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      Methenyltetrahydrofolate synthetase is a high-affinity catecholamine-binding protein.

      Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
      Animals, Binding Sites, Breast Neoplasms, chemistry, metabolism, Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases, Catecholamines, Cell Line, Tumor, Enzyme Activation, Folic Acid, Humans, Mice, Protein Binding, Rabbits, Substrate Specificity

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          Abstract

          Recombinant mouse 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate synthetase (MTHFS) was expressed in Escherichia coli and shown to co-purify with a chromophore that had a lambda(max) at 320nm. The chromophore remained bound to MTHFS during extensive dialysis, but dissociated from MTHFS when its substrate, 5-formyltetrahydrofolate, was bound. The chromophore was identified as an oxidized catecholamine by mass spectrometry and absorption spectroscopy. Purified recombinant mouse MTHFS and rabbit liver MTHFS proteins were shown to bind oxidized N-acetyldopamine (NADA) tightly. The addition of NADA to cell culture medium accelerated markedly folate turnover and decreased both folate accumulation and total cellular folate concentrations in MCF-7 cells. Expression of the MTHFS cDNA in MCF-7 cells increased the concentration of NADA required to deplete cellular folate. The results of this study are the first to identify a link between catecholamines and one-carbon metabolism and demonstrate that NADA accelerates folate turnover and impairs cellular folate accumulation in MCF-7 cells.

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