Isolation and sequence of a cDNA encoding mouse IMP dehydrogenase.
Inosinic acid (IMP) dehydrogenase (IMPD) catalyzes the conversion of IMP to XMP as the first committed step in GMP biosynthesis de novo. We have isolated a cDNA containing the complete coding region of mouse IMPD by its ability to complement a bacterial mutant lacking IMPD activity. Two independent cDNA clones were isolated by complementation, of which the longest was 1.7 kb in length. Northern analyses, using the IMPD cDNA as a probe, indicated that mature IMPD mRNA was a single species approx. 2.0 kb in size. Mouse IMPD is almost identical to Chinese hamster and human IMPDs and is highly conserved between Escherichia coli and mouse, with a direct amino acid (aa) identity of 39%, which increases to 60% if conserved aa are considered. The leader region of our longest cDNA clone is G + C-rich and contains two tandem copies of a G + C-rich direct repeat.[1]References
- Isolation and sequence of a cDNA encoding mouse IMP dehydrogenase. Tiedeman, A.A., Smith, J.M. Gene (1991) [Pubmed]
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