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1.
Summary The presence of the microtubule-associated protein (MAP2) in the brain of several species has been investigated by SDS-gel electrophoresis and by radioimmunoassay. This assay had a sensitivity of approx. 10 ng and it was capable of measuring the protein either in purified microtubules or in crude brain extracts. As determined with this radioimmunoassay, MAP2 accounted for about 10% of the porcine brain microtubule protein and 1% of the protein from a brain extract. Taking porcine MAP2 as a reference, we have detected polypeptides with the same electrophoretic mobility in brain microtubules from cow, sheep, rat and chicken. Nevertheless, the MAP2 from these species showed a variable degree of immunoreactivity. Bovine MAP2 appeared closely related to the porcine protein whereas the rat antigen showed low cross-reaction and chicken MAP2 appeared immunologically unrelated to porcine MAP2. Our results suggest a higher variability of the MAP2 sequences as compared to that reported by other authors for the brain microtubule protein, tubulin.  相似文献   

2.
Brain microtubule-associated protein MAP1A has been purified until homogeneity by using a novel procedure involving copolymerization with microtubules, treatment with poly-l-aspartic acid and FPLC. The purified protein retains its capacity to facilitate microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

3.
The chick brain microtubule-associated protein MAP2 can be phosphorylated in vitro to the extent of 12 mol/mol with GTP at the same sites as can be labelled by the cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase utilizing [gamma-32P]ATP as the phosphoryl donor. Consequently, the microtubule protein is chemically modified by the conditions usually employed for studies of microtubule assembly, so that the derived kinetic parameters may not relate to steady-state conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Purified mitochondria from rat brain contain microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) bound to the outer membrane. Studies of binding in vitro performed with microtubules and with purified microtubule proteins showed that mitochondria preferentially interact with the high-molecular-mass MAPs (and not with Tau protein). Incubation of intact mitochondria with Taxol-stabilized microtubules resulted in the selective trapping of both MAPs 1 and 2 on mitochondria, indicating that an interaction between the two organelles occurred through a site on the arm-like projection of MAPs. Two MAP-binding sites were located on intact mitochondria. The lower-affinity MAP2-binding site (Kd = 2 x 10(-7) M) was preserved and enriched in the outer-membrane fraction, whereas the higher-affinity site (Kd = 1 x 10(-9) M) was destroyed after removing the outer membrane with digitonin. Detergent fractionation of mitochondrial outer membranes saturated with MAP2 bound in vitro showed that MAPs are associated with membrane fragments which contain the pore-forming protein (porin). MAP2 also partially prevents the solubilization of porin from outer membrane, indicating a MAP-induced change in the membrane environment of porin. These observations demonstrate the presence of specific MAP-binding sites on the outer membrane, suggesting an association between porin and the membrane domain involved in the cross-linkage between microtubules and mitochondria.  相似文献   

5.
Streptomyces contain a 7.0 kDa cold shock like protein.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
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6.
A novel type of collagenous fibers has been isolated from human brain and characterized by electron microscopy and optical diffraction. It was found that the morphology of the fibers is similar, but not identical, to that of skin collagen. Also, the collagenous fibers show some similarities with the paracrystals that could be assembled in vitro from purified microtubule-associated protein tau. Immunological analyses indicated the presence of epitopes in these collagenous fibers which react with antibodies against collagen and tau.  相似文献   

7.
Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) is a neuronal phosphoprotein that promotes net microtubule growth and actin cross-linking and bundling in vitro. Little is known about MAP2 regulation or its interaction with the cytoskeleton in vivo. Here we investigate the in vivo function of three specific sites of phosphorylation on MAP2. cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity disrupts the MAP2-microtubule interaction in living HeLa cells and promotes MAP2c localization to peripheral membrane ruffles enriched in actin. cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylates serines within three KXGS motifs, one within each tubulin-binding repeat. These highly conserved motifs are also found in homologous proteins tau and MAP4. Phosphorylation at two of these sites was detected in brain tissue. Constitutive phosphorylation at these sites was mimicked by single, double, and triple mutations to glutamic acid. Biochemical and microscopy-based assays indicated that mutation of a single residue was adequate to disrupt the MAP2-microtubule interaction in HeLa cells. Double or triple point mutation promoted MAP2c localization to the actin cytoskeleton. Specific association between MAP2c and the actin cytoskeleton was demonstrated by retention of MAP2c-actin colocalization after detergent extraction. Specific phosphorylation states may enhance the interaction of MAP2 with the actin cytoskeleton, thereby providing a regulated mechanism for MAP2 function within distinct cytoskeletal domains.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
We have identified a bovine sperm phosphoprotein, pp255 (Mr = 255,000), which reacts strongly and specifically with an antibody to rat brain microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2). The phosphorylation state of this putative sperm MAP2 in intact bovine epididymal sperm is uniquely sensitive to regulation by intracellular pH (pHi), calcium, isobutyl-3-methylxanthine (MIX), H-8, and fluoride. Increasing pHi by approximately 0.4 units or exposure to calcium (0.1 microM with the ionophore A23187) or to the protein kinase inhibitor, H-8, decreases sperm MAP2 phosphorylation. Decreasing sperm pHi or exposure to MIX or fluoride increases MAP2 phosphorylation. Numerous other detectable sperm phosphoproteins are either unresponsive to most of these modulators or are considerably less sensitive to them. This phosphoprotein co-sediments with the particulate sperm heads during subcellular fractionation, and is not detectable in other sperm fractions. Two-dimensional electrophoresis separates sperm MAP2 into multiple species, indicative of varying degrees of phosphorylation. Sperm MAP2 is phosphorylated on serine residues, changes electrophoretic mobility slightly on one-dimensional gels with changes in phosphorylation levels, and exhibits the highest specific radioactivity of any sperm phosphoprotein observed. The phosphorylation state of sperm MAP2 can be uncoupled from sperm motility levels under several conditions. The co-localization of sperm MAP2 with the head fraction and the unique sensitivity of its phosphorylation level to modulators, which are known to regulate capacitation and the acrosome reaction, suggest that sperm MAP2 phosphorylation may be an intermediate step in the regulation of one or both of these sperm processes.  相似文献   

11.
In previous work we have demonstrated that the microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2) molecule consists of two structural parts. One part of the molecule, referred to as the assembly-promoting domain, binds to the microtubule surface and is responsible for promoting microtubule assembly; the other represents a filamentous projection observed on the microtubule surface that may be involved in the interaction of microtubules with other cellular structures. MAP 2 is known to be specifically phosphorylated as the result of a protein kinase activity that is present in microtubule preparations. We have now found that the activity copurifies with the projection portion of MAP 2 itself. Kinase activity coeluted with MAP 2 when microtubule protein was subjected to either gel- filtration chromatography on bio-gel A-15m or ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE- Sephadex. The activity was released from microtubules by mild digestion with chymotrypsin in parallel with the removal by the protease of the MAP 2 projections from the microtubule surface. The association of the activity with the projection was demonstrated directly by gel filtration chromatography of the projections on bio-gel A-15m. Three protein species (M(r) = 39,000, 55,000, and 70,000) cofractionated with MAP 2, and two of these (M(r) = 39,000 and 55,000) may represent the subunits of an associated cyclic AMP- dependent protein kinase. The projection-associated activity was stimulated 10-fold by cyclic AMP and was inhibited more than 95 percent by the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor from rabbit skeletal muscle. It appeared to represent the only significant activity associated with microtubules, almost no activity being found with tubulin, other MAPs, or the assembly-promoting domain of MAP 2, and was estimated to account for 7-22 percent of the total brain cytosolic protein kinase activity. The location of the kinase on the projection is consistent with a role in regulating the function of the projection, though other roles for the enzyme are also possible.  相似文献   

12.
N Shiina  T Moriguchi  K Ohta  Y Gotoh    E Nishida 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(11):3977-3984
The interphase-M phase transition of microtubule dynamics is thought to be induced by phosphorylation reactions mediated by MPF and by MAP kinase functioning downstream of MPF. We have now identified and purified from Xenopus eggs a major microtubule-associated protein, p220, that may be a target protein for these two M phase-activated kinases. p220, when purified from interphase cells, potently bound to microtubules and stimulated tubulin polymerization, whereas p220 purified from M phase cells showed little or no such activities. Cell staining with a monoclonal anti-p220 antibody revealed that p220 is localized on cytoplasmic microtubule networks during interphase, while it is distributed rather diffusely throughout the cell during M phase. We have further found that p220 is phosphorylated specifically in M phase. Moreover, p220 purified from interphase cells served as a good substrate for MAP kinase and MPF in vitro, and two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping pattern of the p220 phosphorylated in vitro was very similar to that of p220 phosphorylated at M phase in vivo. These results suggest that the drastic change in p220 activity during the transition from interphase to M phase may be induced by its phosphorylation in M phase probably catalyzed by MAP kinase and MPF.  相似文献   

13.
MAP3: characterization of a novel microtubule-associated protein   总被引:5,自引:7,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Using monoclonal antibodies we have characterized a brain protein that copurifies with microtubules. We identify it as a microtubule-associated protein (MAP) by the following criteria: it copolymerizes with tubulin through repeated cycles of microtubule assembly in vitro; it is not associated with any brain subcellular fraction other than microtubules; in double-label immunofluorescence experiments antibodies against this protein stain the same fibrous elements in cultured cells as are stained by antitubulin; and this fibrous staining pattern is dispersed when cytoplasmic microtubules are disrupted by colchicine. Because it is distinct from previously described MAPs we designate this novel species MAP3. The MAP3 protein consists of a closely spaced pair of polypeptides on SDS gels, Mr 180,000, which are present in both glial (glioma C6) and neuronal (neuroblastoma B104) cell lines. In brain the MAP3 antigen is present in both neurons and glia. In nerve cells its distribution is strikingly restricted: anti-MAP3 staining is detectable only in neurofilament-rich axons. It is not, however, a component of isolated brain intermediate filaments.  相似文献   

14.
MAP3 is a novel microtubule-associated protein found in brain and a variety of other tissues (Huber, G., Alaimo-Beuret, D., and Matus, A. (1985) J. Cell Biol. 100, 496-507). In this study, monoclonal antibodies were used to assess its influence on the polymerization of brain tubulin. When added to unpolymerized brain microtubules, anti-MAP3 IgG produced a dose-related inhibition of subsequent assembly. Under the same circumstances, nonimmune mouse IgG did not influence either the rate or the extent of tubulin polymerization. We also used immobilized antibodies to deplete brain MAPs selectively in either MAP3 or MAP1. MAP3-depleted MAPs showed a reproducible decrease in activity compared to control preparations that had been exposed to immobilized nonimmune IgG. MAP1-depleted MAPs did not differ significantly in performance from the nonimmune treated controls. We conclude that MAP3 contributes to the net assembly of brain microtubules observed in vitro. This may be particularly relevant in neonatal animals where brain MAP3 is more abundant than in the adult.  相似文献   

15.
L Lim  C Hall  T Leung    S Whatley 《The Biochemical journal》1984,224(2):677-680
A protein of molecular mass 68 kDa and pI5.6 is a major translation product of rat brain mRNA [Hall, Mahadevan, Whatley, Biswas & Lim (1984) Biochem. J. 219, 751-761]. In the rat brain this protein was associated with microtubule preparations and was present together with tubulin as a component of the synaptosomal plasma membranes, synaptic vesicles and post-synaptic structures. The brain mRNA for this protein was found to hybridize specifically to the Drosophila gene for the 70 kDa heat-shock protein, thus enabling its rapid isolation.  相似文献   

16.
The classification of MAP 2 as a microtubule-associated protein is based on its affinity for microtubules in vitro and its filamentous distribution in cultured cells. We sought to determine whether MAP 2 is also able to bind in situ to organelles other than microtubules. For this purpose, primary cultures of rat brain cells were stained for immunofluorescence microscopy with a rabbit anti-MAP 2 antibody prepared in our laboratory, as well as with antibodies to vimentin, an intermediate filament protein, and to tubulin, the major subunit of microtubules. MAP 2 was present on cytoplasmic fibers in neurons and in a subpopulation of the flat cells present in the cultures. Our observations were concentrated on the flat cells because of their suitability for high-resolution immunofluorescence microscopy. Double antibody staining revealed co-localization of MAP 2 with both tubulin and vimentin in the flat cells. Pretreatment of the cultures with vinblastine resulted in the redistribution of MAP 2 into perinuclear cables that contained vimentin. Tubulin paracrystals were not stained by anti-MAP 2. In cells extracted with digitonin, the normal fibrillar distribution of MAP 2 was resistant to several treatments (PIPES buffer plus 10 mM Ca++, phosphate buffer at pH 7 or 9) that induced depolymerization of microtubules, but not intermediate filaments. Staining of the primary brain cells was not observed with preimmune serum nor with immune serum adsorbed prior to use with pure MAP 2. We detected MAP 2 on intermediate filaments not only with anti-MAP 2 serum, but also with affinity purified anti-MAP 2 and with a monoclonal anti-MAP 2 prepared in another laboratory. We conclude from these experiments that material recognized by anti-MAP 2 antibodies associates with both microtubules and intermediate filaments. We propose that one function of MAP 2 is to cross-link the two types of cellular filaments.  相似文献   

17.
A monoclonal antibody to neuronal microtubule-associated protein MAP-2 was produced. Immunoblotting of lysates of cultured cells revealed that the antibody, called MA-01, bound to a protein of Mr 210 kDa. Double immunofluorescence microscopy showed that the antibody stained microtubules. No fibrillar structures were observed in cells treated with Colcemid, but the antibody stained vinblastine paracrystals. In cytochalasin B-treated Leydig cells, MA-01 antibody stained star-like structures that codistributed with actin patches and with a star-like arrangement of vimentin. These observations indicate that the protein immunologically related to MAP-2 in Leydig cells could be involved in the interaction of microtubules with intermediate filaments or microfilaments.  相似文献   

18.
Pre-phosphorylation of the microtubule-associated protein MAP2 with the co-purifying cAMP-independent protein kinase (a) decrease the affinity of MAP2 for taxol-stabilised microtubules, (b) increases the dissociation rate constant for microtubule polymerisation, each of which is dependent upon the level of phosphorylation, but (c) has no effect on the association rate constant. Microtubule assembly has no effect on the kinetics of phosphorylation, whereas phosphorylation of pre-assembled microtubules causes their immediate depolymerisation at a rate which is proportional to the initial rate of phosphorylation. The results suggest that the modulated phosphorylation of MAP2 may regulate microtubule length in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a procedure to isolate the microtubule-associated protein 2c (MAP2c), a juvenile form of MAP2 occurring in mammalian brain. The shape, size, self-association, and antibody interactions of MAP2c were studied. Monomeric MAP2c is an elongated molecule with a length approximately 48 nm, considerably shorter than the higher molecular weight forms MAP2a or b of adult brain. Two monoclonal antibodies whose epitopes are near the N or C terminus, respectively, are located close to the opposite ends of the MAP2c rods. This places constraints on the types of internal folding of the molecule. MAP2c self-associates into dimers and fibrous aggregates. The dimers are predominantly antiparallel and nearly in register, as judged by antibody labeling.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and tau, which is involved in Alzheimer's disease, are major cytoskeletal proteins in neurons. These proteins are involved in microtubule assembly and stability. To further characterize MAP2, we took a strategy of identifying potential MAP2 binding partners. The low molecular weight MAP2c protein has 11 PXXP motifs that are conserved across species, and these PXXP motifs could be potential ligands for Src homology 3 (SH3) domains. We tested for MAP2 interaction with SH3 domain-containing proteins. All neuronal MAP2 isoforms bound specifically to the SH3 domains of c-Src and Grb2 in an in vitro glutathione S-transferase-SH3 pull-down assay. Interactions between endogenous proteins were confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation using brain lysate. All three proteins were also found co-expressed in neuronal cell bodies and dendrites. Surprisingly, the SH3 domain-binding site was mapped to the microtubule-binding domain that contains no PXXP motif. Src bound primarily the soluble, non-microtubule-associated MAP2c in vitro. This specific MAP2/SH3 domain interaction was inhibited by phosphorylation of MAP2c by the mitogen-activated protein kinase extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 but not by protein kinase A. This phosphorylation-regulated association of MAP2 with proteins of intracellular signal transduction pathways suggests a possible link between cellular signaling and neuronal cytoskeleton, with MAP2 perhaps acting as a molecular scaffold upon which cytoskeleton-modifying proteins assemble and dissociate in response to neuronal activity.  相似文献   

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