Transiently Transfected Purine Biosynthetic Enzymes Form Stress Bodies

Date

2013-02-06

Authors

Zhao, Alice
Tsechansky, Mark
Swaminathan, Jagannath
Cook, Lindsey
Ellington, Andrew D.
Marcotte, Edward M.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

It has been hypothesized that components of enzymatic pathways might organize into intracellular assemblies to improve their catalytic efficiency or lead to coordinate regulation. Accordingly, de novo purine biosynthesis enzymes may form a purinosome in the absence of purines, and a punctate intracellular body has been identified as the purinosome. We investigated the mechanism by which human de novo purine biosynthetic enzymes might be organized into purinosomes, especially under differing cellular conditions. Irregardless of the activity of bodies formed by endogenous enzymes, we demonstrate that intracellular bodies formed by transiently transfected, fluorescently tagged human purine biosynthesis proteins are best explained as protein aggregation.

Description

LCSH Subject Headings

Citation

Zhao A, Tsechansky M, Swaminathan J, Cook L, Ellington AD, et al. (2013) Transiently Transfected Purine Biosynthetic Enzymes Form Stress Bodies. PLoS ONE 8(2): e56203. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0056203