Ectopic pigmentation in Xenopus in response to DCoH/PCD, the cofactor of HNF1 transcription factor/pterin-4α-carbinolamine dehydratase
نویسندگان
چکیده
DCoH, the dimerization cofactor of the HNF-1 homeodomain proteins (hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha and beta), is involved in gene expression by associating with these transcription factors. The protein also called PCD for pterin-4alpha-carbinolamine dehydratase is a bifunctional factor as it catalyzes also the regeneration of tetrahydrobiopterin. This coenzyme is used by the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase, which generates tyrosine, the precursor of catecholamines and melanin. DCoH/PCD presumably cooperates with other partners, because it is expressed earlier than HNF1 and phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) in early vertebrate development. It is also found in cells lacking HNF1 and PAH like skin, brain and the pigmented epithelium of the eye suggesting a yet unknown function. We show that the overexpression of DCoH/PCD in Xenopus induces the formation of ectopic pigment cells in the epidermis, that are visible earlier than the endogenous pigmentation and broader distributed. This ectopic pigmentation is accompanied by an increase in tyrosinase activity and the amount of melanin. Overexpression of DCoH/PCD induces the appearance of pigment cells also in animal cap explants, that normally differentiate into atypical epidermis. DCoH/PCD mutants with impaired carbinolamine dehydratase activity retain the potential to induce pigmentation and we propose therefore that DCoH/PCD is not simply an essential enzyme for melanin biosynthesis, but also a regulator for the differentiation of pigment producing cells.
منابع مشابه
Studies on the enzymatic and transcriptional activity of the dimerization cofactor for hepatocyte nuclear factor 1.
The relationship between the enzymatic and the transcriptional activity of the bifunctional protein pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratase/dimerization cofactor for hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 (DCoH) has been elucidated by site-directed mutagenesis. DCoH dimers harbor a binding site for hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 (HNF1), two active centers that bind pterins, and a saddle-shaped surface that resem...
متن کاملOn the Mechanism of Pterin-4a-carbinolamine Dehydratase - Synthesis of New Substrate Analogues and Interaction with the Enzyme
Introduction Pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratase (PCD) is a bifunctional mamnlalian enzyme that acts, on the one hand, as dimerization cofactor of the hepatocyte nuclear factor 1-a. (1). On the other hand it takes part in the metabolism of tetrahydrobiopterin, the natural cofactor of the aromatic amino acid hydroxylases. PCD catalyzes the dehydration of 4a-OH-tetrahydrobiopterin (carbinolamine)...
متن کاملPhhB, a Pseudomonas aeruginosa homolog of mammalian pterin 4a-carbinolamine dehydratase/DCoH, does not regulate expression of phenylalanine hydroxylase at the transcriptional level.
Pterin 4a-carbinolamine dehydratase is bifunctional in mammals. In addition to playing a catalytic role in pterin recycling in the cytoplasm, it plays a regulatory role in the nucleus, where it acts as a dimerization-cofactor component (called DCoH) for the transcriptional activator HNF-1alpha. A thus far unique operon in Pseudomonas aeruginosa contains a gene encoding a homolog (PhhB) of the r...
متن کاملIdentity of 4a-carbinolamine dehydratase, a component of the phenylalanine hydroxylation system, and DCoH, a transregulator of homeodomain proteins.
The principal pathway for the metabolism of phenylalanine in mammals is via conversion to tyrosine in a tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent hydroxylation reaction occurring predominantly in the liver. Recently, the proposal that certain hyperphenylalaninemic children may have a deficiency of carbinolamine dehydratase, a component of the phenylalanine hydroxylation system, has widened the interest in ...
متن کاملPhylogenomic and functional analysis of pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratase family (COG2154) proteins in plants and microorganisms.
Pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratases (PCDs) recycle oxidized pterin cofactors generated by aromatic amino acid hydroxylases (AAHs). PCDs are known biochemically only from animals and one bacterium, but PCD-like proteins (COG2154 in the Clusters of Orthologous Groups [COGs] database) are encoded by many plant and microbial genomes. Because these genomes often encode no AAH homologs, the annotati...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Mechanisms of Development
دوره 91 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2000