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A novel amino acid modification in sulfatases that is defective in multiple sulfatase deficiency
ISSN
0092-8674
Date Issued
1995
Author(s)
Abstract
Multiple sulfatase deficiency (MSD) is a lysosomal storage disorder characterized by a decreased activity of all known sulfatases. The deficiency of sulfatases was proposed to result from the lack of a co- or posttranslational modification that is common to all sulfatases and required for their catalytic activity. Structural analysis of two catalytically active sulfatases revealed that a cysteine residue that is predicted from the cDNA sequence and conserved among all known sulfatases is replaced by a 2-amino-3-oxopropionic acid residue, while in sulfatases derived from Mp. cells, this cysteine residue is retained. It is proposed that the co- or posttranslational conversion of a cysteine to 2-amino- 3-oxopropionic acid is required for generating catalytically active sulfatases and that deficiency of this protein modification is the cause of MSD.
Subjects
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279. A Novel Amino Acid Modification in Sulfatases ....pdf
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