Glutamine as a precursor to N-terminal pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid in mouse immunoglobulin lambda-type light chains. Amino acid-sequence variability at the N-terminal extra piece of lambda-type light-chain precursors.
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ABSTRACT: The mRNA molecules coding for three mouse immunoglobulin lambda-type light (L) chains (MOPC-104E lambda(1), RPC-20 lambda(1), MOPC-315 lambda(2)) programme the cell-free synthesis of precursors larger than the mature proteins. Radioactive amino acid-sequence analyses of each of the three precursors labelled with [(3)H]alanine, [(3)H]serine, [(3)H]glutamine, [(3)H]glutamic acid and [(3)H]threonine showed that an extra piece, at least 18 residues long, is linked to the N-terminus of the mature L-chains. The N-terminal extra-peptide segment may be 19 residues long, since analyses of precursors labelled with [(35)S]methionine indicated an additional N-terminal methionine residue which was recovered in low yields. Presumably this is the initiator methionine, which is known to be short lived in eukaryotes. The mature forms of MOPC-104E, RPC-20 and MOPC-315 lambda L-chains are blocked at the N-termini by pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid (pyroglutamic acid). Sequence analyses of precursors labelled with [(3)H]glutamine and [(3)H]glutamic acid showed incorporation only of glutamine in a position that matches with the position of pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid in the mature forms of all three precursors, and incorporation of glutamic acid in other positions. The data showed the absence of glutamine-glutamic acid interconversion, since the radioactive peaks obtained from either (3)H-labelled amino acid were discrete, and free from cross-contamination. These results prove that glutamine is the precursor amino acid of pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid at the N-termini of the mature MOPC-104E lambda(1), RPC-20 lambda(1) and MOPC-315 lambda(2) L-chains. Thus the formation of pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid by cyclization of glutamine is a post-translational event which occurs after, or concomitant with, cleavage of the extra piece from the precursor to yield the mature L-chain. The variable (V) regions (110 amino acid residues) of mouse lambda L-chains are quite similar: when compared with that of MOPC-104E lambda(1) chain, the V-region of RPC-20 lambda(1) chain differs in one residue, and the V-region of MOPC-315 lambda(2) chain differs in 11 residues. The partial sequence data show that the N-terminal extra pieces of the two lambda(1) L-chain precursors have, so far, identical partial sequences; the extra piece of the lambda(2) L-chain precursor differs from these in at least three out of 19 positions.
SUBMITTER: Burstein Y
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1164907 | biostudies-other | 1977 Aug
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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