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Albinism-causing mutations in recombinant human tyrosinase alter intrinsic enzymatic activity.
[oculocutaneous albinism]
Tyrosinase
(
TYR
)
catalyzes
the
rate-limiting
,
first
step
in
melanin
production
and
its
gene
(
TYR
)
is
mutated
in
many
cases
of
oculocutaneous
albinism
(
OCA
1
)
,
an
autosomal
recessive
cause
of
childhood
blindness
.
Patients
with
reduced
TYR
activity
are
classified
as
OCA
1
B
;
some
OCA
1
B
mutations
are
temperature-sensitive
.
Therapeutic
research
for
OCA
1
has
been
hampered
,
in
part
,
by
the
absence
of
purified
,
active
,
recombinant
wild-
type
and
mutant
human
enzymes
.
T
he
intra-melanosomal
domain
of
human
tyrosinase
(
residues
19
-
469
)
and
two
OCA
1
B
related
temperature-sensitive
mutants
,
R
422
Q
and
R
422
W
were
expressed
in
insect
cells
and
produced
in
T
.
ni
larvae
.
The
short
trans-membrane
fragment
was
deleted
to
avoid
potential
protein
insolubility
,
while
preserving
all
other
functional
features
of
the
enzymes
.
Purified
tyrosinase
was
obtained
with
a
yield
of
>
1
mg
per
10
g
of
larval
biomass
.
The
protein
was
a
monomeric
glycoenzyme
with
maximum
enzyme
activity
at
37
°
C
and
neutral
pH
.
The
two
purified
mutants
when
compared
to
the
wild-
type
protein
were
less
active
and
temperature
sensitive
.
These
differences
are
associated
with
conformational
perturbations
in
secondary
structure
.
The
intramelanosomal
domains
of
recombinant
wild-
type
and
mutant
human
tyrosinases
are
soluble
monomeric
glycoproteins
with
activities
which
mirror
their
in
vivo
function
.
This
advance
allows
for
the
structure
-
function
analyses
of
different
mutant
TYR
proteins
and
correlation
with
their
corresponding
human
phenotypes
;
it
also
provides
an
important
tool
to
discover
drugs
that
may
improve
tyrosinase
activity
and
treat
OCA
1
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"other functional features of the enzymes"
symptom
oculocutaneous albinism
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