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1.
A vinculin-like protein was identified in chicken as well as in bovine platelets by ELISA competitive binding assay using antibodies against vinculin from chicken gizzard. By a modified procedure (J. Biol. Chem. (1980) 255, 1194–1199) we succeeded in isolating bovine platelet vinculin to apparent homogeneity. The structural identity of platelet and chicken gizzard vinculin was demonstrated by circular dichroism analysis. It was also shown that platelet vinculin induces a significant decrease in the low shear viscosity of F-actin. Vinculin, in all probability, plays an important role in the organization of actin filaments in platelets, especially in the linkages of microfilaments to the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
We report here on the identification of two distinct functional domains on chicken vinculin molecule, which can, independently, mediate its interaction with focal contacts in living cells. These findings were obtained by immunofluorescent labeling of COS cells transfected with a series of chicken vinculin-specific cDNA constructs derived from clones cVin1 and cVin5 (Bendori, R., D. Salomon, and B. Geiger. 1987. EMBO [Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.] J. 6:2897-2905). These included a chimeric construct consisting of 5' sequences of cVin1 attached to the complementary 3' region of cVin5, as well as several constructs of either cVin1 or cVin5 from which 3' or 5' sequences were deleted. We show here that the products of both cVin1 and cVin5, and of the cVin1/cVin5 chimera, readily associated with focal contacts in transfected COS cells. Furthermore, 78 and 45 kD NH2-terminal fragments encoded by a deleted cVin1 and the 78-kD COOH-terminal portion of vinculin encoded by cVin5 were capable of binding specifically to focal contact areas. In contrast 3'-deletion mutants prepared from clone cVin5 and a 5'-deletion mutant of cVin1, lacking both NH2- and COOH-terminal sequences, failed to associate with focal contacts in transfected cells. The loss of binding was accompanied by an overall disarray of the microfilament system. These results, together with previous in vitro binding studies, suggest that vinculin contains at least two independent sites for binding to focal contacts; the NH2-terminal domain may contain the talin binding site while the COOH-terminal domain may mediate vinculin-vinculin interaction. Moreover, the disruptive effect of the double-deleted molecule (lacking the two focal-contact binding sites) on the organization of actin suggests that a distinct region involved in the binding of vinculin to the microfilament system is present in the NH2-terminal 45-kD region of the molecule.  相似文献   

3.
The localization of talin and vinculin in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) during transformation was studied by immunoelectron microscopy. CEF cells were infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virus. After 16 h at 42 degrees C, transformation was induced by incubation at 37 degrees C for different intervals up to 3 h. Cells were cleaved by "wet cleaving" as reported previously by us (R. Brands and C.A. Feltkamp, 1988, Exp. Cell Res. 176, 309) and labeled with affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies to talin or vinculin, or monoclonal anti-vinculin. We observed a rapid reduction of vinculin in adhesion plaques within 15 min and a much slower dissociation of talin. This was found using single-labeling procedures and also within the same cell using double labeling. Seemingly intact microfilament bundles were observed associated with adhesion plaques that contained relatively little vinculin. These observations show that an early event in src-induced transformation is the release of vinculin from adhesion plaques. Furthermore, since adhesion plaques with attached filament bundles can exist at least transiently with very little or no vinculin present, it seems likely that vinculin is not, or not the only protein, linking actin filaments to adhesion plaques.  相似文献   

4.
We have used immunocytofluorescence techniques to determine the subcellular distribution of the Ca2+, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C (PKC). Using monoclonal antibodies that are specific for Type 3 (alpha) PKC, we have determined that there are least two pools of PKC in normal rat embryo fibroblasts (REF52 cells): diffuse cytoplasmic and fiber-associated. Extraction with chelators and detergent before fixing and staining removes the cytoplasmic PKC. The fiber-associated staining remains in these cytoskeleton preparations. The cytoskeleton Type 3 PKC staining closely resembles that of the focal contact protein vinculin and colocalizes with another focal contact protein, talin. Cytochalasin, but not colchicine, coordinately disrupts the staining pattern of vinculin and PKC. Activation of PKC by treatment with phorbol esters causes depolymerization of microfilaments and reorganization of vinculin staining. We propose that Type 3 PKC is a modulatory component of the focal contact and has a primary role in regulation of the association of microfilament bundles with the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

5.
By screening a yeast two-hybrid library with COOH-terminal fragments of vinculin/metavinculin as the bait, we identified a new protein termed raver1. Raver1 is an 80-kD multidomain protein and widely expressed but to varying amounts in different cell lines. In situ and in vitro, raver1 forms complexes with the microfilament-associated proteins vinculin, metavinculin, and alpha-actinin and colocalizes with vinculin/metavinculin and alpha-actinin at microfilament attachment sites, such as cell-cell and cell matrix contacts of epithelial cells and fibroblasts, respectively, and in costameres of skeletal muscle. The NH2-terminal part of raver1 contains three RNA recognition motifs with homology to members of the heterogeneous nuclear RNP (hnRNP) family. Raver1 colocalizes with polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB)/hnRNPI, a protein involved in RNA splicing of microfilament proteins, in the perinucleolar compartment and forms complexes with PTB/hnRNPI. Hence, raver1 is a dual compartment protein, which is consistent with the presence of nuclear location signal and nuclear export sequence motifs in its sequence. During muscle differentiation, raver1 migrates from the nucleus to the costamere. We propose that raver1 may coordinate RNA processing and targeting as required for microfilament anchoring in specific adhesion sites.  相似文献   

6.
The expression of membrane-associated transformation-specific parameters was analyzed in de novo Rous sarcoma virus (strain SR-RSV-D) infected chicken embryo fibroblasts pretreated with homologous interferon. Cellular morphology, hexose transport, microfilament organization, and tyrosine-phosphate content of two primary substrates of the transformation-generating viral kinase, pp60src, were found indistinguishable from non-infected controls. These observations support the hypothesis that vinculin and possibly 36 kDa protein are involved in microfilament organization and that tyrosine-phosphorylation of these structural proteins is a prerequisite for the rearrangement of microfilaments during transformation. In de novo infection, interferon pretreatment reduces viral protein synthesis and pp60src activity as compared to non-treated, SR-RSV-D infected cells. However, the phosphotyrosine content of total cellular proteins as measured under steady state conditions is as high in interferon-pretreated as in nontreated transformed cells.  相似文献   

7.
A new protein of adhesion plaques and ruffling membranes   总被引:61,自引:46,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
A protein with a molecular weight on SDS polyacrylamide gels of 215,000 (referred to here as 215K) was purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle. Antibodies against this protein localized it in fibroblasts to adhesion plaques (focal contacts), to regions underlying cell surface fibronectin, and to ruffling membranes. In the first two distributions it was similar to vinculin in cellular location, and this was confirmed by double-label immunofluorescence microscopy, but the concentration of 215K in membrane ruffles distinguished it from vinculin. There was no cross-reaction of the antibody against 215K with vinculin, and immunoprecipitation and antibody staining of SDS gels of whole cells revealed a single cross-reactive component with a molecular weight of 215,000. Immunoprecipitation from cultures labeled with [32P]phosphate revealed 215K to be a phosphoprotein. Transformation of rat or chicken fibroblasts by Rous sarcoma virus resulted in a reorganization of 215K, in some cases into complex intracellular structures. The localization of 215K where microfilament bundles terminate as well as in close relation to cell surface fibronectin and in membrane ruffles suggests that the protein has some function in the organization of actin filaments at or close to regions of actin-membrane attachment.  相似文献   

8.
R Bendori  D Salomon    B Geiger 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(10):2897-2905
Vinculin specific cDNA clones were isolated from chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cDNA library in lambda gt11. The clones, ranging in size from 2.8 to 5.0 kb, were initially selected by rabbit antibodies to vinculin. Their identity was further confirmed by their specific reactivities with a battery of different vinculin-specific monoclonal antibodies. Southern blot analysis of restriction enzyme digested chicken spleen DNA suggested that all the isolated cDNA clones correspond to the same gene(s). Northern blot hybridization revealed that the vinculin-specific cDNA clones react with a single 6.5 kb mRNA in total cellular RNA preparations of CEF, whole chicken embryos and chicken gizzard smooth muscle. Moreover, fractionation of CEF poly(A)+ RNA by sucrose gradient centrifugation followed by translation in cell free system indicated that the mRNA coding for vinculin has a size of about 6.0-7.0 kb. The identity of these clones was finally confirmed by selection hybridization assay. The isolated vinculin-specific cDNA probes were subsequently used in order to study the effect of substrate adhesiveness on the expression of vinculin. We show here that cells cultured on highly adhesive substrate, such as endothelial extracellular matrix (ECM), form large vinculin-rich focal contacts, while cells grown on poorly adhesive substrate poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) [poly(HEMA)] contain only small distorted vinculin spots. These morphological differences were accompanied by over 5-fold reduction in vinculin synthesis in cells growing on poly(HEMA), compared to those cultured on the ECM and over 7.5-fold decrease in the levels of vinculin-specific mRNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of cellular proteins has been implicated in the neoplastic transformation of cells by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). One of the putative substrates for the src gene product (pp60v-src) of RSV is the cytoskeletal protein vinculin, giving rise to the hypothesis that tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin disrupts adhesion plaque integrity, leading to the characteristic rounded morphology of RSV-transformed cells. We have investigated this hypothesis by analysing the properties of fibroblasts transformed by conditional and non-conditional mutants of RSV which confer different morphologies on infected cells, with respect to formation of microfilament bundles, formation of vinculin-containing adhesion plaques, the deposition of a fibronectin-containing extracellular matrix, the localization of pp60v-src and the tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin. Cells transformed by the temperature-sensitive (ts) RSV mutant LA32 cultured at 41 degrees C were morphologically normal, and contained prominent microfilament bundles and well-developed adhesion plaques. However, these cells had a fully active pp60v-src kinase, had pp60v-src concentrated in their adhesion plaques and contained vinculin which was heavily phosphorylated on tyrosine residues. Cells transformed by a recovered avian sarcoma virus, rASV 2234.3 exhibited a markedly fusiform morphology with pp60v-src concentrated in well-developed adhesion plaques and an elevation of the phosphotyrosine content of vinculin. Cells transformed by LA32 at restrictive temperature comprise morphologically normal cells, indistinguishable from untransformed CEF, yet which contain tyrosine-phosphorylated vinculin and suggest that neither tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin nor pp60v-src concentration in adhesion plaques is sufficient for the rounded morphology of RSV-transformed cells.  相似文献   

10.
Antibodies were raised against the sequence Glu-Glu-Glu-Glu-Tyr-Met-Pro-Met -Glu, which represents a part of the middle T antigen of polyomavirus that is considered to be important in inducing the phenotype of transformed cells. The antibodies reacted with native as well as denatured middle T antigens. In addition, the antibodies immunoprecipitated a cellular protein with an apparent molecular weight of 130,000 (130K) from mouse and rat cells. In some cases, a 33K protein was also immunoprecipitated. Immunoprecipitation of middle T antigen as well as 130K and 33K proteins was blocked by the peptide. The antibodies labeled microfilaments of untransformed mouse, rat, human, and chicken cells by immunofluorescence. This labeling was also blocked by the peptide. The labeling pattern and distribution under a variety of conditions were indistinguishable from those of anti-actin antibodies, although no evidence has been obtained to indicate that the anti-peptide antibodies react with actin. The 130K protein migrated in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis slightly slower than chicken gizzard vinculin (130K) and slightly faster than myosin light-chain kinase of chicken smooth muscle (130K). Neither of these proteins absorbed the anti-peptide antibodies. The 33K protein does not seem to be tropomyosin (32K to 40K).  相似文献   

11.
Affinity-purified antibodies against actin, myosin, alpha-actinin and vinculin cross-reacted with corresponding proteins from Amoeba proteus in immunoblotting experiments. Antibody staining of cells fixed during locomotion revealed different distribution patterns with a local concentration of anti-actin in the intermediate and of anti-myosin in the uroid region. Anti-alpha-actinin labeled a thin layer at the internal face of the plasma membrane, whereas anti-vinculin was distinctly concentrated at the base of advancing pseudopodia. Microinjection of different control solutions or antibodies against actin, myosin and alpha-actinin neither influenced the normal morphology and motile activity of amoebae nor changed the cellular distribution pattern of complementary antigens. However, antibodies against vinculin disorganized controlled locomotion and altered the spatial morphology of the microfilament system as well as the localization of the vinculin antigen thus pointing to a function of this protein in adhesion and locomotion of A. proteus. The results of the present paper show similarities to observations on mammalian tissue culture cells.  相似文献   

12.
The level of phosphotyrosine in vinculin was determined in chicken embryo fibroblasts transformed by various strains of avian sarcoma virus. As previously reported (Sefton et al., Cell 24:165-174, 1981), vinculin was phosphorylated at tyrosine residues in most cultures examined, but the level varied greatly and no detectable change was found in cultures infected with Fujinami sarcoma virus or UR2 sarcoma virus. Regardless of the level of vinculin phosphorylation, the number of organized microfilament bundles was found to be decreased in all transformed cells. These results strongly suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation of vinculin is not an obligatory step in cell transformation by this class of oncogenes, nor is it correlated with the associated cytoskeletal disarray.  相似文献   

13.
The cytoskeletal protein vinculin is acylated by myristic acid   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
In non-muscle cells the mechanism by which microfilament bundles interact with the plasma membrane is unclear. Vinculin, a 130 kDa protein found in adhesion plaques, has been postulated to have a role as a membrane anchor for microfilaments and we have investigated the biochemistry of this molecule in more detail. We report that a fraction of vinculin in chick embryo fibroblasts is acylated by myristic acid. This modification was present in both membrane-bound, cytoskeletal and cytosolic vinculin and thus did not determine preferential subcellular localisation. Myristic acid was also present in vinculin from cells transformed by Rous sarcoma virus.  相似文献   

14.
Paxillin: a new vinculin-binding protein present in focal adhesions   总被引:66,自引:27,他引:39       下载免费PDF全文
The 68-kD protein (paxillin) is a cytoskeletal component that localizes to the focal adhesions at the ends of actin stress fibers in chicken embryo fibroblasts. It is also present in the focal adhesions of Madin-Darby bovine kidney (MDBK) epithelial cells but is absent, like talin, from the cell-cell adherens junctions of these cells. Paxillin purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle migrates as a diffuse band on SDS-PAGE gels with a molecular mass of 65-70 kD. It is a protein of multiple isoforms with pIs ranging from 6.31 to 6.85. Using purified paxillin, we have demonstrated a specific interaction in vitro with another focal adhesion protein, vinculin. Cleavage of vinculin with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease results in the generation of two fragments of approximately 85 and 27 kD. Unlike talin, which binds to the large vinculin fragment, paxillin was found to bind to the small vinculin fragment, which represents the rod domain of the molecule. Together with the previous observation that paxillin is a major substrate of pp60src in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed cells (Glenney, J. R., and L. Zokas. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 108:2401-2408), this interaction with vinculin suggests paxillin may be a key component in the control of focal adhesion organization.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in cell morphology and motility are mediated by the actin cytoskeleton. Recent advances in our understanding of the regulators of microfilament structure and dynamics have shed light on how these changes are controlled, and efforts continue to define all the structural and signaling components involved in these processes. The actin cytoskeleton-associated protein talin binds to integrins, vinculin, and actin. We report a new binding partner for talin that we have named layilin, which contains homology with C-type lectins, is present in numerous cell lines and tissue extracts, and is expressed on the cell surface. Layilin colocalizes with talin in membrane ruffles, and is recruited to membrane ruffles in cells induced to migrate in in vitro wounding experiments and in peripheral ruffles in spreading cells. A ten–amino acid motif in the layilin cytoplasmic domain is sufficient for talin binding. We have identified a short region within talin''s amino-terminal 435 amino acids capable of binding to layilin in vitro. This region overlaps a binding site for focal adhesion kinase.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Fluorescently labeled vinculin binds to focal contact areas in permeabilized cells independent of actin (Avnur, Z., J. V. Small, and B. Geiger, 1983, J. Cell Biol., 96:1622-1630), but the nature of the binding site is unknown. In this study we have examined the interaction of vinculin with these sites in permeabilized L6 myoblasts to define conditions that perturb the binding and subsequently to reconstitute it. Mild treatment with low concentrations of protease prevents vinculin incorporation without gross changes in the cytoskeleton or extensive protein breakdown. Exposure to buffers of moderate ionic strength also reduces subsequent vinculin binding without large morphological effects. These extraction conditions were used to obtain a fraction from gizzard which was able to restore the vinculin localization. Talin, actin, and vinculin itself were able to alter the binding of labeled vinculin to permeabilized cells and each also interacted with vinculin in gel overlays; however, they were unable to reconstitute the binding site in treated permeabilized cells. The results show a requirement for an as yet unidentified protein to capacitate vinculin binding to focal contact sites and suggest that this protein is peripheral and interacts directly with the binding site.  相似文献   

18.
We have mapped the vinculin-binding sites in the cytoskeletal protein talin as well as those sequences which target the talin molecule to focal contacts. Using a series of overlapping talin-fusion proteins expressed in E. coli and 125I-vinculin in both gel-overlay and microtitre well binding assays, we present evidence for three separable binding sites for vinculin. All three are in the tail segment of talin (residues 434-2541) and are recognized by the same fragment of vinculin (residues 1-258). Two sites are adjacent to each other and span residues 498-950, and the third site is more than 700 residues distant in the primary sequence. Scatchard analysis of 125I-vinculin binding to talin also indicates three sites, each with a similar affinity (Kd = 2- 6 x 10(-7) M). We also detect a substoichiometric interaction of higher affinity (Kd = 3 x 10(-8) M) which remains unexplained. By expressing regions of the chicken talin molecule in heterologous cells, we have shown that the sequences required to target talin to focal contacts overlap those which bind vinculin.  相似文献   

19.
Talin is a high molecular weight phosphoprotein that is localized at adhesion plaques. We have found that talin phosphorylation increases 3.0-fold upon exposure of chicken embryo fibroblasts to the tumor-promoting phorbol ester, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Talin isolated from tumor promoter-treated cells is phosphorylated on serine and threonine residues. Vinculin, a 130 kDa talin-binding protein, also exhibits increased phosphorylation in vivo in response to tumor promoter, but to a lesser degree than does talin. Because tumor-promoting phorbol esters augment protein kinase C activity, we have compared the ability of purified protein kinase C to phosphorylate talin and vinculin in vitro. Both talin and vinculin were found to be substrates for protein kinase C; however, talin was phosphorylated to a greater extent than was vinculin. Cleavage of protein kinase C-phosphorylated talin by the calcium-dependent protease (Type II) revealed that while both the resulting 190-200 and 46 kDa proteolytic peptides were phosphorylated, the majority of label was contained within the 46-kDa fragment. Although incubation of chicken embryo fibroblasts with tumor-promoting phorbol ester induces a dramatic increase in talin phosphorylation, we detected no change in the organization of stress fibers and focal contacts in these cells. Exposure of the cells to tumor promoter did, however, result in a loss of actin and talin-rich cell surface elaborations that resemble focal contact precursor structures.  相似文献   

20.
Myosin, tropomyosin, and actin were localized in the epithelial cells of rat intestine by means of specific antibodies to chicken gizzard smooth muscle myosin, tropomyosin, and actin by immunohistochemical studies at both the light and electron microscope levels (unlabeled antibody enzyme technique). The pattern of antibody staining was the following (a) Anti-actin was associated with the microfilament bundles of the microvilli in their entire length, as well as with the microfilament network in the terminal web. (b) Anti-myosin was concentrated along the rootlets of the microvillar microfilament bundles and within the filamentous feltwork forming the terminal web. (c) Anti-tropomyosin showed a distribution similar to that of anti- myosin. In addition, the three antibodies also labeled the subplasmalemmal web underneath the cell membrane bordering on the basal lamina. Utilizing the above ultrastructural findings, we wish to propose a functional model of microvillar contraction.  相似文献   

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