Sugar-nucleotide donor specificity of histo-blood group A and B transferases is based on amino acid substitutions.

Article Details

Citation

Yamamoto F, Hakomori S

Sugar-nucleotide donor specificity of histo-blood group A and B transferases is based on amino acid substitutions.

J Biol Chem. 1990 Nov 5;265(31):19257-62.

PubMed ID
2121736 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Four amino acid substitutions (aa 176, 235, 266, and 268) have been found between the coding regions of cDNAs for histo-blood group A and B transferases (Yamamoto F., Clausen, H., White, T., Marken, J., and Hakomori, S. (1990) Nature 345, 229-233). Here we establish the basis of differential affinity of these glycosyltransferases to nucleotide-sugar (UDP-GalNAc or UDP-Gal). On the basis of gene reconstruction experiments and studies of expression in DNA transfected HeLa cells, the third as well as the fourth aa substitutions (leucine and glycine in A and methionine and alanine in B), which were calculated to modify flexibility of the protein, were found to be crucial in determining nucleotide-sugar specificity. The second substitution (glycine in A and serine in B) also affects the specificity. We have also created new enzymes which catalyze the transfer of both GalNAc and Gal, and may provide an explanation of the rare cis-AB phenotype.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Histo-blood group ABO system transferaseP16442Details