Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1976508 | Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2008 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
An extract of the skin of the Japanese tree frog, Hyla japonica Günther, 1859 (Anura: Hylidae) did not inhibit the growth of the bacteria Escherichia coli or Staphylococcus aureus, but contained a protein that was strongly hemolytic against human erythrocytes. The protein was purified to near homogeneity by reverse-phase HPLC, and its N-terminal amino acid sequence (SGRGKGGKGLâ¦) identified it as histone H4. The complete primary structure of the 102-amino-acid-residue histone H4 was determined by a combination of molecular cloning of genomic and complementary DNAs encoding the protein. The molecular mass of the purified histone H4 determined by electrospray mass spectrometry was 71 ± 2 Daltons greater than that predicted from the deduced amino acid sequence of the protein. The + 71 mass units is consistent with the proposal that the protein isolated from the skin was post-translationally modified by addition of one acetyl and two methyl groups. The stem-loop structure at the 3â² flanking region of the H. japonica histone H4 gene, which acts as a transcription termination signal, contained a nucleotide sequence (5â²-GGCTCTCCTCAGAGCC-3â²) with unusual structural features not seen in other histone genes.
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Authors
Hiroaki Kawasaki, Shawichi Iwamuro, Yuta Goto, Per F. Nielsen, J. Michael Conlon,