首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
S-100 proteins   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
R Donato 《Cell calcium》1986,7(3):123-145
S-100 is a group of closely related, small, acidic Ca2+-binding proteins (S-100a0, S-100a and S-100b, which are alpha alpha, alpha beta, and beta beta in composition, respectively). S-100 is structurally related to calmodulin and other Ca2+-binding proteins. S-100 is abundant in the brain and is contained in well defined cell types of both neuroectodermal and non-neuroectodermal origin, as well as in their neoplastic counterparts. In the mammalian brain, S-100a and S-100b are confined to glial cells, while S-100a0 is neuronal in localization. Single S-100 isoforms bind Ca2+ with nearly the same affinity. K+ antagonizes the binding of Ca2+ to high affinity sites on S-100. S-100 binds Zn2+ with high affinity. S-100 is found in a soluble and a membrane-bound form and has the ability to interact with artificial and natural membranes. S-100 has no enzymatic activity. S-100 has been involved in several activities including memory processes, regulation of diffusion of monovalent cations across membranes, modulation of the physical state of membranes, regulation of the phosphorylation of several proteins, control of the assembly-disassembly of microtubules. Some of these effects are strictly Ca2+-dependent, while other are not. S-100 is being secreted or released to the extracellular space. In some cases, this event is hormonally regulated. Several S-100 binding proteins are being described.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the subcellular distribution of S-100b protein in primary cultures of Schwann cells. The subcellular localization of the protein in cells fixed and then permeabilized is similar, if not identical, to that seen in Schwann cells in peripheral nerves, i.e., S-100b protein is found in the cytoplasm and associated with membranes and filamentous structures. In cells either fixed in the presence of Triton X-100 or exposed to Triton X-100 for a short time before fixation (Triton cytoskeletons), the immune reaction product is considerably less intense, and the protein is associated with filaments running parallel to the long axis of the cell as well as in a submembranous position. Including CaCl2 in the buffer during fixation in the presence of Triton X-100 does not result in any increase in the intensity of the immune reaction product in Triton cytoskeletons, suggesting that, within the limits of the technique employed, no binding of additional S-100b protein to the Triton X-100-resistant material can be induced. On the other hand, including EGTA results in a substantial decrease in the intensity of the immune reaction product in Triton cytoskeletons. Altogether, these findings suggest that a remarkable fraction of S-100b protein in cultured Schwann cells is associated with elements of the cytoskeleton and that Ca2+ exerts some regulatory role in the association of S-100b protein with the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

3.
R Donato 《Cell calcium》1985,6(4):343-361
In the presence of the usual 0.1 M Mes buffer, pH 6.7, mM free Ca2+ levels are required for half-maximal decrease in the rate and extent of brain microtubule protein (MTP) assembly in the absence of ox brain S-100, while microM free Ca2+ levels are sufficient in the presence of S-100. At the same pH 6.7, but in the presence of 0.12 M KCl, as low as 1.5 microM free Ca2+ is sufficient for S-100 to produce half-maximal reduction in the rate of assembly, while as high as 0.5 mM free Ca2+ is required in the absence of S-100. Similar results are obtained with rat brain S-100 (S-100b), indicating that single S-100 iso forms are equipotent in affecting the MTP assembly. At pH 7.5, MTPs are remarkably resistant to Ca2+ in the absence of S-100. In the presence of S-100, not only is the free Ca2+ concentration required for complete inhibition of assembly at least one order of magnitude smaller than that required in the absence of S-100, but significant S-100-dependent inhibition of assembly occurs in the absence of Ca2+. Under the two conditions where S-100 is particularly effective in inhibiting the assembly, i.e. at pH 6.7 in the presence of KCl and at pH 7.5, S-100 increases the disassembly rate even in the presence of microM Ca2+ levels. Our results suggest that the free Ca2+ concentration regulates the way S-100 disassembles microtubules (MTs): at microM Ca2+ levels, S-100 sequesters tubulin with concomitant increase in the disassembly rate; at mM Ca2+ levels, the S-100-Ca2+ complex probably interacts with MTs producing endwise disassembly.  相似文献   

4.
Two acidic Ca2(+)-binding proteins (CaBP33 and CaBP37) purified from bovine brain have been characterized in terms of immunological properties, heat-sensitivity, electrophoretic mobility, and Ca2(+)-dependent binding to negatively charged phospholipids and to brain membranes. They were induced to bind to membranes by homogenization of brain tissue in the presence of CaCl2. The membrane-bound CaBP33/CaBP37 mixture resisted extraction with detergents and was solubilized with high concentrations of EGTA/KCl. However, apparent Ca2(+)-independent binding of the two proteins to membranes seemed to occur as well. This latter fraction of membrane-bound CaBP33 and CaBP37 could be solubilized with Triton X-100, indicating that brain membranes normally contain the two proteins as intrinsic components.  相似文献   

5.
This study reports the isolation and characterization of a Triton X-100-resistant membrane fraction from homogenates of rod outer segment (ROS) disk membranes purified free of the surrounding plasma membrane. A portion of the ROS disk membrane was found to be resistant to Triton X-100 extraction at 4 degrees C. This detergent-resistant fraction was isolated as a low buoyant density band on sucrose density gradients and exhibited an increase in light scattering detected at 600 nm. Biochemical analysis of the Triton X-100-resistant fraction showed it to be enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin relative to phospholipid and in phospholipid relative to protein compared with the soluble fraction. The Triton X-100-resistant membranes described herein did not arise simply from partial solubilization of the ROS disk membranes because detergent-treated low buoyant density fractions isolated from homogenates with octyl glucopyranoside had cholesterol and sphingomyelin content indistinguishable from that of solubilized ROS disk homogenates. Analysis of proteins associated with the Triton X-100-resistant fraction showed it to be enriched in the rim-specific protein ROM-1 and caveolin; surprisingly, the fusion protein peripherin/rds (where rds is retinal degeneration slow), also localized to the disk rim, was entirely absent from the membrane raft domain. The lipid profiles of the Triton X-100-resistant membranes were virtually identical in preparations homogenized in either the light or dark. Slightly more ROM-1 was recovered from samples prepared in the light (23%) than from samples prepared in the dark (13%), but peripherin/rds could not be detected in either preparation. When the Triton X-100-resistant membranes were treated with methyl-beta-cyclodextran to deplete membrane cholesterol, the resultant membranes contained slightly lower levels of ROM-1, specifically in the dimeric form. Cholesterol depletion also resulted in the collapse of the large caveolin complex to monomeric caveolae. The results presented herein characterize a pool of ROM-1, a photoreceptor tetraspanin protein, that may play a regulatory role in peripherin/rds-dependent fusion.  相似文献   

6.
Studies on the alpha-subunit of bovine brain S-100 protein.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A method is described for the rapid purification of both S-100 protein and calmodulin from crude bovine brain extracts by the use of a fluphenazine-Sepharose affinity column eluted stepwise with decreasing concentrations of free Ca2+. Protein containing only alpha-subunit was purified from preparations of S-100 protein by anion-exchange chromatography. This protein co-migrated with the alpha-subunit of S-100 protein on sodium dodecyl sulphate/urea/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and had an amino acid composition identical with that previously reported for this subunit. The results of u.v.-absorption and fluorescence-emission spectroscopy indicate that the tryptophan residue of the purified alpha-subunit of S-100 protein undergoes a Ca2+-induced change in environment. Measurements of changes in tryptophan fluorescence with increasing Ca2+ concentrations suggest an apparent dissociation constant of the alpha-subunit for Ca2+ of 7 X 10(-5)M in the absence of K+. In the presence of 90mM-K+ this value is increased to 3.4 X 10(-4)M.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined the S-100-chlorpromazine interplay at the level of brain microtubule proteins in vitro. The results indicate that in the presence of 0.12 M KCl and 10 microM free Ca2+ the inhibitory effect of S-100 on microtubule assembly is additive to that of chlorpromazine, but S-100 fails to potentiate the disassembling effect of 0.1 mM Ca2+ if added to assembled microtubule proteins after chlorpromazine and Ca2+, probably because of inhibition of S-100 by the phenothiazine. Chlorpromazine does not compete with S-100 for binding to purified tubulin.  相似文献   

8.
Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs) are involved in signal transduction after exposure of neural cells to the axon guidance molecule Semaphorin 3A/collapsin. All five known CRMPs are expressed in the developing cerebral cortex and neocortical neurons are responsive to Semaphorin 3A. Here, we examine the expression and subcellular localization of CRMPs in neocortical neurons and in neonatal rat brain. In neocortical neurons CRMP-4 was detected in the perikaryon with a diffuse cytosolic distribution. In neurites and at growth cones punctate staining patterns were observed. Extraction of neuron cultures with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin to deplete cholesterol caused rapid redistribution of the punctate CRMP-4 staining into larger patches and abundant growth cone collapse. Western blotting of brain extracts demonstrated for all CRMPs the existence of soluble, detergent-extractable, and Triton X-100-resistant forms. Furthermore, sucrose density gradient centrifugation after solubilization of brain membranes with Triton X-100 revealed that CRMP-1, -3, -5, and to a lower extent CRMP-4 are associated with a detergent-resistant fraction with low buoyant density, but CRMP-2 was not detectable in this fraction. Thus, we propose that lipid rafts form sites for the compartmentalization of signaling events involving specific CRMPs and that the integrity of these membrane microdomains is essential for the maintenance of growth cones.  相似文献   

9.
Isolation of S-100 binding proteins from brain by affinity chromatography   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
S-100-binding proteins, and calmodulin-binding proteins were isolated from S-100- and calmodulin-depleted bovine brain extract by Ca2+-dependent affinity chromatography using S-100- and calmodulin-coupled Sepharose columns respectively. The majority of the protein (80 to 90%) including calcineurin that bound to S-100 also bound to calmodulin and vice versa, suggesting both proteins may regulate common targets. However these two regulatory proteins also bind few other proteins specific for each. These include cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase, 55k, and 220k proteins for calmodulin and 24k, 42k, and 90k proteins for S-100. Certain proteins also specifically bound to S-100 both in Ca2+-dependent and independent ways. In glial cells S-100 protein may replace calmodulin in regulating Ca2+-influenced functions.  相似文献   

10.
S-100 proteins are a group of three 21-kilodalton, acidic, Ca2+-binding proteins of the "E-F hand" type shown to regulate several cell activities, including microtubule (MT) assembly-disassembly. We show here that S-100 proteins interact with MTs assembled from either whole microtubule protein or purified tubulin, both in the absence and in the presence of the MT-stabilizing drug taxol. Evidence for the binding of S-100 to MTs comes from both kinetic (turbidimetric) and binding studies. Kinetically, S-100 enhances the disassembly of steady-state MTs in the presence of high concentrations of colchicine or vinblastine at 10 microM free Ca2+ and disassembles taxol-stabilized MTs at high Ca2+ concentrations. Experiments performed using 125I-labeled S-100 show that S-100 binds Ca2+ independently to a single set of sites on taxol-stabilized MTs assembled from pure tubulin with an affinity of 6 x 10(-5) M and a stoichiometry of 0.15 mol of S-100/mol of polymerized tubulin. Under certain conditions, S-100 proteins also cosediment with MTs prepared by coassembly of S-100 with MTs, probably in the form of an S-100-tubulin complex. Because S-100 binds to MTs under conditions where this protein fraction does not produce observable effects on the kinetics of assembly-disassembly, e.g., in the absence of Ca2+ at pH 6.7, we conclude that the S-100 binding to MTs does not affect the stability of MTs per se, but rather creates conditions for increased sensitivity of MTs to Ca2+.  相似文献   

11.
Effect of S-100 protein on assembly of brain microtubule proteins in vitro   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
R Donato 《FEBS letters》1983,162(2):310-313
S-100 protein inhibits the assembly of brain microtubule proteins in vitro in the presence of 10 microM free Ca2+. The S-100 effect is generally greater on the rate than on the extent of assembly, and even greater as the microtubule protein concentration decreases and the time of preincubation between S-100 and microtubule proteins before GTP addition increases, at a given S-100/tubulin dimer molar ratio. The S-100 effect is greatly enhanced in the presence of physiological concentrations of K+ and is completely reversed by EGTA.  相似文献   

12.
To identify integral and peripheral membrane proteins, highly purified coated vesicles from bovine brain were exposed to solutions of various pH, ionic strength, and concentrations of the nonionic detergent Triton X-100. At pH 10.0 or above most major proteins were liberated, but four minor polypeptides sedimented with the vesicles. From quantitative analysis of phospholipids in the pellet and extract, we determined that at a pH of up to 12 all phospholipids could be recovered in the pellet. Electron microscopic examination of coated vesicles at pH 12.0 showed all vesicles devoid of coat structures. Treatment with high ionic strength solutions (0-1.0 M KCl) at pH 6.5-8.5 also liberated all major proteins, except tubulin, which remained sedimentable. The addition of Triton X-100 to coated vesicles or to stripped vesicles from which 90% of the clathrin had been removed resulted in the release of four distinct polypeptides of approximate Mr 38,000, 29,000, 24,000 and 10,000. The 38,000-D polypeptide (pK approximately 5.0), which represents approximately 50% of the protein liberated by Triton X-100, appears to be a glycoprotein on the basis of its reaction with periodic acid-Schiff reagent. Extraction of 90% of the clathrin followed by extraction of 90% of the phospholipids with Triton X-100 produced a protein residue that remained sedimentable and consisted of structures that appeared to be shrunken stripped vesicles. Together our data indicate that most of the major polypeptides of brain coated vesicles behave as peripheral membrane proteins and at least four polypeptides behave as integral membrane proteins. By use of a monoclonal antibody, we have identified one of these polypeptides (38,000 mol wt) as a marker for a subpopulation of calf brain coated vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction of S-100b protein with cardiolipin (CL) vesicles has been studied by electron spin resonance, pyrene fluorescence, and circular dichroism. Electron spin resonance and pyrene fluorescence data indicate that S-100b binds to the polar surface of vesicles Ca2+-independently. In the presence of Ca2+, S-100b potentiates the Ca2+-induced clustering of the polar headgroups of CL molecules and causes a further reduction in the Ca2+-dependent decrease in the lateral mobility of the pyrene inserted into the lipid bilayer, which points to an effect of the protein on the hydrophobic core of the lipid bilayer through a larger perturbation of its polar surface. Circular dichroism analyses indicate that CL vesicles cause a decrease in the alpha-helical content of S-100b, analogous to that produced by Ca2+ and that the effects of CL vesicles and of Ca2+ on the secondary structure of the protein are supra-additive. By this technique, we found that the affinity of Ca2+ for S-100b increases substantially in the presence of CL vesicles, even in the presence of physiologic concentrations of KCl, suggesting that once S-100b had interacted with CL vesicles it assumes a new conformation in which its Ca2+-binding properties are greatly enhanced. These results are discussed in relation to binding of S-100b proteins to natural membranes, and to a possible involvement of S-100b in the regulation of membrane structural organization.  相似文献   

14.
CaPB33 and CaPB37, two annexins purified from bovine brain, interact with a Triton X-100-resistant fraction (cytoskeleton) from bovine brain membranes in a Ca2(+)-dependent way in vitro. The binding is saturable with respect to the CaBP33-CaBP37 concentration, half-maximal binding occurring at approximately 15 micrograms of the CaBP33-CaBP37 mixture/ml. The binding of these two annexins to the crude cytoskeleton preparation as a function of free Ca2+ concentration is biphasic, with half-maximal binding at approximately 50 microM and approximately 400 microM free Ca2+ for the first and the second component, respectively. By an overlay technique, CaBP33 and CaBP37 bind to a set of low Mr polypeptides (10-20 kDa) in the crude cytoskeleton preparation, with formation of an 85-90 kDa complex as investigated in cross-linking experiments. No binding of the CaBP33-CaBP37 mixture to either G- or F-actin has been observed. Identification of the CaBP33-CaBP37-binding proteins in cytoskeletons would help elucidating the function(s) of these annexins in the brain.  相似文献   

15.
Ca2+-binding of S-100 protein was studied using a Ca2+ electrode at pH 6.80. In the presence of 0.1 M KCl and 10 mM MgCl2 (ionic strength 0.13), Ca2+-binding to S-100 protein occurred in three steps with positive cooperativity. The numbers of bound Ca2+ ions in the three steps were 2, 2, and 4. The Ca2+-binding constants were 6.9 x 10(3) M-1, 2.9 x 10(3) M-1, and 3.7 x 10(2) M-1, respectively. The Ca2+-binding constants of the first and second steps obtained in the presence of 33.3 mM MgCl2 or 0.1 M KCl (ionic strength 0.10) were 1.4 times larger than those described above. This suggests that Mg2+ does not inhibit Ca2+-binding of S-100 protein. The increase of KCl concentration from 0.1 to 0.2 M caused a decrease of the Ca2+-binding constants to ca. 50%.  相似文献   

16.
At alkaline pH, Ca2+ is no longer required for S-100 proteins to inhibit the assembly and to promote the disassembly of brain microtubules in vitro, though the presence of Ca2+ significantly favors the S-100 effects. These effects are inversely related to the microtubule protein concentration and directly related to the S-100 concentration and the pH. Ca2+-independent, pH-regulated inhibition of assembly of phosphocellulose-purified tubulin by S-100 is also described. The microtubule disassembling effect of S-100 is additive to that of alkali (used to raise the pH), and S-100 further disassembles microtubules after alkalinization. Thus the larger inhibitory effect of S-100 on microtubule assembly at alkaline versus acid pH depends on both a decrease in the assembly rate and an increase in the disassembly rate. Together with previous data on this topic, the present findings indicate that S-100 proteins act on microtubule protein in vitro primarily by binding to tubulin, this event being Ca2+-regulated at a given pH, and pH-regulated at a given free Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

17.
R Donato 《Cell calcium》1987,8(4):283-297
S-100 was shown to regulate the in vitro assembly of brain microtubule proteins (MTPs) in a Ca2+-mediated way by acting on both the nucleation and the elongation of microtubules (MTs). Here data will be shown suggesting that S-100 binds to tubulin. The binding is time-, temperature-, Ca2+-, and pH-dependent, and saturable with respect to S-100. At pH 6.75, the saturation curve is biphasic, displaying a high affinity component (dissociation constant, Kd1, approximately 0.1 microM) and a low affinity component (Kd2 approximately 3.8 microM). At pH 6.75, as the free Ca2+ concentration raises from 0 to 100 microM, the overall binding capacity increases from 0.065 to 0.66 mol S-100/mol tubulin dimer. This finding, together with the observation that the S-100 effect on MTP assembly is Ca2+-dependent at that pH, suggests that the S-100-induced inhibition of MTP assembly depends on S-100 binding to the low affinity sites on the tubulin molecule. The S-100 binding to tubulin is pH-dependent; as the pH raises from 6.75 to 8.3, both binding components are affected, the major changes consisting of an increase in the binding capacity and a decrease in the overall affinity. Moreover, as the pH raises, Ca2+ is no longer required for S-100 to bind to tubulin. S-100 also interacts with a component of whole MTPs (probably tubulin, on the basis of the above results). No S-100 binding to microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) could be evidenced by the techniques employed in this study. On the contrary, some competition between S-100 and MAPs for binding sites or tubulin seems to occur.  相似文献   

18.
Chen X  Morris R  Lawrence MJ  Quinn PJ 《Biochimie》2007,89(2):192-196
The action of detergents in the isolation of detergent-resistant membrane fractions from rat brain is reported. Triton X-100 treatment of whole rat brain homogenate at 4 degrees C produced detergent-resistant membranes with a density of 1.07g/ml compared with Brij96 where the density of the membrane was only 1.05g/ml. The DRM fractions isolated using Triton X-100 are considerably heavier than those isolated from homogenates treated with Brij96. The major polar lipid composition of DRMs derived from Brij96 treated homogenates have a higher proportion of aminophospholipids compared with choline phospholipids than Triton X-100 derived DRMs; this may indicate that DRMs from Brij96 treated homogenates are more closely related to the parent membrane in lipid composition. Solubilization by Triton X-100 at higher temperatures resulted in the appearance of a second detergent-resistant membrane fraction distinctly lighter in density than the membrane recovered at density 1.07g/ml. Analysis of phospholipid composition of the brain homogenate during detergent treatment for up to 30min at 37 degrees C showed a decreasing proportion of sphingomyelin. Treatment of homogenates at 37 degrees C appears to activate phospholipases/sphingomyelinases that may alter the lipid content of isolated DRMs. The presence of K+/Mg2+ with Brij96 treatment results in DRM fractions with significantly thicker bilayers and of larger vesicle diameter than DRMs isolated from either Triton X-100 or Brij96 treated homogenates in the absence of cations.  相似文献   

19.
We have recently shown that S-100b protein interacts with the polar surface of cardiolipin vesicles [6]. This interaction produces changes in the secondary structure of S-100b as well as changes in the structural organization of cardiolipin vesicles. We report here on the effects of S-100b on cardiolipin vesicles as investigated by turbidity, terbium-dipicolinate fluorescence and freeze-fracture. Experiments were carried out in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+. In the absence of Ca2+ (0.1 mM EDTA), S-100b favors the aggregation and fusion of vesicles to some extent. Under these conditions, electron microscope analyses reveal the presence of fused vesicles along with particles similar to those observed in protein reconstituted systems or to lipid particles observed during fusional processes. In the presence of Ca2+, S-100b counteracts the Ca2(+)-dependent tendency of vesicles to aggregate and fuse. Under these conditions, bilayer phases along with hexagonal phases can be observed by electron microscopy. The latter effects of S-100b are not due to chelation of Ca2+ because of the relative concentrations of S-100b and Ca2+ under our experimental conditions and since much larger concentrations of EDTA are required to produce the S-100b effects. We propose that the dimeric nature of S-100b plays a major role in these events. In the absence of Ca2+, the S-100b molecules probably cross-link adjacent vesicles, one subunit contacting one vesicle and the other subunit contacting another vesicle through electrostatic bonds. In the presence of Ca2+, due to the large changes occurring in the conformation of the protein (which loses about 52% of its alpha-helical content), S-100b associates strongly with the polar surface of individual vesicles, thus generating some kind of physical barrier to aggregation and fusion of vesicles.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of acidic neurospecific protein S-100 on the phosphorylation of brain and liver nuclear proteins with 1 and 10 microM ATP was investigated. It was shown that protein S-100 increases the phosphorylation of brain nuclear proteins, while antigen D, another acidic neurospecific protein half-identical to 14-3-2 protein, inhibits this process. Ca2+ and cAMP at concentration of 10(-6) M do not affect the phosphorylation of brain nuclear proteins. In control assays the tracer 32P is presumably incorporated into high molecular weight nuclear protein fractions (Mr greater than 40000). After addition of protein S-100 the tracer is mainly incorporated into these proteins as well independently of ATP concentration (1 or 10 microM). The phosphorylation of nuclear proteins with molecular weights above 100000 is mostly increased in this case. At ATP concentration of 1 microM protein S-100 decreases histone phosphorylation 2.3 times but does not affect that of non-histone proteins. However, at 10 microM ATP the inhibitory action of this protein on histone phosphorylation is absent. The possible mechanisms of protein S-100 action on nuclear proteins phosphorylation are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号