scholarly journals The beta 4 subunit cytoplasmic domain mediates the interaction of alpha 6 beta 4 integrin with the cytoskeleton of hemidesmosomes.

1993 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. 871-884 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Spinardi ◽  
Y L Ren ◽  
R Sanders ◽  
F G Giancotti

The alpha 6 beta 4 integrin is structurally distinct from all the other known integrins because the cytoplasmic domain of beta 4 is unusually large and contains four type III fibronectin-like modules toward its C-terminus. To examine the function of the beta 4 cytoplasmic tail, we have expressed full-length and truncated human beta 4 cDNAs in rat bladder epithelial 804G cells, which form hemidesmosome-like adhesions in vitro. The cDNA encoded wild-type beta 4 subunit associated with endogenous alpha 6 and was recruited at the cell surface within hemidesmosome-like adhesions. A recombinant form of beta 4, lacking almost the entire cytoplasmic domain associated with alpha 6, reached the cell surface but remained diffusely distributed. A beta 4 molecule lacking almost the entire extracellular portion did not associate with alpha 6 but was correctly targeted to the hemidesmosome-like adhesions. Thus, the cytoplasmic portion of beta 4 contains sequences that are required and may be sufficient for the assembly of the alpha 6 beta 4 integrin into hemidesmosomes. To localize these sequences we examined the properties of additional mutant forms of beta 4. A truncated beta 4 subunit, lacking the most C-terminal pair of type III fibronectin homology domains, was incorporated into hemidesmosome-like adhesions, but another recombinant beta 4 molecule, lacking both pairs of type III fibronectin repeats, was not. Finally a recombinant beta 4 molecule, which was created by adjoining the region of the cytoplasmic domain including all type III repeats to the transmembrane segment, was efficiently recruited in hemidesmosome-like adhesions. Taken together these results suggest that the assembly of the alpha 6 beta 4 integrin into hemidesmosomes is mediated by a 303-amino acid region of beta 4 tail that comprises the first pair of type III fibronectin repeats and the segment between the second and third repeats. These data imply a function of a specific segment of the beta 4 cytoplasmic domain in interaction with cytoskeletal components of hemidesmosomes.

Genetics ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
pp. 661-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jodi L Vogel ◽  
Vincent Geuskens ◽  
Lucie Desmet ◽  
N Patrick Higgins ◽  
Ariane Toussaint

Abstract Mutations in an N-terminal 70-amino acid domain of bacteriophage Mu's repressor cause temperature-sensitive DNA-binding activity. Surprisingly, amber mutations can conditionally correct the heat-sensitive defect in three mutant forms of the repressor gene, cts25 (D43-G), cts62 (R47-Q and cts71 (M28-I), and in the appropriate bacterial host produce a heat-stable Sts phenotype (for survival of temperature shifts). Sts repressor mutants are heat sensitive when in supE or supF hosts and heat resistant when in Sup° hosts. Mutants with an Sts phenotype have amber mutations at one of three codons, Q179, Q187, or Q190. The Sts phenotype relates to the repressor size: in Sup° hosts sts repressors are shorter by seven, 10, or 18 amino acids compared to repressors in supE or supF hosts. The truncated form of the sts62-1 repressor, which lacks 18 residues (Q179–V196), binds Mu operator DNA more stably at 42° in vitro compared to its full-length counterpart (cts62 repressor). In addition to influencing temperature sensitivity, the C-terminus appears to control the susceptibility to in vivo Clp proteolysis by influencing the multimeric structure of repressor.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (7) ◽  
pp. 3353-3365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Long Lin ◽  
Che-Sheng Chung ◽  
Hans G. Heine ◽  
Wen Chang

ABSTRACT An immunodominant antigen, p35, is expressed on the envelope of intracellular mature virions (IMV) of vaccinia virus. p35 is encoded by the viral late gene H3L, but its role in the virus life cycle is not known. This report demonstrates that soluble H3L protein binds to heparan sulfate on the cell surface and competes with the binding of vaccinia virus, indicating a role for H3L protein in IMV adsorption to mammalian cells. A mutant virus defective in expression of H3L (H3L−) was constructed; the mutant virus has a small plaque phenotype and 10-fold lower IMV and extracellular enveloped virion titers than the wild-type virus. Virion morphogenesis is severely blocked and intermediate viral structures such as viral factories and crescents accumulate in cells infected with the H3L− mutant virus. IMV from the H3L− mutant virus are somewhat altered and less infectious than wild-type virions. However, cells infected by the mutant virus form multinucleated syncytia after low pH treatment, suggesting that H3L protein is not required for cell fusion. Mice inoculated intranasally with wild-type virus show high mortality and severe weight loss, whereas mice infected with H3L− mutant virus survive and recover faster, indicating that inactivation of the H3L gene attenuates virus virulence in vivo. In summary, these data indicate that H3L protein mediates vaccinia virus adsorption to cell surface heparan sulfate and is important for vaccinia virus infection in vitro and in vivo. In addition, H3L protein plays a role in virion assembly.


1998 ◽  
Vol 180 (5) ◽  
pp. 1023-1029 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Massanz ◽  
Silke Schmidt ◽  
Bärbel Friedrich

The cytoplasmic, NAD-reducing hydrogenase (SH) of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 is a heterotetrameric enzyme which contains several cofactors and undergoes a complex maturation during biogenesis. HoxH is the Ni-carrying subunit, and together with HoxY it forms the hydrogenase dimer. HoxF and HoxU represent the flavin-containing diaphorase moiety, which is closely related to NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase and mediates NADH oxidation. A variety of mutations were introduced into the four SH structural genes to obtain mutant enzymes composed of monomeric and dimeric forms. A deletion removing most ofhoxF, hoxU, and hoxY led to the expression of a HoxH monomer derivative which was proteolytically processed at the C terminus like the wild-type polypeptide. While the hydrogenase dimer, produced by a strain deleted of hoxF andhoxU, displayed H2-dependent dye-reducing activity, the monomeric form did not mediate the activation of H2, although nickel was incorporated into HoxH. Deletion ofhoxH and hoxY led to the production of HoxFU dimers which displayed NADH:oxidoreductase activity. Mixing the hydrogenase and the diaphorase moieties in vitro reconstituted the structure and catalytic function of the SH holoenzyme.


Development ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 124 (19) ◽  
pp. 3727-3736 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hays ◽  
G.B. Gibori ◽  
A. Bejsovec

wingless (wg) and its vertebrate homologues, the Wnt genes, play critical roles in the generation of embryonic pattern. In the developing Drosophila epidermis, wg is expressed in a single row of cells in each segment, but it influences cell identities in all rows of epidermal cells in the 10- to 12-cell-wide segment. Wg signaling promotes specification of two distinct aspects of the wild-type intrasegmental pattern: the diversity of denticle types present in the anterior denticle belt and the smooth or naked cuticle constituting the posterior surface of the segment. We have manipulated the expression of wild-type and mutant wg transgenes to explore the mechanism by which a single secreted signaling molecule can promote these distinctly different cell fates. We present evidence consistent with the idea that naked cuticle cell fate is specified by a cellular pathway distinct from the denticle diversity-generating pathway. Since these pathways are differentially activated by mutant Wg ligands, we propose that at least two discrete classes of receptor for Wg may exist, each transducing a different cellular response. We also find that broad Wg protein distribution across many cell diameters is required for the generation of denticle diversity, suggesting that intercellular transport of the Wg protein is an essential feature of pattern formation within the epidermal epithelium. Finally, we demonstrate that an 85 amino acid region not conserved in vertebrate Wnts is dispensable for Wg function and we discuss structural features of the Wingless protein required for its distinct biological activities.


2001 ◽  
Vol 276 (15) ◽  
pp. 11980-11987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven A. Haney ◽  
Elizabeth Glasfeld ◽  
Cynthia Hale ◽  
David Keeney ◽  
Zhizhen He ◽  
...  

The recruitment of ZipA to the septum by FtsZ is an early, essential step in cell division inEscherichia coli. We have used polymerase chain reaction-mediated random mutagenesis in the yeast two-hybrid system to analyze this interaction and have identified residues within a highly conserved sequence at the C terminus of FtsZ as the ZipA binding site. A search for suppressors of a mutation that causes a loss of interaction (ftsZD373G) identified eight different changes at two residues within this sequence.In vitro, wild type FtsZ interacted with ZipA with a high affinity in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, whereas FtsZD373Gfailed to interact. Two mutant proteins examined restored this interaction significantly.In vivo, the alleles tested are significantly more toxic than the wild typeftsZand cannot complement a deletion. We have shown that a fusion, which encodes the last 70 residues of FtsZ in the two-hybrid system, is sufficient for the interaction with FtsA and ZipA. However, when the wild type sequence is compared with one that encodes FtsZD373G, no interaction was seen with either protein. Mutations surrounding Asp-373 differentially affected the interactions of FtsZ with ZipA and FtsA, indicating that these proteins bind the C terminus of FtsZ differently.


2020 ◽  
Vol 202 (23) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anastasiia N. Klimova ◽  
Steven J. Sandler

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli PriA and PriC recognize abandoned replication forks and direct reloading of the DnaB replicative helicase onto the lagging-strand template coated with single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB). Both PriA and PriC have been shown by biochemical and structural studies to physically interact with the C terminus of SSB. In vitro, these interactions trigger remodeling of the SSB on ssDNA. priA341(R697A) and priC351(R155A) negated the SSB remodeling reaction in vitro. Plasmid-carried priC351(R155A) did not complement priC303::kan, and priA341(R697A) has not yet been tested for complementation. Here, we further studied the SSB-binding pockets of PriA and PriC by placing priA341(R697A), priA344(R697E), priA345(Q701E), and priC351(R155A) on the chromosome and characterizing the mutant strains. All three priA mutants behaved like the wild type. In a ΔpriB strain, the mutations caused modest increases in SOS expression, cell size, and defects in nucleoid partitioning (Par−). Overproduction of SSB partially suppressed these phenotypes for priA341(R697A) and priA344(R697E). The priC351(R155A) mutant behaved as expected: there was no phenotype in a single mutant, and there were severe growth defects when this mutation was combined with ΔpriB. Analysis of the priBC mutant revealed two populations of cells: those with wild-type phenotypes and those that were extremely filamentous and Par− and had high SOS expression. We conclude that in vivo, priC351(R155A) identified an essential residue and function for PriC, that PriA R697 and Q701 are important only in the absence of PriB, and that this region of the protein may have a complicated relationship with SSB. IMPORTANCE Escherichia coli PriA and PriC recruit the replication machinery to a collapsed replication fork after it is repaired and needs to be restarted. In vitro studies suggest that the C terminus of SSB interacts with certain residues in PriA and PriC to recruit those proteins to the repaired fork, where they help remodel it for restart. Here, we placed those mutations on the chromosome and tested the effect of mutating these residues in vivo. The priC mutation completely abolished function. The priA mutations had no effect by themselves. They did, however, display modest phenotypes in a priB-null strain. These phenotypes were partially suppressed by SSB overproduction. These studies give us further insight into the reactions needed for replication restart.


2000 ◽  
Vol 182 (16) ◽  
pp. 4628-4631 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mio Ohnuma ◽  
Nobuyuki Fujita ◽  
Akira Ishihama ◽  
Kan Tanaka ◽  
Hideo Takahashi

ABSTRACT ς38 (or ςS, the rpoS gene product) is a sigma subunit of RNA polymerase in Escherichia coli and directs transcription from a number of stationary-phase promoters as well as osmotically inducible promoters. In this study, we analyzed the function of the carboxy-terminal 16-amino-acid region of ς38 (residues 315 to 330), which is well conserved among the rpoS gene products of enteric bacterial species. Truncation of this region was shown to result in the loss of sigma activity in vivo using promoter-lacZ fusion constructs, but the mutant ς38 retained the binding activity in vivo to the core enzyme. The in vitro transcription analysis revealed that the transcription activity of ς38 holoenzyme under high potassium glutamate concentrations was significantly decreased by the truncation of the carboxy-terminal tail element.


1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 5043-5053 ◽  
Author(s):  
A S Ho ◽  
S H Wei ◽  
A L Mui ◽  
A Miyajima ◽  
K W Moore

The functions of wild-type and mutant mouse interleukin-10 receptors (mIL-10R) expressed in murine Ba/F3 cells were studied. As observed previously, IL-10 stimulates proliferation of IL-10R-expressing Ba/F3 cells. Accumulation of viable cells in the proliferation assay is to a significant extent balanced by concomitant cell death. Moreover, growth in IL-10 also induces a previously unrecognized response, differentiation of the cells, as evidenced both by formation of large clusters of cells in cultures with IL-10 and by induction or enhancement of expression of several cell surface antigens, including CD32/16, CD2, LECAM-1 (v-selectin), and heat-stable antigen. Two distinct functional regions near the C terminus of the mIL-10R cytoplasmic domain which mediate proliferation were identified; one of these regions also mediates the differentiation response. A third region proximal to the transmembrane domain was identified; removal of this region renders the cell 10- to 100-fold more sensitive to IL-10 in the proliferation assay. In cells expressing both wild-type and mutant IL-10R, stimulation with IL-10 leads to tyrosine phosphorylation of the kinases JAK1 and TYK2 but not JAK2 or JAK3 under the conditions tested.


2007 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 395-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Schregel ◽  
Sabrina Auerochs ◽  
Ramona Jochmann ◽  
Katja Maurer ◽  
Thomas Stamminger ◽  
...  

The human cytomegalovirus-encoded protein kinase pUL97 is a determinant of efficient virus replication and fulfils several regulatory functions. In particular, pUL97 interacts with and phosphorylates viral and cellular proteins. Substrate phosphorylation has regulatory consequences on viral replicative stages such as DNA synthesis, transcription and nuclear capsid egress. pUL97, in accordance with related herpesviral protein kinases, possesses strong autophosphorylation activity. Here, we demonstrate that pUL97 shows a pronounced potential to self-interact. Self-interaction of pUL97 is not dependent on its kinase activity, as seen with a catalytically inactive point mutant. The property of self-interaction maps to the amino acid region 231–280 which is separable from the postulated kinase domain. The detection of high-molecular-mass complexes of pUL97 suggests the formation of dimers and oligomers. Importantly, the analysis of pUL97 mutants by in vitro kinase assays demonstrated a correlation between self-interaction and protein kinase activity, i.e. all mutants lacking the ability to self-interact were negative or reduced in their kinase activity. Thus, our findings provide novel insights into the pUL97 structure–activity relationship suggesting an importance of self-interaction for pUL97 functionality.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2524-2524
Author(s):  
Suman Paul ◽  
Jacqueline Douglass ◽  
Annika Schaefer ◽  
Emily Han-Chung Hsiue ◽  
Alexander Pearlman ◽  
...  

2524 Background: Increased tumor suppressor protein p53 expression is observed in a wide range of human cancers. As a result there is intense interest in targeting p53 for cancer therapy. Intracellular p53 is inaccessible to therapeutic antibodies that bind cell surface proteins. However, intracellular proteins including p53 are degraded into peptides that are presented on cell surface in association with HLA class I molecules. Thus p53 peptide-HLA (p53-HLA) complexes can be antibody targets. Methods: Using phage display we identified a novel anti-p53-HLA single chain variable fragment (scFv) clone-43 that recognizes a wild-type p53 10-mer epitope bound to HLA-A*2402. By coupling our clone-43 scFv with an anti-CD3 scFv, we generated a single chain diabody (scDb) designed to activate T-cells against p53-expressing target cells. Results: In-vitro co-culture of clone-43 scDb with donor human T-cells and p53 expressing SIG-M5 cancer cells results in SIG-M5 cell killing and concomitant T-cell interferon gamma (IFNγ) release. In contrast, similar co-culture with SIG-M5 p53-knock out (KO) cells showed no cell killing and minimal IFNγ release demonstrating specificity of clone-43 to p53 expressing cells. Additionally, in-vivo growth of p53 expressing SW480 cancer cell xenografts in NSG mice was completely terminated by clone-43 scDb injections. A major concern for wild-type p53 epitope targeting is potential on-target off-tumor effect on non-cancerous tissue. We observed significant in-vitro clone-43 scDb mediated killing of human HLA-A*24:02 peripheral blood mononuclear cells. To better evaluate effect of clone-43 scDb on non-neoplastic human cells, we engrafted HLA-A*24:02 human CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells into NSG mice to generate a humanized mouse model with circulating mature human CD45+ cells. Clone-43 scDb treatment resulted in selective depletion of circulating human cells while the same cells persisted in mice treated with unrelated control scDb. Conclusions: Our observation that immune targeting of wild-type p53 epitope results in significant off-tumor hematopoietic cell death is contrary to previously published reports and carries important implications for future anti-p53 antibody and vaccine design for cancer immunotherapy.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document