Amino-terminal processing of the catalytic subunit from Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase

1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (3) ◽  
pp. C825-C832 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. A. Pressley ◽  
J. C. Allen ◽  
C. H. Clarke ◽  
T. Odebunmi ◽  
S. C. Higham

The first five amino acids of the catalytic alpha 1-subunit predicted from its cDNA are not found in purified mammalian Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, suggesting co- or posttranslational cleavage. To facilitate evaluation of amino-terminal structure and the cleavage process, we developed a site-directed antibody (anti-VGR) specific for the first nine residues of nascent alpha 1 from rat. In immunoblots of polypeptides generated by in vitro translation, anti-VGR detected a prominent band with a mobility appropriate for the alpha 1-subunit (100 kDa). Immunoblots of total protein from various rat organs, however, revealed no significant binding, implying that virtually all the alpha 1-subunit expressed in vivo was modified. We also assessed amino-terminal structure in various heterologous expression systems. Binding of anti-VGR was observed in Escherichia coli transformed with a vector containing an alpha 1/troponin fusion protein and in insect cells infected with baculovirus containing full-length alpha 1 or alpha 1T. This suggests that modification of the introduced alpha 1 in these expression systems was absent or different from that in mammals. In contrast, green monkey kidney cells (COS-1) transfected with alpha 1 did not reveal significant binding of the antibody, indicating that the introduced isoform was processed appropriately. These results demonstrate that the structure of the alpha 1-subunit's amino terminus differs among various expression systems. The results further imply that efficient co- or posttranslational processing of nascent alpha 1 is conserved among various organs within the rat, yet the required modification enzymes are not present in distant phyla.

1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (3) ◽  
pp. 1076-1082 ◽  
Author(s):  
M G Rosenfeld ◽  
E E Marcantonio ◽  
J Hakimi ◽  
V M Ort ◽  
P H Atkinson ◽  
...  

Ribophorins are two transmembrane glycoproteins characteristic of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, which are thought to be involved in the binding of ribosomes. Their biosynthesis was studied in vivo using lines of cultured rat hepatocytes (clone 9) and pituitary cells (GH 3.1) and in cell-free synthesis experiments. In vitro translation of mRNA extracted from free and bound polysomes of clone 9 cells demonstrated that ribophorins are made exclusively on bound polysomes. The primary translation products of ribophorin messengers obtained from cultured hepatocytes or from regenerating livers co-migrated with the respective mature proteins, but had slightly higher apparent molecular weights (2,000) than the unglycosylated forms immunoprecipitated from cells treated with tunicamycin. This indicates that ribophorins, in contrast to all other endoplasmic reticulum membrane proteins previously studied, contain transient amino-terminal insertion signals which are removed co-translationally. Kinetic and pulse-chase experiments with [35S]methionine and [3H]mannose demonstrated that ribophorins are not subjected to electrophoretically detectable posttranslational modifications, such as proteolytic cleavage or trimming and terminal glycosylation of oligosaccharide side chain(s). Direct analysis of the oligosaccharides of ribophorin l showed that they do not contain the terminal sugars characteristic of complex oligosaccharides and that they range in composition from Man8GlcNAc to Man5GlcNAc. These findings, as well as the observation that the mature proteins are sensitive to endoglycosidase H and insensitive to endoglycosidase D, are consistent with the notion that the biosynthetic pathway of the ribophorins does not require a stage of passage through the Golgi apparatus.


2014 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 303-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz Hofmann ◽  
Veit Flockerzi ◽  
Sabine Kahl ◽  
Jörg W. Wegener

The L-type Cav1.2 calcium channel is present throughout the animal kingdom and is essential for some aspects of CNS function, cardiac and smooth muscle contractility, neuroendocrine regulation, and multiple other processes. The L-type CaV1.2 channel is built by up to four subunits; all subunits exist in various splice variants that potentially affect the biophysical and biological functions of the channel. Many of the CaV1.2 channel properties have been analyzed in heterologous expression systems including regulation of the L-type CaV1.2 channel by Ca2+ itself and protein kinases. However, targeted mutations of the calcium channel genes confirmed only some of these in vitro findings. Substitution of the respective serines by alanine showed that β-adrenergic upregulation of the cardiac CaV1.2 channel did not depend on the phosphorylation of the in vitro specified amino acids. Moreover, well-established in vitro phosphorylation sites of the CaVβ2 subunit of the cardiac L-type CaV1.2 channel were found to be irrelevant for the in vivo regulation of the channel. However, the molecular basis of some kinetic properties, such as Ca2+-dependent inactivation and facilitation, has been approved by in vivo mutagenesis of the CaV1.2α1 gene. This article summarizes recent findings on the in vivo relevance of well-established in vitro results.


1991 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 773-786 ◽  
Author(s):  
P D Kouklis ◽  
T Papamarcaki ◽  
A Merdes ◽  
S D Georgatos

To identify sites of self-association in type III intermediate filament (IF) proteins, we have taken an "anti-idiotypic antibody" approach. A mAb (anti-Ct), recognizing a similar feature near the end of the rod domain of vimentin, desmin, and peripherin (epsilon site or epsilon epitope), was characterized. Anti-idiotypic antibodies, generated by immunizing rabbits with purified anti-Ct, recognize a site (presumably "complementary" to the epsilon epitope) common among vimentin, desmin, and peripherin (beta site or beta epitope). The beta epitope is represented in a synthetic peptide (PII) modeled after the 30 COOH-terminal residues of peripherin, as seen by comparative immunoblotting assays. Consistent with the idea of an association between the epsilon and the beta site, PII binds in vitro to intact IF proteins and fragments containing the epsilon epitope, but not to IF proteins that do not react with anti-Ct. Microinjection experiments conducted in vivo and filament reconstitution assays carried out in vitro further demonstrate that "uncoupling" of this site-specific association (by competition with PII or anti-Ct) interferes with normal IF architecture, resulting in the formation of filaments and filament bundles with diameters much greater than that of the normal IFs. These thick fibers are very similar to the ones observed previously when a derivative of desmin missing 27 COOH-terminal residues was assembled in vitro (Kaufmann, E., K. Weber, and N. Geisler. 1985. J. Mol. Biol. 185:733-742). As a molecular explanation, we propose here that the epsilon and the beta sites of type III IF proteins are "complementary" and associate during filament assembly. As a result of this association, we further postulate the formation of a surface-exposed "loop" or "hairpin" structure that may sterically prevent inappropriate filament-filament aggregation and regulate filament thickness.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 3868-3872 ◽  
Author(s):  
C M Shumard ◽  
C Torres ◽  
D C Eichler

In an investigation of the possible involvement of a highly purified nucleolar endoribonuclease in processing of pre-rRNA at the 3' end of the 18S rRNA sequence, an in vitro synthesized pre-18S rRNA transcript containing the 3' end region of 18S rRNA and the 5' region of the first internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) was used as a substrate for the enzyme. Cleavages generated by the nucleolar RNase were localized by S1 nuclease protection analysis and by the direct release of labeled rRNA products. Precise determination of the specificity of cleavage was achieved by RNA sequence analysis with end-labeled rRNA transcripts. These data demonstrated that the purified nucleolar RNase cleaved the pre-18S rRNA transcript at three specific sites relative to the 3' region of 18S rRNA. The first two sites included the mature 3'-end 18S rRNA sequence and a site approximately 55 nucleotides downstream of the 3'-end 18S rRNA sequence, both of which corresponded directly to recent results (Raziuddin, R. D. Little, T. Labella, and D. Schlessinger, Mol. Cell. Biol. 9:1667-1671, 1989) obtained with transfected mouse rDNA in hamster cells. The other cleavage occurred approximately 35 nucleotides upstream from the mature 3' end in the 18S rRNA sequence. The results from this study mimic the results obtained from in vivo studies for processing in the 3' region of pre-18S rRNA, supporting the proposed involvement of this nucleolar endoribonuclease in rRNA maturation.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 3607-3618
Author(s):  
P Belenguer ◽  
M Caizergues-Ferrer ◽  
J C Labbé ◽  
M Dorée ◽  
F Amalric

Nucleolin is a ubiquitous multifunctional protein involved in preribosome assembly and associated with both nucleolar chromatin in interphase and nucleolar organizer regions on metaphasic chromosomes in mitosis. Extensive nucleolin phosphorylation by a casein kinase (CKII) occurs on serine in growing cells. Here we report that while CKII phosphorylation is achieved in interphase, threonine phosphorylation occurs during mitosis. We provide evidence that this type of in vivo phosphorylation involves a mammalian homolog of the cell cycle control Cdc2 kinase. In vitro M-phase H1 kinase from starfish oocytes phosphorylated threonines in a TPXK motif present nine times in the amino-terminal part of the protein. The same sites which matched the p34cdc2 consensus phosphorylation sequence were used in vivo during mitosis. We propose that successive Cdc2 and CKII phosphorylation could modulate nucleolin function in controlling cell cycle-dependent nucleolar function and organization. Our results, along with previous studies, suggest that while serine phosphorylation is related to nucleolin function in the control of rDNA transcription, threonine phosphorylation is linked to mitotic reorganization of nucleolar chromatin.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 5433-5441
Author(s):  
B Y Ahn ◽  
P D Gershon ◽  
E V Jones ◽  
B Moss

Eucaryotic transcription factors that stimulate RNA polymerase II by increasing the efficiency of elongation of specifically or randomly initiated RNA chains have been isolated and characterized. We have identified a 30-kilodalton (kDa) vaccinia virus-encoded protein with apparent homology to SII, a 34-kDa mammalian transcriptional elongation factor. In addition to amino acid sequence similarities, both proteins contain C-terminal putative zinc finger domains. Identification of the gene, rpo30, encoding the vaccinia virus protein was achieved by using antibody to the purified viral RNA polymerase for immunoprecipitation of the in vitro translation products of in vivo-synthesized early mRNA selected by hybridization to cloned DNA fragments of the viral genome. Western immunoblot analysis using antiserum made to the vaccinia rpo30 protein expressed in bacteria indicated that the 30-kDa protein remains associated with highly purified viral RNA polymerase. Thus, the vaccinia virus protein, unlike its eucaryotic homolog, is an integral RNA polymerase subunit rather than a readily separable transcription factor. Further studies showed that the expression of rpo30 is regulated by dual early and later promoters.


2000 ◽  
Vol 113 (13) ◽  
pp. 2471-2483 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Hofmann ◽  
C. Mertens ◽  
M. Brettel ◽  
V. Nimmrich ◽  
M. Schnolzer ◽  
...  

Plakophilin 1 and 2 (PKP1, PKP2) are members of the arm-repeat protein family. They are both constitutively expressed in most vertebrate cells, in two splice forms named a and b, and display a remarkable dual location: they occur in the nuclei of cells and, in epithelial cells, at the plasma membrane within the desmosomal plaques. We have shown by solid phase-binding assays that both PKP1a and PKP2a bind to intermediate filament (IF) proteins, in particular to cytokeratins (CKs) from epidermal as well as simple epithelial cells and, to some extent, to vimentin. In line with this we show that recombinant PKP1a binds strongly to IFs assembled in vitro from CKs 8/18, 5/14, vimentin or desmin and integrates them into thick (up to 120 nm in diameter) IF bundles extending for several microm. The basic amino-terminal, non-arm-repeat domain of PKP1a is necessary and sufficient for this specific interaction as shown by blot overlay and centrifugation experiments. In particular, the binding of PKP1a to IF proteins is saturable at an approximately equimolar ratio. In extracts from HaCaT cells, distinct soluble complexes containing PKP1a and desmoplakin I (DPI) have been identified by co-immunoprecipitation and sucrose density fractionation. The significance of these interactions of PKP1a with IF proteins on the one hand and desmoplakin on the other is discussed in relation to the fact that PKP1a is not bound - and does not bind - to extended IFs in vivo. We postulate that (1) effective cellular regulatory mechanisms exist that prevent plakophilins from unscheduled IF-binding, and (2) specific desmoplakin interactions with either PKP1, PKP2 or PKP3, or combinations thereof, are involved in the selective recruitment of plakophilins to the desmosomal plaques.


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