[No authors listed]
An enzyme which converts D-dopachrome into 5,6-dihydroxyindole has recently been isolated from rat liver. Enzymatic D-dopachrome conversion has been observed in extracts from all tissues examined of several species, including man. We have now cloned and sequenced a 628 bp long cDNA encoding the enzyme provisionally called D-dopachrome tautomerase. The cDNA was isolated by 3' and 5' rapid amplification and cloning of cDNA ends (RACE) from rat liver cells using degenerate oligonucleotide primers, deduced from the N-terminal peptide sequence of D-dopachrome tautomerase. The cDNA contains an open reading frame encoding 118 amino acids. Edman degradation of intact and of trypsin degraded D-dopachrome tautomerase fragments gave information on and corroborated 67% of the deduced protein sequence. A homology search in the EST database found a human cDNA encoding a peptide sharing 66% homology with the rat enzyme. The rat D-dopachrome tautomerase shares 27% homology with the rat macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF).
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