Metabolite Proofreading in Carnosine and Homocarnosine Synthesis

  • Veiga da Cunha, Maria
  • Chevalier, Nathalie
  • Stroobant, Vincent
  • Vertommen, Didier
  • Van Schaftingen, Emile
Publication date
January 2014
Publisher
American Society for Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (ASBMB)
ISSN
0021-9258
Citation count (estimate)
17

Abstract

Carnosine synthase is the ATP-dependent ligase responsible for carnosine (β-alanyl-histidine) and homocarnosine (γ-aminobutyryl-histidine) synthesis in skeletal muscle and brain, respectively. This enzyme uses, also at substantial rates, lysine, ornithine, and arginine instead of histidine, yet the resulting dipeptides are virtually absent from muscle or brain, suggesting that they are removed by a "metabolite repair" enzyme. Using a radiolabeled substrate, we found that rat skeletal muscle, heart, and brain contained a cytosolic β-alanyl-lysine dipeptidase activity. This enzyme, which has the characteristics of a metalloenzyme, was purified ≈ 200-fold from rat skeletal muscle. Mass spectrometry analysis of the fractions obtained at differe...

Extracted data

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