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Selenium Metabolism in Neptunia amplexicaulis
Author(s) -
James N. Burnell
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.67.2.316
Subject(s) - inorganic pyrophosphatase , biochemistry , aminoacylation , selenate , pyrophosphate , amino acid , chemistry , aminoacyl trna synthetase , transfer rna , adenosine , selenium , enzyme , pyrophosphatase , metabolism , stereochemistry , rna , gene , organic chemistry
ATP sulfurylase (EC 2.7.7.4), cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase (EC 6.1.1.16), and methionyl-tRNA synthetase (EC 6.1.1.10) from Neptunia amplexicaulis have been purified approximately 162-, 140- and 185-fold, respectively. Purified ATP sulfurylase in the presence of purified inorganic pyrophosphatase catalyzed the incorporation of sulfate into adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate; evidence of an analogous reaction with selenate is presented. Crude extracts catalyzed both the sulfate- and the adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate-dependent NADH oxidation in the adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate kinase assay of Burnell and Whatley (1977 Biochim Biophys Acta 481: 266-278), but an analogous reaction with selenate could not be detected. Both purified cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase and methionyl-tRNA synthetase used selenium-containing analogs as substrates in both the ATP-pyrophosphate exchange and the aminoacylation assays.It seems that selenium-containing amino acids are excluded from proteins by a mechanism(s) other than substrate discrimination at the amino acid activation stage of protein synthesis.

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