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Biochemistry. 2000 Feb 22;39(7):1807-16.

Bovine NAD+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase: alternative splicing and tissue-dependent expression of subunit 1.

Weiss C, Zeng Y, Huang J, Sobocka MB, Rushbrook JI.

Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, 450 Clarkson Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11203, USA.

NAD+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH), a key regulatory enzyme in the Krebs cycle, is a multi-tetrameric enzyme. At least three of the subunits in the core tetramer of mammals are unique gene products. Subunits 1/beta and 2/gamma are considered to be regulatory, while subunits 3,4/alpha, comprising half the tetramer, are catalytic. The full sequence was obtained for the major subunit 1 cDNA in bovine heart, IDH 1-A. A second cDNA, rare in heart, was also identified (IDH 1-B). Differences in the two were confined to the 3'-region, suggesting alternative splicing. Screening of brain, kidney, and liver RNA showed the presence of IDH 1-A and 1-B and a third major species, IDH 1-C. Amplification of bovine genomic DNA by PCR across the regions of difference produced a single product. Comparison of the genomic and mRNA sequences showed that IDH 1-A resulted from splicing of exon W to exon Y, eliminating intron w, exon X, and intron x. IDH 1-B was formed by splice junctions between exon W, exon X, and exon Y. IDH 1-C resulted from splicing of exon W to exon X and subsequent retention of intron x. The 2 proteins predicted from these 3 mRNAs are identical over their first 357 residues. Protein IDH 1-A, resulting from a termination codon within exon Y, contains an additional 26 residues. Proteins IDH 1-B and 1-C derive from a common termination codon within exon X and contain an additional 28 residues. The two C-terminal regions differ notably in the number and nature of charged residues, resulting in proteins with a charge difference of 3.2 at pH 7.0. Subunit 1 sequences previously reported from other species grouped with one or the other of the bovine proteins. No evidence was found for alternative splicing in subunit 3,4/alpha. The results of the present study, together with recent work on the 2/gamma subunit [Brenner,V., Nyakatura, G., Rosenthal, A., and Platzer, M. (1998) Genomics 44, 8], indicate that the regulatory subunits of the enzyme, but not the catalytic, possess alternatively spliced forms varying in C-terminal properties with tissue-specific expression. The finding is suggestive of a mechanism for modulation of allosteric regulation tailored to the needs of different tissues.

PMID: 10677231 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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