Abstract

Investigation of proteins extracted from wheat bran lead to the isolation of a 37 kDa polypeptide extracted from a polyacrylamide gel. Extensive internal peptide sequence information of this protein identified it as a glyoxalase I. Glyoxalase I activity in crude wheat bran extract was measured to 1 U/mg protein (1U=1 μmol S-lactoyl glutathione formed/min). Degenerate primers were designed and used for PCR-RACE-based cloning of the corresponding composite cDNA sequence (AJ243528). The wheat bran glyoxalase I amino acid sequence is very similar to the translated sequence of a RNA transcript induced by desiccation of the resurrection grass Sporobulus stapfianus, suggesting a role for glyoxalase in de- or rehydration of plant tissue. The 37 kDa wheat enzyme belongs to a group of monomeric glyoxalases and is composed of two similar halves each representing the full-length human glyoxalase I enzyme. A survey of glyoxalase I sequences, including one (not previously reported) from Drosophila melanogaster, is presented and alignments of these sequences show that amino acid residues involved in co-ordinating zinc or interaction with the substrate are conserved. The alignments indicate a non-linear evolution of glyoxalase I enzymes.

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