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1.
L Eichinger  M Schleicher 《Biochemistry》1992,31(20):4779-4787
Severin is a Ca(2+)-activated actin-binding protein that nucleates actin assembly and severs and caps the fast growing ends of actin filaments. It consists of three highly conserved domains. To investigate the domain structure of severin, we constructed genetically the N-terminal domain 1, the middle domain 2, and the tandem domains 2 + 3. Their interaction with actin, Ca2+, and lipids was characterized. Domain 1 contains the F-actin capping and a Ca(2+)-binding site [Eichinger, L., Noegel, A. A., & Schleicher, M. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 112, 665-676]. Binding of domain 2 to actin filaments was Ca(2+)-dependent and saturated at a 1:1 molar ratio. In the presence of Ca2+, about 1.5 mol of domains 2 + 3 bound per mole of F-actin subunit. Scatchard analysis gave a Kd of 18 microM for the interaction of domain 2 with F-actin subunits and a Kd of 1.6 microM for domains 2 + 3. Low-shear viscometry, electron microscopy, and low-speed sedimentation assays showed that domains 2 + 3 induced bundling of actin filaments. The influence of PIP2 micelles on the different activities of severin was assayed using native severin and N- and C-terminally truncated fragments. Severin contains at least two PIP2-binding sites since the activities of the two nonoverlapping severin fragments domain 1 and domains 2 + 3 were inhibited by PIP2. The specificity of severin-phospholipid interaction was investigated by studying the regulation of native severin by PIP2 and other pure or mixed phospholipids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Schroeter M  Chalovich JM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13875-13882
Fesselin is a proline-rich actin-binding protein that was isolated from avian smooth muscle. Fesselin bundles actin and accelerates actin polymerization by facilitating nucleation. We now show that this polymerization of actin can be regulated by Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Fesselin was shown to bind to immobilized calmodulin in the presence of Ca(2+). The fesselin-calmodulin interaction was confirmed by a Ca(2+)-dependent increase in 2-(4-maleimidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (MIANS) fluorescence upon addition of fesselin to MIANS-labeled wheat germ calmodulin. The affinity was estimated to be approximately 10(9) M(-1). The affinity of Ca(2+)-calmodulin to the fesselin F-actin complex was approximately 10(8) M(-1). Calmodulin binding to fesselin appeared to be functionally significant. In the presence of fesselin and calmodulin, the polymerization of actin was Ca(2+)-dependent. Ca(2+)-free calmodulin either had no effect or enhanced the ability of fesselin to accelerate actin polymerization. Ca(2+)-calmodulin not only reversed the stimulatory effect of fesselin but reduced the rate of polymerization below that observed in the absence of fesselin. While Ca(2+)-calmodulin had a large effect on the interaction of fesselin with G-actin, the effect on F-actin was small. Neither the binding of fesselin to F-actin nor the subsequent bundling of F-actin was greatly affected by Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Fesselin may function as an actin-polymerizing factor that is regulated by Ca(2+) levels.  相似文献   

3.
Striated muscles are regulated by Ca(2+) via the thin filament proteins troponin (Tn) and tropomyosin (Tm). In the absence of Ca(2+), contraction is inhibited, whereas myosin-actin interaction and contraction can take place in its presence. Although it is well established that the interaction of troponin-I (TnI), the inhibitory subunit of Tn, with actin is required for the inhibition process and that there are two separate actin-binding regions in TnI that interact with actin, the molecular mechanism of this inhibition process is still not clear. Using TnI mutants with photocrosslinking probes attached to genetically engineered cysteine residues in each of the two actin-binding regions, we show that both regions are close to Met47 of actin in its outer domain. It has been proposed that the Ca(2+)-induced activation of contraction involves the movement of Tm from the outer to the inner domain of the actin filament. On the basis of our results presented here, we propose that the position of Tm at the outer domain of actin in the Ca(2+)-free state is stabilized by the presence of TnI over actin's outer domain via mutual interactions of all three components. In the presence of Ca(2+), TnI's actin-binding regions dissociate from actin allowing Tm to move toward actin's inner domain.  相似文献   

4.
Five proteins having molecular masses of 90, 67, 37, 36, and 32 kDa (p90, p67, p37, p36, and p32, respectively) were identified in the particulate fractions of pig brain cortex and pig spinal cord prepared in the presence of 0.2 mM Ca2+ and further purified using a protocol previously described for the purification of calpactins. Proteins p90, p37, and p36 are related to annexins I and II. Annexin II, represented by p90, is found as an heterotetramer, composed of two heavy chains of 36 kDa and two light chains of 11 kDa, and as a monomer of 36 kDa. Protein p37, which differs immunologically from p36, is a monomer and could be related to annexin I. All three proteins are Ca(2+)-dependent phospholipid- and F-actin-binding proteins; they are phosphorylated on a serine and on a tyrosine residue by protein kinases associated with synaptic plasma membranes. Purified p36 monomer and p36 heterotetramer proteins bind to actin at millimolar Ca2+ concentrations. The stoichiometry of p36 binding to F-actin at saturation is 1:2, corresponding to one tetramer or monomer of calpactin for two actin monomers (KD, 3 x 10(-6) M). Synaptic plasma membranes supplemented with the monomeric or tetrameric forms of p36 phosphorylate the proteins on a serine residue. The monomer is phosphorylated on a serine residue by a Ca(2+)-independent protein kinase, whereas the heterotetramer is phosphorylated on a serine residue and a tyrosine residue by Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinases. Antibodies to brain p37 and p36 together with antibodies to lymphocytes lipocortins 1 and 2 were used to follow the distribution of these proteins in nervous tissues. Polypeptides of 37, 34, and 36 kDa cross-react with these antibodies. Anti-p37 and antilipocortin 1 cross-react on the same 37- and 34-kDa polypeptides; anti-p36 and antilipocortin 2 cross-react only on the 36-kDa polypeptides.  相似文献   

5.
Macrophage caldesmon is an actin bundling protein.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
M P Arias  M Pacaud 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):12974-12982
A rapid purification procedure was developed for the isolation of caldesmon (CaD) from rabbit alveolar macrophage. The purified protein migrated with an apparent M(r) of 74,000 +/- 4000 on SDS-PAGE and cross-reacted with anti-gizzard CaD antibodies. A higher M(r) isoform was isolated from chicken gizzard. Their actin-binding parameters and effects on actomyosin-ATPase activity were investigated under identical experimental conditions. Electron microscope studies revealed that macrophage CaD was able to cross-link actin filaments into both networks and bundles. Compact F-actin bundles were predominantly or exclusively seen at cross-linker to actin molar ratios in the 1:20 to 1:10 range. Apparent K(a) at extrapolated saturation of the CaD-binding sites on F-actin was 1.2 x 10(6) M(-1) for macrophage CaD and 1.6 x 10(6) M(-1) for chicken gizzard CaD. CaD from either source was able to stimulate the actin-activated ATPase activity of macrophage myosin. Unexpectedly, chicken gizzard CaD also increased the ATPase activity of gizzard myosin. The degree of stimulation was approximately doubled in the presence of a large excess of Ca(2+)-calmodulin but was unaffected by the presence of macrophage tropomyosin. However, macrophage CaD did not behave as a Ca(2+)- and calmodulin-regulated actin-binding protein. These results, together with published data on other well-characterized actin bundling proteins, suggest that nonmuscle CaD could be essentially involved in the formation and organization of actin bundles at adhesion sites and cell surface projections. However, they afforded no evidence that the macrophage isoform might play a specific role in the Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of actin and myosin II interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Actin-binding proteins were assayed in various tissues using an 125I-actin overlay procedure. Four major G actin-binding proteins of 90000, 65000, 58000 and 40000 Mr have been identified. The 90K protein is present in all tissues and binds labelled actin in a calcium-sensitive manner with binding increasing 3-4-fold in the presence of Ca2+. The distribution of the 58K and 65K protein which are not Ca2+-sensitive was more variable. These proteins were present in different ratios in different tissues. 125I-actin binding to all four actin-binding proteins is specific and can be displaced by preincubation of the gels with unlabelled actin. The interaction of actin with these proteins does not appear to involve ionic forces, since binding is not diminished by varying the salt concentration. Skeletal muscle glycolytic enzymes, the lens crystallins and the histones also bind 125I-actin. This binding cannot be displaced by preincubation with unlabelled actin and is presumably non-specific. The calcium sensitivity of two highly purified actin-binding proteins, the 90K human platelet protein and villin was compared using 125I-actin. The platelet 90K protein binds actin at less than 10(-7) M free calcium, but detectable binding to villin does not occur below 10(-6) M free calcium. The ubiquity of these actin-binding proteins is clear and we conclude that the calcium-sensitive 90K actin-binding protein in all of these tissues is the same as the platelet protein.  相似文献   

7.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae MID1 gene product (Mid1) is a stretch-activated Ca(2+)-permeable channel component required for Ca2+ influx and the maintenance of viability of cells exposed to the mating pheromone, alpha-factor. It is composed of 548-amino-acid (aa) residues with four hydrophobic segments, H1 (aa 2-22), H2 (aa 92-111), H3 (aa 337-356) and H4 (aa 366-388). It also has 16 putative N-glycosylation sites. In this study, sequentially truncated Mid1 proteins conjugated with GFP were expressed in S. cerevisiae cells. The truncated protein containing the region from H1 to H3 (Mid1(1-360)-GFP) localized normally in the plasma and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes and complemented the low viability and Ca(2+)-uptake activity of the mid1 mutant, whereas Mid1(1-133)-GFP containing the region from H1 to H2 did not. Mid1(Delta3-22)-GFP lacking the H1 region failed to localize in the plasma membrane. Membrane fractionation showed that Mid1(1-22)-GFP containing only H1 localized in the plasma membrane in the presence of alpha-factor, suggesting that H1 is a signal sequence responsible for the alpha-factor-induced Mid1 delivery to the plasma membrane. The region from H1 to H3 is required for the localization of Mid1 in the plasma and ER membranes. Finally, trafficking of Mid1-GFP to the plasma membrane was dependent on the N-glycosylation of Mid1 and the transporter protein Sec12.  相似文献   

8.
Isolation and properties of two actin-binding domains in gelsolin   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Gelsolin is a Ca2+-sensitive 90-kDa protein which regulates actin filament length. A molecular variant of gelsolin is present in plasma as a 93-kDa protein. Functional studies have shown that gelsolin contains two actin-binding sites which are distinct in that after Ca2+-mediated binding, removal of free Ca2+ releases actin from one site but not from the other. We have partially cleaved human plasma gelsolin with alpha-chymotrypsin and identified two distinct actin-binding domains. Peptides CT17 and CT15, which contain one of the actin-binding domains, bind to actin independently of Ca2+; peptides CT54 and CT47, which contain the other domain, bind to actin reversibly in response to changes in Ca2+ concentration. These peptides sequester actin monomers inhibiting polymerization. Unlike intact gelsolin, neither group of peptides nucleates actin assembly or forms stable filament end caps. CT17 and CT15 can however sever actin filaments. Amino acid sequence analyses place CT17 at the NH2 terminus of gelsolin and CT47 at the carboxyl-terminal two-thirds of gelsolin. Circular dichroism measurements show that Ca2+ induces an increase in the alpha-helical content of CT47. These studies provide a structural basis for understanding the interaction of gelsolin with actin and allow comparison with other Ca2+-dependent actin filament severing proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Macrophage capping protein (MCP) is a Ca(2+)-sensitive protein which reversibly blocks the barbed ends of actin filaments but does not sever preformed actin filaments. The human cDNA for MCP has been cloned and sequenced. The derived amino acid sequence predicts a polypeptide of 38.4 kDa. Human MCP expressed in Escherichia coli using a pET12a vector was functionally identical to the native protein purified from rabbit alveolar macrophages with respect to Ca2+ sensitivity and ability to block monomer exchange at the barbed end of actin filaments. Sequence comparison with other actin-binding protein sequences indicates that MCP is a member of the gelsolin/villin family of barbed end blocking proteins. Unlike gelsolin, this protein has a limited tissue distribution being detected primarily in macrophages where it was abundant, representing 0.9-1% of the total cytoplasmic protein. Northern blot analysis of U937 and HL60 cells differentiated to macrophage-like cells demonstrated that MCP message increases to 2.6 and greater than 7 times initial levels, respectively. Human MCP displays a 93% amino acid sequence identity with two recently described mouse proteins, gCap39 and Mbh1. Its abundance in macrophages and the corresponding increases in mRNA levels upon promyelocyte and monocyte development into macrophages indicate that MCP may play an important role in macrophage function.  相似文献   

10.
The contractile state of smooth muscle is regulated primarily by the sarcoplasmic (cytosolic) free Ca2+ concentration. A variety of stimuli that induce smooth muscle contraction (e.g., membrane depolarization, alpha-adrenergic and muscarinic agonists) trigger an increase in sarcoplasmic free [Ca2+] from resting levels of 120-270 to 500-700 nM. At the elevated [Ca2+], Ca2+ binds to calmodulin, the ubiquitous and multifunctional Ca(2+)-binding protein. The interaction of Ca2+ with CaM induces a conformational change in the Ca(2+)-binding protein with exposure of a site(s) of interaction with target proteins, the most important of which in the context of smooth muscle contraction is the enzyme myosin light chain kinase. The interaction of calmodulin with myosin light chain kinase results in activation of the kinase that catalyzes phosphorylation of myosin at serine-19 of each of the two 20-kDa light chains (native myosin is a hexamer composed of two heavy chains (230 kDa each) and two pairs of light chains (one pair of 20 kDa each and the other pair of 17 kDa each)). This simple phosphorylation reaction triggers cycling of myosin cross-bridges along actin filaments and the development of force. Relaxation of the muscle follows removal of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasm, whereupon calmodulin dissociates from myosin light chain kinase regenerating the inactive kinase; myosin is dephosphorylated by myosin light chain phosphatase(s), whereupon it dissociates and remains detached from the actin filament and the muscle relaxes. A substantial body of evidence has been accumulated in support of this central role of myosin phosphorylation-dephosphorylation in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. However, a wide range of physiological and biochemical studies supports the existence of additional, secondary Ca(2+)-dependent mechanisms that can modulate or fine-tune the contractile state of the smooth muscle cell. Three such mechanisms have emerged: (i) the actin-, tropomyosin-, and calmodulin-binding protein, calponin; (ii) the actin-, myosin-, tropomyosin-, and calmodulin-binding protein, caldesmon; and (iii) the Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C).  相似文献   

11.
Triton X-100 residues (cytoskeletons) of human platelets were prepared in the presence of various concentrations of free calcium (Ca2+), and the polypeptide composition and ATPase activity were examined. Triton residues prepared in the presence of Ca2+ concentrations below 2 X 10(-7) M were composed primarily of polypeptides with an apparent molecular mass of 43 (actin), 105 (alpha-actinin-like protein) and 250 (actin-binding protein) kDa and showed low K+-EDTA-ATPase activity. When Triton residues were prepared at Ca2+ above 5 X 10(-7) M, a 200 kDa polypeptide (myosin heavy chain) and K+-EDTA-ATPase activity increased markedly, but actin-binding protein and alpha-actinin-like protein decreased. When N-(N-(L-3-trans-carboxyoxirane-2-carbonyl)-L-leucyl)agmatine, an inhibitor for Ca2+-dependent proteinase, was added to Triton lysis buffer containing high Ca2+, polypeptides of 250, 235 and 105 kDa remained associated with the residues. Under electron microscopic analysis, the treatment of platelets with Triton X-100 at low Ca2+ showed a network of microfilaments. When platelets were treated with high Ca2+, the microfilaments were disrupted and a few thick filaments and many granules appeared. However, when the inhibitor for Ca2+-proteinase was included in Triton lysis buffer, the microfilaments remained intact. These results suggested that an increase in Ca2+ concentration to more than 5 X 10(-7) M not only makes myosin associate with cytoskeletons but also regulates the organization of filamentous structures.  相似文献   

12.
Actin-bundling proteins organize actin filaments into densely packed bundles. In Dictyostelium discoideum two abundant proteins display calcium-regulated bundling activity, fimbrin and the 34-kDa protein (ABP34). Using a GFP fusion we observed transient localization of fimbrin at the phagocytic cup and macropinosomes. The distribution of truncated constructs encompassing the EF hands and the first actin-binding domain (EA1) or both actin-binding domains devoid of EF hands (A1A2) was indistinguishable from that of the full length protein. The role of fimbrin and a possible functional overlap with ABP34 was investigated in fim- and double 34-/fim- mutants. Except for a moderate cell size defect, fim- mutants did not show defects in growth, endocytosis, exocytosis, and chemotaxis. Double mutants were characterized by a small cell size and a defect in morphogenesis resulting in small fruiting bodies and a low spore yield. The cell size defect could not be overcome by expression of fimbrin fragments EA1 or A1A2, suggesting that both bundling activity and regulation by calcium are important. Induction of filopod formation in 34-/fim- cells was not impaired, indicating that both proteins are dispensable for this process. We searched in the Dictyostelium genome database for fimbrin-like proteins that could compensate for the fimbrin defect and identified three unconventional fimbrins and two more proteins with actin-binding domains of the type present in fimbrins.  相似文献   

13.
An analysis of the primary structure of the actin-binding protein fesselin revealed it to be the avian homologue of mammalian synaptopodin 2 [Schroeter, Beall, Heid, and Chalovich (2008) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 371, 582-586]. We isolated two synaptopodin 2 isoforms from rabbit stomach that corresponded to known types of human synaptopodin 2. The purification scheme used was that developed for avian fesselin. These synaptopodin 2 forms shared several key functions with fesselin. Both avian fesselin and mammalian synaptopodin 2 bound to Ca(2+)-calmodulin, alpha-actinin and smooth-muscle myosin. In addition, both proteins stimulated the polymerization of actin in a Ca(2+)-calmodulin-dependent manner. Synaptopodin 2 has never before been shown to polymerize actin in the absence of alpha-actinin, to polymerize actin in a Ca(2+)-calmodulin-dependent manner, or to bind to Ca(2+)-calmodulin or myosin. These properties are consistent with the proposed function of synaptopodin 2 in organizing the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
The localization of various Ca(2+) transport and signaling proteins in secretory cells is highly restricted, resulting in polarized agonist-stimulated Ca(2+) waves. In the present work, we examined the possible roles of the Sec6/8 complex or the exocyst in polarized Ca(2+) signaling in pancreatic acinar cells. Immunolocalization by confocal microscopy showed that the Sec6/8 complex is excluded from tight junctions and secretory granules in these cells. The Sec6/8 complex was found in at least two cellular compartments, part of the complex showed similar, but not identical, localization with the Golgi apparatus and part of the complex associated with Ca(2+) signaling proteins next to the plasma membrane at the apical pole. Accordingly, immunoprecipitation (IP) of Sec8 did not coimmunoprecipitate betaCOP, Golgi 58K protein, or mannosidase II, all Golgi-resident proteins. By contrast, IP of Sec8 coimmunoprecipitates Sec6, type 3 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP(3)R3), and the Gbetagamma subunit of G proteins from pancreatic acinar cell extracts. Furthermore, the anti-Sec8 antibodies coimmunoprecipitate actin, Sec6, the plasma membrane Ca(2+) pump, the G protein subunits Galphaq and Gbetagamma, the beta1 isoform of phospholipase C, and the ER resident IP(3)R1 from brain microsomal extracts. Antibodies against the various signaling and Ca(2+) transport proteins coimmunoprecipitate Sec8 and the other signaling proteins. Dissociation of actin filaments in the immunoprecipitate had no effect on the interaction between Sec6 and Sec8, but released the actin and dissociated the interaction between the Sec6/8 complex and Ca(2+) signaling proteins. Hence, the interaction between the Sec6/8 and Ca(2+) signaling complexes is likely mediated by the actin cytoskeleton. The anti-Sec6 and anti-Sec8 antibodies inhibited Ca(2+) signaling at a step upstream of Ca(2+) release by IP(3). Disruption of the actin cytoskeleton with latrunculin B in intact cells resulted in partial translocation of Sec6 and Sec8 from membranes to the cytosol and interfered with propagation of agonist-evoked Ca(2+) waves. Our results suggest that the Sec6/8 complex has multiple roles in secretory cells including governing the polarized expression of Ca(2+) signaling complexes and regulation of their activity.  相似文献   

15.
In cytokinesis, the contractile ring constricts the cleavage furrow. However, the formation and properties of the contractile ring are poorly understood. Fimbrin has two actin-binding domains and two EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding motifs. Ca(2+) binding to the EF-hand motifs inhibits actin-binding activity. In Tetrahymena, fimbrin is localized in the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. In a previous study, Tetrahymena fimbrin was purified with an F-actin affinity column. However, the purified Tetrahymena fimbrin was broken in to a 60 kDa fragment of a 70 kDa full length fimbrin. In this study, we investigated the properties of recombinant Tetrahymena fimbrin. In an F-actin cosedimentation assay, Tetrahymena fimbrin bound to F-actin and bundled it in a Ca(2+)-independent manner, with a K(d) of 0.3 micro M and a stoichiometry at saturation of 1:1.4 (Tetrahymena fimbrin: actin). In the presence of 1 molecule of Tetrahymena fimbrin to 7 molecules of actin, F-actin was bundled. Immunofluorecence microscopy showed that a dotted line of Tetrahymena fimbrin along the cleavage furrow formed a ring structure. The properties and localization of Tetrahymena fimbrin suggest that it bundles actin filaments in the cleavage furrow and plays an important role in contractile ring formation during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

16.
Gelsolin has three actin-binding sites   总被引:21,自引:13,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Gelsolin, a Ca2+-modulated actin filament-capping and -severing protein, complexes with two actin monomers. Studies designed to localize binding sites on proteolytic fragments identify three distinct actin-binding peptides. 14NT, a 14-kD fragment that contains the NH2 terminal, will depolymerize F-actin. This peptide forms a 1:1 complex with G-actin which blocks the exchange of etheno-ATP from bound actin. The estimated association and dissociation rates for this complex are 0.3 microM-1 s-1 and 1.35 x 10(-6) s-1 which gives a maximum calculated Kd = 4.5 x 10(-12) M. 26NT, the adjacent peptide on the NH2-terminal half of gelsolin, binds to both G- and F-actin. This fragment has little or no intrinsic severing activity and will bind to F-actin to nearly stoichiometric ratios. The interactions of 14NT and 26NT with actin are largely Ca2+ independent and one of these sites, probably 14NT, is the EGTA-stable site identified in the intact protein. 41CT, the COOH-terminal half of gelsolin, forms a rapidly reversible 1:1 complex with actin, Kd = 25 nM, that slows but does not block etheno-ATP exchange. This interaction is Ca2+ dependent and is the exchangeable site in the intact protein. One of these sites is hidden in the intact protein, but cleavage into half fragments exposes all three and removes the Ca2+ dependence of severing.  相似文献   

17.
Caldesmon was originally purified from gizzard smooth muscle as a major calmodulin-binding protein which also interacts with actin filaments. It has an alternative binding ability to either calmodulin or actin filaments depending upon the concentration of Ca2+ ("flip-flop binding"). Two forms of caldesmon (Mr's in the range of 120-150 kDa and 70-80 kDa) have been demonstrated in a wide variety of smooth muscles and nonmuscle cells. Immunohistochemical studies suggest that caldesmon is colocalized with actin filaments in vivo. Considering its abundance, the Ca2+-dependent flip-flop binding ability to either calmodulin or actin filaments, and its intracellular localization, caldesmon is expected to be involved in contractile events. Recent results from our laboratory have led to the conclusion that caldesmon regulates the smooth muscle and nonmuscle actin-myosin interaction and the smooth muscle actin-high Mr actin-binding protein (ABP or filamin) interactin in a flip-flop manner. It might function in cell motility by regulating the contractile system.  相似文献   

18.
By combination of column chromatographies (heparin-agarose, HiTrap heparin and HiTrap SP columns) and gel filtration on a Superdex 200-pg HPLC column, an actin kinase was partially purified from a 1. 5 M NaCl extract of porcine liver. The actin kinase was finally purified, by actin-Sepharose column chromatography (HPLC), as an actin-binding protein kinase. The biochemical properties, such as (1) requirements of divalent cations (10 mM Mg(2+) and 3 mM Mn(2+)) and effective phosphate acceptors (actin and alpha-casein), (2) phosphorylation of both Ser- and Thr-residues on these two phosphate acceptors, (3) autophosphorylation of the catalytic subunit (approximately 37 kDa), and (4) inhibition kinetics by CK-I-7 (a CK-I specific inhibitor), of the purified actin kinase were similar to those reported for CK-I purified from various mammalian cells, but it was distinguishable from three cellular actin kinases (A-kinase, C-kinase and actin-fragmin kinase (approximately 80 kDa)). The 37 kDa actin kinase-mediated phosphorylation of actin did not relate to its polymerizability. Inhibition of CK-II-mediated phosphorylation of functional cellular proteins, including calmodulin (CaM), by actin was significantly stimulated after its full phosphorylation by the purified 37 kDa actin kinase or rCK-I in vitro. These results suggest that: (1) the 37 kDa Ser/Thr actin-binding kinase may be classified as a member of the CK-I family; and (2) specific phosphorylation of actin by the actin kinase may be involved in the suppression mechanism of CK-II-mediated signal transduction at the cellular level.  相似文献   

19.
Spinophilin is a protein phosphatase-1- and actin-binding protein that modulates excitatory synaptic transmission and dendritic spine morphology. We have recently shown that the interaction of spinophilin with the actin cytoskeleton depends upon phosphorylation by protein kinase A. We have now found that spinophilin is phosphorylated by Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in neurons. Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, located within the post-synaptic density of dendritic spines, is known to play a role in synaptic plasticity and is ideally positioned to regulate spinophilin. Using tryptic phosphopeptide mapping, site-directed mutagenesis and microsequencing analysis, we identified two sites of CaMKII phosphorylation (Ser-100 and Ser-116) within the actin-binding domain of spinophilin. Phosphorylation by CaMKII reduced the affinity of spinophilin for F-actin. In neurons, phosphorylation at Ser-100 by CaMKII was Ca(2+) dependent and was associated with an enrichment of spinophilin in the synaptic plasma membrane fraction. These results indicate that spinophilin is phosphorylated by multiple kinases in vivo and that differential phosphorylation may target spinophilin to specific locations within dendritic spines.  相似文献   

20.
Platelets have previously been shown to contain a membrane skeleton that is composed of actin filaments, actin-binding protein, and three membrane glycoproteins (GP), GP Ib, GP Ia, and a minor glycoprotein of Mr = 250,000. The present study was designed to determine how the membrane glycoproteins were linked to actin filaments. Unstimulated platelets were lysed with Triton X-100, and the membrane skeleton was isolated on sucrose density gradients or by high-speed centrifugation. The association of the membrane glycoproteins with the actin filaments was disrupted when actin-binding protein was hydrolyzed by activity of the Ca2+-dependent protease, which was active in platelet lysates upon addition of Ca2+ in the absence of leupeptin. Similarly, activation of the Ca2+-dependent protease in intact platelets by the addition of a platelet agonist also caused the membrane glycoproteins to dissociate from the membrane skeleton. Affinity-purified actin-binding protein antibodies immunoprecipitated the membrane glycoproteins from platelet lysates in which actin filaments had been removed by DNase I-induced depolymerization and high-speed centrifugation. These results demonstrate that actin-binding protein links actin filaments of the platelet membrane skeleton to three plasma membrane glycoproteins and that filaments are released from their attachment site when actin-binding protein is hydrolyzed by the Ca2+-dependent protease within intact platelets during platelet activation.  相似文献   

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