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    J Biochem. 1999 Oct;126(4):748-55.

    Isolation and cloning of rat poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase: presence of a potential nuclear export signal conserved in mammalian orthologs.

    Shimokawa T, Masutani M, Nagasawa S, Nozaki T, Ikota N, Aoki Y, Nakagama H, Sugimura T.

    Biochemistry Division, National Cancer Center Research Institute, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0045, Japan.

    Poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (Parg) is the main enzyme of poly(ADP-ribose) degradation. To understand its structure-and-function relationship, we purified Parg from rat testis 9,740-fold using an improved affinity column; the purified product was a 60 kDa protein. Based on the determined sequences of three peptide fragments, degenerated primers were synthesized and a Parg cDNA comprising 3,974 nucleotides, encoding a 109 kDa protein, was isolated. The 60 kDa Parg purified from rat testes corresponded to the C-terminal half of the 109 kDa deduced peptide. When recombinant rat Parg was expressed as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein in Escherichia coli, Parg activity was observed for the full-length and C-terminal half proteins but not in for the N-terminal half protein. Taken together, these data indicate that the catalytic domain of Parg is located in the C-terminal half. Further, we newly identified the presence of a potential nuclear export signal in the N-terminal half in addition to the previously reported nuclear localization signals in rat and other mammalian Pargs. Northern blot analysis showed the ubiquitous expression of a single 4.0 kb Parg mRNA in various rat tissues. The findings suggest that the 60 kDa Parg is produced by post-transcriptional processing.

    PMID: 10502684 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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