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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 7382

Kyoung-Sook Ann and David L. Nelson; A Nucleoside Diphosphate Kinase from Paramecium tetraurelia with Protein Kinase Activity. J.Eukaryot.Microbiol. 43(5):365-372, 1996

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Nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDP kinase) from Paramecium was purified to homogeneity. The native enzyme was 80 kDa (by gel filtration), with subunits of 18 and 20 kDa. Near the amino terminus, 15 of 20 residues were identical with those in human NDP kinase, and 17 of 20 with the awd gene product from Drosophila. NDP kinase bound alpha-labeled ATP and GTP, and a photoreactive GTP analog labeled both subunits. Purified NDP kinase underwent autophosphorylation on a histidine and a serine residue using either ATP or GTP as a substrate. The enzyme also catalyzed acid-stable phosphorylation of casein and phosvitin. This protein kinase activity is distinct from the histidine phosphorylation that is part of the NDP kinase catalytic cycle. Antiserium against the purified protein from Paramecium cross-reacted with 16- to 20-kDa proteins in most species tested, and with a larger protein (44 kDa) in Paramecium, Xenopus, and two human lines. The multiple forms (20 and 44 kDa) of the NDP kinase in Paramecium and its protein activity, suggest that the protein is more than a housekeeping enzyme; it may have regulatory roles such as those of the NDP kinase-like awd protein of Drosophila and Nm23 protein of humans.