Abstract

Achieving a satisfactory biochemical explanation for the opportunistic underwater adhesion of marine invertebrates such as mussels and barnacles requires a detailed characterization of proteins extracted from holdfast structures produced by these organisms. Mefp-5 is an adhesive protein derived from the foot of the common mussel, Mytilus edulis, and deposited into the byssal attachment pads. Purification and primary structure of mefp-5 was determined by peptide mapping and cDNA sequencing. The protein is 74 residues long and has a mass of about 9500 Da. Mefp-5 composition shows a strong amino acid bias: aromatic amino acids, lysine, and glycine represent 65 mol % of the composition. More than a third of all the residues in the protein are posttranslationally modified by hydroxylation or phosphorylation. The conversion of tyrosine to 3, 4-dihydroxyphenyl-L-alanine (DOPA) and serine to O-phosphoserine accounts for the hydroxylation and phosphorylation, respectively. Neither modification is complete since variations in the extent of phosphorylation and hydroxylation can be detected by mass spectrometry. More than 75% of the DOPA is adjacent to basic residues, e.g., Lys-DOPA and DOPA-Lys. Phosphoserine occurs in sequences strikingly reminiscent of acidic mineral-binding motifs that appear in statherin, osteopontin, and others. This may be an adaptation for adhesion to the most common substrata for mussels, i.e., calcareous materials.

Keywords

MytilusBiochemistryHydroxylationPhosphoserineSerineAlanineMarine invertebratesAmino acidByssusPhosphorylationTyrosineChemistryProtein phosphorylationBiologyEnzymeEcologyProtein kinase A

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
40
Issue
9
Pages
2887-2893
Citations
591
Access
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J. Herbert Waite, Xiaoxia Qin (2001). Polyphosphoprotein from the Adhesive Pads of <i>Mytilus edulis</i>. Biochemistry , 40 (9) , 2887-2893. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi002718x

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DOI
10.1021/bi002718x