma 371-8511, Japan.
Journal of Biochemistry (impact factor: 2.37). 04/2003; 133(3):377-86. pp.377-86
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT A survey of DNase I in nine different carp tissues showed that the hepatopancreas has the highest levels of both DNase I enzyme activity and gene expression. Carp hepatopancreatic DNase I was purified 17,000-fold, with a yield of 29%, to electrophoretic homogeneity using three-step column chromatography. The purified enzyme activity was inhibited completely by 20 mM EDTA and a specific anti-carp DNase I antibody and slightly by G-actin. Histochemical analysis using this antibody revealed the strongest immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm of pancreatic tissue, but not in that of hepatic tissue in the carp hepatopancreas. A 995-bp cDNA encoding carp DNase I was constructed from total RNA from carp hepatopancreas. The mature carp DNase I protein comprises 260 amino acids, the same number as the human enzyme, however, the carp enzyme has an insertion of Ser59 and a deletion of Ala225 in comparison with the human enzyme. These alterations have no influence on the enzyme activity and stability. Three amino acid residues, Tyr65, Val67, and Ala114, of human DNase I are involved in actin binding, whereas those of carp DNase I are shifted to Tyr66, Val68, and Phe115, respectively, by the insertion of Ser59: the decrease in affinity to actin is due to one amino acid substitution, Ala114Phe. The results of our phylogenetic and immunological analyses indicate that carp DNase I is not closely related to the mammalian, avian or amphibian enzymes, and forms a relatively tight piscine cluster with the tilapia enzyme.

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Keywords

260 amino acids
 
995-bp cDNA encoding carp DNase
 
amino acid residues
 
amino acid substitution
 
amphibian enzymes
 
carp DNase
 
carp enzyme
 
Carp hepatopancreatic DNase
 
different carp tissues
 
electrophoretic homogeneity
 
enzyme activity
 
gene expression
 
highest levels
 
human enzyme
 
mature carp DNase
 
purified enzyme activity
 
specific anti-carp DNase
 
strongest immunoreactivity
 
three-step column chromatography
 
tilapia enzyme
 

Kouichi Mogi