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1.
Khanamiryan L  Li Z  Paulin D  Xue Z 《Biochemistry》2008,47(36):9531-9539
The mechanisms regulating the intermediate filament (IF) protein assembly are complex and not yet fully understood. All vertebrate cytoplasmic IF proteins have a central alpha-helical rod domain flanked by variable head and tail domains. The IF protein synemin cannot homopolymerize to form filament networks; it needs an appropriate copolymerization partner. To elucidate the roles of the vimentin head domain, the TAAL motif in the 2A region, and the TYRKLLEGEE motif in the 2B region of the rod domain in synemin filament formation, we have prepared a series of synemin constructs by site-directed mutagenesis and chimeric synemins having the vimentin head domain. The assembly properties of synemin constructs were assessed by the immunofluorescence of transient transfection into cultured SW13 cells without endogenous IFs. Our data showed that the formation of a filamentous network required at least the vimentin-like head domain and both the 2A and 2B regions of the rod domain.  相似文献   

2.
In the past three years, defects in the genes that encode intermediate filament (IF) proteins have been found to be responsible for some inherited skin diseases, and others have been implicated in certain motor neuron diseases and cardiomyopathies. This article reviews how knowledge of IF structure led to the discovery of genetic disorders of IFs, and how the clinical manifestations of these diseases have confirmed the notion that IFs provide the mechanical strength of cells.  相似文献   

3.
Molecular architecture of intermediate filaments   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Together with microtubules and actin microfilaments, approximately 11 nm wide intermediate filaments (IFs) constitute the integrated, dynamic filament network present in the cytoplasm of metazoan cells. This network is critically involved in division, motility and other cellular processes. While the structures of microtubules and microfilaments are known in atomic detail, IF architecture is presently much less understood. The elementary 'building block' of IFs is a highly elongated, rod-like dimer based on an alpha-helical coiled-coil structure. Assembly of cytoplasmic IF proteins, such as vimentin, begins with a lateral association of dimers into tetramers and gradually into the so-called unit-length filaments (ULFs). Subsequently ULFs start to anneal longitudinally, ultimately yielding mature IFs after a compaction step. For nuclear lamins, however, assembly starts with a head-to-tail association of dimers. Recently, X-ray crystallographic data were obtained for several fragments of the vimentin dimer. Based on the dimer structure, molecular models of the tetramer and the entire filament are now a possibility.  相似文献   

4.
Very little data have been reported that describe the structure of the tail domain of any cytoplasmic intermediate filament (IF) protein. We report here the results of studies using site directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance (SDSL‐EPR) to explore the structure and dynamics of the tail domain of human vimentin in tetramers (protofilaments) and filaments. The data demonstrate that in contrast to the vimentin head and rod domains, the tail domains are not closely apposed in protofilaments. However, upon assembly into intact IFs, several sites, including positions 445, 446, 451, and 452, the conserved “beta‐site,” become closely apposed, indicating dynamic changes in tail domain structure that accompany filament elongation. No evidence is seen for coiled‐coil structure within the region studied, in either protofilaments or assembled filaments. EPR analysis also establishes that more than half of the tail domain is very flexible in both the assembly intermediate and the intact IF. However, by positioning the spin label at distinct sites, EPR is able to identify both the rod proximal region and sites flanking the beta‐site motif as rigid locations within the tail. The rod proximal region is well assembled at the tetramer stage with only slight changes occurring during filament elongation. In contrast, at the beta site, the polypeptide backbone transitions from flexible in the assembly intermediate to much more rigid in the intact IF. These data support a model in which the distal tail domain structure undergoes significant conformational change during filament elongation and final assembly.  相似文献   

5.
Using a vimentin-free expression system we were able to demonstrate that the carboxy terminus of desmin is necessary for filament assembly in the living cell. Desmin subunits missing only 4 carboxy-terminal residues of their rod domain are incapable of homopolymeric filament assembly. Moreover, even single amino acid substitutions in the conserved carboxy-terminal part of the rod domain prevent desmin subunits from homopolymeric filament assembly. Desmin subunits missing 18 or more carboxy-terminal residues of their rod domain (including the complete conserved carboxy-terminal region) are unstable in cells devoid of intact type III intermediate filaments (IFs). Interaction with an intact type III IF, however, stabilizes these mutated desmin subunits. Expression of a desmin subunit missing both its non-helical end domains in vimentin-containing cells disrupts the endogenous vimentin network completely.  相似文献   

6.
We recently demonstrated that inherited disease-causing mutations clustered in the alpha-helical coiled-coil "rod" domain of the muscle-specific intermediate filament (IF) protein desmin display a wide range of inhibitory effects on regular in vitro assembly. In these studies, we showed that individual mutations exhibited phenotypes that were not, with respect to the severity of interference, predictable by our current knowledge of the structural design of IF proteins. Moreover, the behavior of some mutated proteins in a standard tissue culture cell expression system was found to be even more complex. Here, we systematically investigate the behavior of these disease mutants in four different cell types: three not containing desmin or the related IF protein vimentin and the standard fibroblast line 3T3, which has an extensive vimentin system. The ability of the mutants to form filaments in the vimentin-free cells varies considerably, and only the mutants forming IFs in vitro generate extended filamentous networks. Furthermore, these latter mutants integrate into the 3T3 vimentin network but all the others do not. Instead, they cause the endogenous network of 3T3 vimentin to reorganize into perinuclear bundles. In addition, most of these assembly-deficient mutant desmins completely segregate from the vimentin system. Instead, the small round to fibrillar particles formed distribute independently throughout the cytoplasm as well as between the collapsed vimentin filament arrays in the perinuclear area.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the co-assembly properties of the intermediate filament (IF) proteins vimentin and desmin. First, the soluble complexes formed by both proteins separately in 5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.4, were characterized by analytical ultracentrifugation. In both cases, s-values of around 5 S were obtained corresponding to the formation of tetramers. However, at pH 7.5 and in the presence of 1 mM EDTA, both proteins behaved quite differently; whereas vimentin sedimented at 7.2 S, desmin assembled into much larger complexes of about 13 S. A mixture of equimolar amounts of vimentin and desmin in 8 M urea yielded, after reconstitution into 5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, and 1 mM EDTA, complexes exhibiting a sharp peak at 10.9 S. This intermediate s-value indicated that co-assembly into a distinct new set of complexes had occurred. As judged by electron microscopy and viscometry, these mixtures assembled into IFs with characteristics similar to those of pure vimentin and desmin. Furthermore, when vimentin and desmin tetramers were mixed in 5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.4, and subsequently subjected to IF assembly conditions, again "hybrid" filaments were obtained. Most interestingly, after 10 min of assembly, mass-per-length (MPL) measurements by scanning transmission electron microscopy yielded IFs with an MPL-peak value of 36 +/- 5 kDa/nm, hence closer to that of vimentin IFs (33 +/- 4 kDa/nm) than to that of desmin IFs (48 +/- 8 kDa/nm). Finally, when unit length-filaments (ULF) of vimentin and desmin were mixed and assembled further, the diameters of individual mature IFs formed exhibited a significantly higher degree of width inhomogeneity along their length than vimentin and desmin IFs as might be expected for a modular mode of assembly. Last but not least, atomic force microscopy provided further direct evidence that desmin IFs are able to fuse end-to-end with vimentin IFs. In summary, we have shown that vimentin and desmin are able to co-assemble at the dimer, tetramer, ULF and even the mature IF level.  相似文献   

8.
Recent reports on the possible contribution of the non-alpha-helical carboxy-terminal domain ("tail") of type III intermediate filament (IF) proteins to IF assembly have been controversial. To examine the importance and role of this domain, we have therefore engineered a Xenopus laevis vimentin cDNA to code for a tail-less polypeptide and have used it in combination with prokaryotic and eukaryotic expression systems. Here we show that tail-less vimentin, isolated from transfected bacteria (Escherichia coli), when used for assembly in vitro, forms normal-looking, loosely packed IFs. By viscometry we demonstrate that this tail-less vimentin assembles at an even higher rate and into longer IFs than wild-type vimentin. In vivo, i.e., by forced expression in transfected type III IF-free cultured epithelial cells, tail-less vimentin was also recovered in short fibrillar structures, in rodlets and in small as well as large spheroidal aggregates ("granules") that did not reveal any IF substructure. Surprisingly, however, spheroidal aggregate structures formed from the tail-deleted vimentin, were seen not only in the cytoplasm but also in the nucleus, indicating a role of the tail in higher order organization and compartmentalization of the vimentin IF system.  相似文献   

9.
To get new insights into the function of the intermediate filament (IF) protein vimentin in cell physiology, we generated two mutant cDNAs, one with a point mutation in the consensus motif in coil1A (R113C) and one with the complete deletion of coil 2B of the rod domain. In keratins and glia filament protein (GFAP), analogous mutations cause keratinopathies and Alexander disease, respectively. Both mutants prevented filament assembly in vitro and inhibited assembly of wild-type vimentin when present in equal amounts. In stably transfected preadipocytes, these mutants caused the complete disruption of the endogenous vimentin network, demonstrating their dominant-negative behaviour. Cytoplasmic vimentin aggregates colocalised with the chaperones alphaB-crystallin and HSP40. Moreover, vimR113C mutant cells were more resistant against staurosporine-induced apoptosis compared to controls. We hypothesise that mutations in the vimentin gene, like in most classes of IF genes, may contribute to distinct human diseases.  相似文献   

10.
Previous studies have shown that the non-alpha-helical head domain of vimentin is required for polymerization of intermediate filaments (IFs) and, furthermore, a nonapeptide highly conserved among type III IF subunit proteins at their extreme amino-terminus is essential for this process. Recombinant DNA technology was employed to produce specific vimentin deletion mutant proteins (for in vitro studies) or vimentin protein expression plasmids (for in vivo studies), which were used to identify other regions of the vimentin head domain important for polymerization. Various vimentin proteins lacking either residues 25-38, 44-95, or 40-95 polymerized into wild-type or largely normal IFs, both in vitro and in vivo. Vimentin proteins lacking residues 44-69 or 25-63 failed to form IFs in vitro, but assembled into IFs in vivo. Vimentin proteins lacking residues 25-68, 44-103, or 88-103 failed to form IFs in vitro or in vivo. Taken together with previous results, these data demonstrate that the middle of the vimentin non-alpha-helical head domain, which is known to be the site of nucleic acid binding, is completely dispensable for IF formation, whereas both ends of the vimentin non-alpha-helical head domain are required for IF formation. The simplest explanation for these results is that the middle of the vimentin non-alpha-helical head domain loops out, thereby permitting the juxtaposition of the ends of the head domain and their productive interaction with other protein domains (probably the C-terminus of the rod domain) during IF polymerization. The ability of some of the mutant proteins to form IFs in vivo, but not in vitro, suggests that as-yet-unknown cellular proteins may interact with and, in some cases, enable polymerization of IFs, even though they are not absolutely required for IF formation by wild-type vimentin.  相似文献   

11.
The expression of the intermediate filament (IF) protein nestin is closely associated with rapidly proliferating progenitor cells during neurogenesis and myogenesis, but little is known about its function. In this study, we examine the effects of nestin expression on the assembly state of vimentin IFs in nestin-free cells. Nestin is introduced by transient transfection and is positively correlated with the disassembly of vimentin IFs into nonfilamentous aggregates or particles in mitotic but not interphase cells. This nestin-mediated disassembly of IFs is dependent on the phosphorylation of vimentin by the maturation/M-phase-promoting factor at ser-55 in the amino-terminal head domain. In addition, the disassembly of vimentin IFs during mitosis appears to be a unique feature of nestin-expressing cell types. Furthermore, when the expression of nestin is downregulated by the nestin-specific small interfering RNA in nestin-expressing cells, vimentin IFs remain assembled throughout all stages of mitosis. Previous studies suggest that nonfilamentous vimentin particles are IF precursors and can be transported rapidly between different cytoplasmic compartments along microtubule tracks. On the basis of these observations, we speculate that nestin may play a role in the trafficking and distribution of IF proteins and potentially other cellular factors to daughter cells during progenitor cell division.  相似文献   

12.
Plectin is a versatile cytolinker protein critically involved in the organization of the cytoskeletal filamentous system. The muscle-specific intermediate filament (IF) protein desmin, which progressively replaces vimentin during differentiation of myoblasts, is one of the important binding partners of plectin in mature muscle. Defects of either plectin or desmin cause muscular dystrophies. By cell transfection studies, yeast two-hybrid, overlay and pull-down assays for binding analysis, we have characterized the functionally important sequences for the interaction of plectin with desmin and vimentin. The association of plectin with both desmin and vimentin predominantly depended on its fifth plakin repeat domain and downstream linker region. Conversely, the interaction of desmin and vimentin with plectin required sequences contained within the segments 1A-2A of their central coiled-coil rod domain. This study furthers our knowledge of the interaction between plectin and IF proteins important for maintenance of cytoarchitecture in skeletal muscle. Moreover, binding of plectin to the conserved rod domain of IF proteins could well explain its broad interaction with most types of IFs.  相似文献   

13.
We have previously established the utility of site-directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance to determine structural relationships among proteins in intact intermediate filaments. Using this same approach we have introduced spin labels at 21 residues between amino acids 169 and 193 in rod domain 1 of human vimentin. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectra provide direct evidence for the coiled coil nature of the vimentin dimer in this region. This finding is consistent with predictions but has never been demonstrated previously. In a previous study we identified residue 348 in the rod domain 2 as one point of overlap between adjacent dimers in intact filaments. In the present study we defined residue 191 in the rod domain 1 as a second point of overlap and established that the dimers are arranged in an anti-parallel and staggered orientation at this site. Finally, by isolating spin-labeled samples at successive stages during the dialysis that lead to filament assembly in vitro, we have been able to establish a sequence of interactions that occurs during in vitro assembly, starting with the alpha helix and loose coiled coil dimer formation, then the formation of tetrameric species centered on residue 191, followed by interactions centered on residue 348 suggestive of octamer or higher order multimer formation. A continuation of this strategy revealed that both 191-191 and 348-348 interactions are present in low ionic strength Tris buffers when vimentin is maintained at the "protofilament" stage of assembly.  相似文献   

14.
Intermediate filaments (IFs) are key players in multiple cellular processes throughout human tissues. Their biochemical and structural properties are important for understanding filament assembly mechanisms, for interactions between IFs and binding partners, and for developing pharmacological agents that target IFs. IF proteins share a conserved coiled-coil central-rod domain flanked by variable N-terminal ‘head’ and C-terminal ‘tail’ domains. There have been several recent advances in our understanding of IF structure from the study of keratins, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and lamin. These include discoveries of (i) a knob–pocket tetramer assembly mechanism in coil 1B; (ii) a lamin-specific coil 1B insert providing a one-half superhelix turn; (iii) helical, yet flexible, linkers within the rod domain; and (iv) the identification of coil 2B residues required for mature filament assembly. Furthermore, the head and tail domains of some IFs contain low-complexity aromatic-rich kinked segments, and structures of IFs with binding partners show electrostatic surfaces are a major contributor to complex formation. These new data advance the connection between IF structure, pathologic mutations, and clinical diseases in humans.  相似文献   

15.
Desmin, the major intermediate filament (IF) protein of muscle, is evolutionarily highly conserved from shark to man. Recently, an increasing number of mutations of the desmin gene has been described to be associated with human diseases such as certain skeletal and cardiac myopathies. These diseases are histologically characterised by intracellular aggregates containing desmin and various associated proteins. Although there is progress regarding our knowledge on the cellular function of desmin within the cytoskeleton, the impact of each distinct mutation is currently not understood at all. In order to get insight into how such mutations affect filament assembly and their integration into the cytoskeleton we need to establish IF structure at atomic detail. Recent progress in determining the dimer structure of the desmin-related IF-protein vimentin allows us to assess how such mutations may affect desmin filament architecture.  相似文献   

16.
We have developed an assembly protocol for the intermediate filament (IF) protein vimentin based on a phosphate buffer system, which enables the dynamic formation of authentic IFs. The advantage of this physiological buffer is that analysis of the subunit interactions by chemical cross-linking of internal lysine residues becomes feasible. By this system, we have analyzed the potential interactions of the coiled-coil rod domains with one another, which are assumed to make a crucial contribution to IF formation and stability. We show that headless vimentin, which dimerizes under low salt conditions, associates into tetramers of the A(22)-type configuration under assembly conditions, indicating that one of the effects of increasing the ionic strength is to favor coil 2-coil 2 interactions. Furthermore, in order to obtain insight into the molecular interactions that occur during the first phase of assembly of full-length vimentin, we employed a temperature-sensitive variant of human vimentin, which is arrested at the "unit-length filament" (ULF) state at room temperature, but starts to elongate upon raising the temperature to 37 degrees C. Most importantly, we demonstrate by cross-linking analysis that ULF formation predominantly involves A(11)-type dimer-dimer interactions. The presence of A(22) and A(12) cross-linking products in mature IFs, however, indicates that major rearrangements do occur during the longitudinal annealing and radial compaction steps of IF assembly.  相似文献   

17.
The plakin family of cytolinkers interacts with intermediate filaments (IFs) through plakin repeat domain (PRD) and linker modules. Recent structure/function studies have established the molecular basis of envoplakin-PRD and periplakin-linker interactions with vimentin. Both plakin modules share a broad basic groove which recognizes acidic rod elements on IFs, a mechanism that is applicable to other plakin family members. This review postulates a universal IF engagement mechanism that illuminates the specific effects of pathogenic mutations associated with diseases including arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, and reveals how diverse plakin proteins offer tailored IF tethering to ensure stable, dynamic and regulated cellular structures.  相似文献   

18.
Synemin is a cytoskeletal protein originally identified as an intermediate filament (IF)-associated protein because of its colocalization and copurification with the IF proteins desmin and vimentin in muscle cells. Our sequencing studies have shown that synemin is an unusually large member (1,604 residues, 182,187 Da) of the IF protein superfamily, with the majority of the molecule consisting of a long C-terminal tail domain. Molecular interaction studies demonstrate that purified synemin interacts with desmin, the major IF protein in mature muscle cells, and with alpha-actinin, an integral myofibrillar Z-line protein. Furthermore, expressed synemin rod and tail domains interact, respectively, with desmin and alpha-actinin. Analysis of endogenous protein expression in SW13 clonal lines reveals that synemin is coexpressed and colocalized with vimentin IFs in SW13.C1 vim+ cells but is absent in SW13.C2 vim- cells. Transfection studies indicate that synemin requires the presence of another IF protein, such as vimentin, in order to assemble into IFs. Taken in toto, our results suggest synemin functions as a component of heteropolymeric IFs and plays an important cytoskeletal cross-linking role by linking these IFs to other components of the cytoskeleton. Synemin in striated muscle cells may enable these heterofilaments to help link Z-lines of adjacent myofibrils and, thereby, play an important role in cytoskeletal integrity.  相似文献   

19.
The assembly of soluble vimentin subunits into intermediate filaments (IFs) is dependent on information located in the amino-terminal domain. Using site-directed mutagenesis of a Xenopus laevis vimentin cDNA and an Escherichia coli production system to obtain pure mutated protein, we have identified, in the head domain, a nine amino acid motif (SSYRRIFGG), evolutionarily conserved from amphibia to man, which plays an important role in the orderly formation of IFs. Exchanges in the central di-arginine and in the two aromatic residues interfere with IF assembly of vimentin in vitro: on assembly under standard assembly conditions (160 mM-NaCl) most of the protein is included in dense aggregates, with a variable and minor proportion of IFs, whereas at lower ionic concentrations short and incomplete IF-like structures are formed. The deletion of the whole motif results in a protein that under standard assembly conditions (e.g. 160 mM-NaCl) predominantly and rapidly precipitates into large aggregates of non-IF material, whereas at lower ionic strength (e.g. 50 mM-NaCl) both IFs and dense aggregates are formed simultaneously. Our results show that the mutated protein can assume different forms at the same time and under the same conditions. This motif alone is insufficient for the formation of normal IFs as demonstrated by a mutant in which the motif has been brought closer to the alpha-helical rod domain by deletion of 55 internal amino acid residues. Corresponding observations have been made, by immunofluorescence microscopy, upon transfection of cultured epithelial cells lacking vimentin IFs. The importance of the head domain motif for the assembly and higher-order arrangement of IFs is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The assembly of intermediate filament (IF) arrays involves the recruitment of a complex set of cell-type-specific IF-associated proteins. Some of them are integral membrane proteins, others act as crosslinking proteins with vectorial binding activities, and yet others comprise motor proteins. In vivo IFs appear to be predominantly heteropolymers, although in vitro several IF proteins (e.g. vimentin, desmin, neurofilament (NF)-L and the nuclear lamins) do self-assemble into IF-like polymers. In contrast, NF-M, NF-H, nestin, synemin and paranemin, all bona fide IF proteins, are unable to self-assemble into IFs either in vitro or in vivo. The individual IF proteins of this large multigene family are chemically heterogeneous, exhibiting different assembly kinetics and yielding discrete types of filaments. The unique physical properties and interaction capabilities of these distinct IF molecular building blocks, in combination with accessory proteins, mediate the generation of a highly dynamic and interconnected, cell-type-specific cytoarchitecture.  相似文献   

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