Ij. Okazaki et al., IMMUNOLOGICAL AND STRUCTURAL CONSERVATION OF MAMMALIAN SKELETAL-MUSCLE GLYCOSYLPHOSPHATIDYLINOSITOL-LINKED ADP-RIBOSYLTRANSFERASES, Biochemistry, 33(43), 1994, pp. 12828-12836
NAD:arginine ADP-ribosyltransferases catalyze the ADP-ribosylation of
arginine residues in proteins. Coding region nucleic acid and deduced
amino acid sequences of a human skeletal muscle ADP-ribosyltransferase
cDNA were, respectively, 80.8% and 81.3% identical to those of the ra
bbit skeletal muscle transferase. A human transferase-specific cDNA pr
obe detected major mRNA of 1.2 kb (mouse and rat), 3.0 kb (rabbit), 3.
8 kb (monkey), and 5.7 kb (human) upon Northern analysis. Polyclonal a
nti-rabbit ADP-ribosyltransferase antibodies reacted with 36 000 M(r)
proteins in partially purified transferase preparations from bovine, d
og, and rabbit heart muscle and a 40 000 M(r) protein from human skele
tal muscle. The human muscle ADP-ribosyltransferase cDNA, like the pre
viously cloned rabbit muscle transferase, predicts predominantly hydro
phobic amino- and carboxy-terminal amino acid sequences, which is char
acteristic of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins. On
immunoblots of partially purified rabbit and human skeletal muscle AD
P-ribosyltransferases, anti-cross-reacting determinant antibodies dete
cted at 36 000 and 40 000 M(r), respectively, phosphatidylinositol-spe
cific, phospholipase C-sensitive, GPI-anchored proteins. These data ar
e consistent with the conclusion that GPI-anchored skeletal and cardia
c muscle ADP-ribosyltransferases are conserved across mammalian specie
s.