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1.
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) AAA ATPase CDC48A was fused to cerulean fluorescent protein and yellow fluorescent protein. AAA ATPases like CDC48 are only active in hexameric form. Förster resonance energy transfer-based fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy using CDC48A-cerulean fluorescent protein and CDC48A-yellow fluorescent protein showed interaction between two adjacent protomers, demonstrating homo-oligomerization occurs in living plant cells. Interaction between CDC48A and the SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE1 (SERK1) transmembrane receptor occurs in very restricted domains at the plasma membrane. In these domains the predominant form of the fluorescently tagged CDC48A protein is a hexamer, suggesting that SERK1 is associated with the active form of CDC48A in vivo. SERK1 trans-phosphorylates CDC48A on Ser-41. Förster resonance energy transfer-fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy was used to show that in vivo the C-terminal domains of CDC48A stay in close proximity. Employing fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, it was shown that CDC48A hexamers are part of larger complexes.The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) cell division cycle protein CDC48A was previously shown to interact with SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE1 (SERK1) (Rienties et al., 2005) and to coimmunoprecipitate with SERK1 in Arabidopsis cultured cells and seedlings (Karlova et al., 2006). In living cells the CDC48A protein colocalizes with SERK1 at peripheral endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-based membranes and the plasma membrane (PM). Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) showed that CDC48A interacts with SERK1 at the PM (Aker et al., 2006).CDC48A is a member of the family of AAA ATPases (ATPases associated with various cellular activities), shown to have various functions in cell division, membrane fusions, and in proteasome- and ER-associated degradation (ERAD) of proteins (Woodman, 2003). The role of AAA ATPases is to generate mechanical force to disrupt or fuse molecular structures by means of ATP binding and hydrolysis. The AtCDC48A protein was shown to play a role in ERAD and in membrane fusions (Rancour et al., 2002; Müller et al., 2005). AAA proteins are present as stacked hexameric rings that are stabilized by the binding of ATP. They are only reported to be active in hexameric form. This study aims to determine the predominant form of the fluorescently tagged CDC48A protein in Arabidopsis protoplasts at the peripheral ER and the PM domains where interactions between CDC48A and the SERK1 receptor take place, and, therefore, to determine if SERK1 is associated with the active form of CDC48A.CDC48A is 77% identical to the mammalian homolog vasolin-containing protein (VCP) or p97. Recently, conformational and dynamic changes during the ATP hydrolysis cycle of p97 have been studied by cryo-electron microscopy, crystallography, and small-angle x-ray scattering (for review, see Pye et al., 2006). The monomeric protein contains an N-terminal domain, two AAA domains, and a C-terminal domain (Figs. 1 and and3).3). The N domain is important for binding of adaptor proteins and substrates. The two AAA domains D1 and D2 are responsible for binding and hydrolysis of ATP. The D1 and D2 domains form stacked hexameric rings above each other that are connected by a linker. The ATP-binding site in the D1 domain and the D1-D2 linker are responsible for hexamerization, while the ATP-binding site in the D2 domain possesses the major ATPase activity (Wang et al., 2003a). The N domain is flexibly attached to the D1 domain, and projects out of the ring, facilitating binding to other proteins. During ATP hydrolysis, large conformational changes are transmitted from the D2 domain via the D1 domain onto the N domains, due to binding, hydrolysis, and release of the nucleotide (DeLaBarre and Brunger, 2003, 2005). In addition, the pores within the D1 and D2 rings narrow and widen in different nucleotide states. This causes the rings to rotate relative to each other (Davies et al., 2005). The C-terminal tail was not ordered within the crystal structure, and it is therefore unknown whether it stays close to the D2 ring or projects from the core structure toward the N domain.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Expression in Arabidopsis protoplasts of CDC48A, CDC48AA1A2, CDC48ANdel, and CDC48AN-D1 mutants all tagged to YFP. YFP is replaced by CrFP. In A the various mutants are shown schematically. Lysates of transfected cells were submitted to SDS-PAGE in B, to native PAGE in C, and probed with anti-YFP anti-serum. The expected sizes of the denatured proteins are 125 kD for full-length (FL) CDC48A- and CDC48AA1A2-YFP, 96 kD for CDC48ANdel-YFP, and 77 kD for CDC48AN-D1-YFP. Nondenatured hexameric CDC48A-YFP is expected to be between 650 and 750 kD depending on the number of YFP tags.Open in a separate windowFigure 3.Models of the expected hexamers of CDC48A after coexpression of two different protomers. A, Monomeric CDC48A. B, CDC48A fused with CrFP and with YFP (both at the C terminus) are combined and depicted as a hexamer. For simplicity only four fluorophores are drawn at adjacent positions at the C terminus, but in fact these can be randomly positioned at each C domain. C, YFP fused to the N terminus and CrFP to the C terminus. D, YFP and CrFP fused to the N terminus. E and F, CDC48AN-D1 and CDC48ANdel, each depicted as a monomer.For Arabidopsis CDC48A the crystal structure is not known, but in vitro-produced proteins form a hexamer while PUX1 (plant UBX domain-containing protein) facilitates CDC48A oligomer disassembly (Rancour et al., 2004). Up to now hexamerization of AAA ATPases was only shown in vitro or in total cell lysates, studies that do not reveal any spatial information on the oligomerization status of proteins in a living cell. Therefore, the protein was fused to the GFP variant monomeric cerulean fluorescent protein (CrFP) or to yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), and the hexamerization of CDC48A proteins in living cells was monitored by FRET-FLIM. Employing this technique, oligomerization of the CDC48A proteins in living cells was shown to be nonuniform. In addition, intersubunit distances in the oligomeric CDC48A protein could be calculated, revealing that the C-terminal domains stayed in close proximity rather than protruding out of the molecule.It was also shown that SERK1 interacts with the N terminus as well as the C terminus of CDC48A (Aker et al., 2006). After performing a trans-phosphorylation reaction with the SERK1 kinase domain, only Ser-41, a Ser residue found to be in the N domain of CDC48A, was phosphorylated.To investigate the diffusion of the CDC48A protein in cells, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), in which fluorescence intensity fluctuations caused by diffusion of fluorescent molecules in and out of a femtoliter volume are monitored in time, was employed. These fluctuations give information about diffusion times of proteins through the volume and, hence, about the size of protein complexes.Our results show that the oligomeric form of CDC48A in living cells is primarily hexameric and that the fluorescently tagged CDC48A is still able to form hexamers. The SERK1 receptor interacts with CDC48A at the same locations where oligomerization of the CDC48A protein is shown. We conclude therefore that SERK1 interacts with the hexameric form of CDC48A. Using FCS the presence of CDC48A in larger protein complexes in vivo was predicted.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Leucine-rich repeat (LRR)-containing transmembrane receptor-like kinases (RLKs) are important components of plant signal transduction. The Arabidopsis thaliana somatic embryogenesis receptor-like kinase 1 (AtSERK1) is an LRR-RLK proposed to participate in a signal transduction cascade involved in embryo development. By yeast two-hybrid screening we identified AtCDC48, a homologue of the mammalian AAA-ATPase p97 and GF14, a member of the Arabidopsis family of 14-3-3 proteins as AtSERK1 interactors. In vitro, the AtSERK1 kinase domain is able to transphosphorylate and bind both AtCDC48 and GF14. In yeast, AtCDC48 interacts with GF14 and with the PP2C phosphatase KAPP. In plant protoplasts AtSERK1 interacts with GF14.  相似文献   

4.
The Arabidopsis thaliana somatic embryogenesis receptor‐like kinase (SERK) family consists of five leucine‐rich repeat receptor‐like kinases (LRR‐RLKs) with diverse functions such as brassinosteroid insensitive 1 (BRI1)‐mediated brassinosteroid perception, development and innate immunity. The autophosphorylation activity of the kinase domains of the five SERK proteins was compared and the phosphorylated residues were identified by LC‐MS/MS. Differences in autophosphorylation that ranged from high activity of SERK1, intermediate activities for SERK2 and SERK3 to low activity for SERK5 were noted. In the SERK1 kinase the C‐terminally located residue Ser‐562 controls full autophosphorylation activity. Activation loop phosphorylation, including that of residue Thr‐462 previously shown to be required for SERK1 kinase activity, was not affected. In vivo SERK1 phosphorylation was induced by brassinosteroids. Immunoprecipitation of CFP‐tagged SERK1 from plant extracts followed by MS/MS identified Ser‐303, Thr‐337, Thr‐459, Thr‐462, Thr‐463, Thr‐468, and Ser‐612 or Thr‐613 or Tyr‐614 as in vivo phosphorylation sites of SERK1. Transphosphorylation of SERK1 by the kinase domain of the main brassinosteroid receptor BRI1 occurred only on Ser‐299 and Thr‐462. This suggests both intra‐ and intermolecular control of SERK1 kinase activity. Conversely, BRI1 was transphosphorylated by the kinase domain of SERK1 on Ser‐887. BRI1 kinase activity was not required for interaction with the SERK1 receptor in a pull down assay.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Among the >200 members of the leucine-rich repeat receptor kinase family in Arabidopsis thaliana, only a few have been functionally characterized. Here, we report a critical function in anther development for the SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR KINASE1 (SERK1) and SERK2 genes. Both SERK1 and SERK2 are expressed widely in locules until stage 6 anthers and are more concentrated in the tapetal cell layer later. Whereas serk1 and serk2 single insertion mutants did not show developmental phenotypes, serk1 serk2 double mutants were not able to produce seeds because of a lack of pollen development in mutant anthers. In young buds, double mutant anthers developed normally, but serk1 serk2 microsporangia produced more sporogenous cells that were unable to develop beyond meiosis. Furthermore, serk1 serk2 double mutants developed only three cell layers surrounding the sporogenous cell mass, whereas wild-type anthers developed four cell layers. Further confocal microscopic and molecular analyses showed that serk1 serk2 double mutant anthers lack development of the tapetal cell layer, which accounts for the microspore abortion and male sterility. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that the SERK1 and SERK2 receptor kinases function redundantly as an important control point for sporophytic development controlling male gametophyte production.  相似文献   

7.
To examine the structure and function of the Na-K-Cl cotransporter, NKCC1, we tagged the transporter with cyan (CFP) and yellow (YFP) fluorescent proteins and measured fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) in stably expressing human embryonic kidney cell lines. Fluorescent protein tags were added at the N-terminal residue between the regulatory domain and the membrane domain and within a poorly conserved region of the C terminus. Both singly and doubly tagged NKCC1s were appropriately trafficked to the cell membrane and were fully functional; regulation was normal except when YFP was inserted near the regulatory domain, in which case activation occurred only upon incubation with calyculin A. Quenching of YFP fluorescence by Cl(-) provided a ratiometric indicator of intracellular [Cl(-)]. All of the CFP/YFP NKCC pairs exhibited some level of FRET, demonstrating the presence of dimers or higher multimers in functioning NKCC1. With YFP near the regulatory domain and CFP in the C terminus, we recorded a 6% FRET change signaling the regulatory phosphorylation event. On the other hand, when the probe was placed at the extreme N terminus, such changes were not seen, presumably due to the length and predicted flexibility of the N terminus. Substantial FRET changes were observed contemporaneous with cell volume changes, possibly reflective of an increase in molecular crowding upon cell shrinkage.  相似文献   

8.
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR KINASE (SERK) genes belong to a small family of five plant receptor kinases that are involved in at least five different signaling pathways. One member of this family, BRASSINOSTEROID INSENSITIVE1 (BRI1)-ASSOCIATED KINASE1 (BAK1), also known as SERK3, is the coreceptor of the brassinolide (BR)-perceiving receptor BRI1, a function that is BR dependent and partially redundant with SERK1. BAK1 (SERK3) alone controls plant innate immunity, is also the coreceptor of the flagellin receptor FLS2, and, together with SERK4, can mediate cell death control, all three in a BR-independent fashion. SERK1 and SERK2 are essential for male microsporogenesis, again independent from BR. SERK5 does not appear to have any function under the conditions tested. Here, we show that the different SERK members are only redundant in pairs, whereas higher order mutant combinations only show additive phenotypes. Surprisingly, SERK members that are redundant within one are not redundant in another pathway. We also show that this evolution of functional pairs occurred by a change in protein function and not by differences in spatial expression. We propose that, in plants, closely related receptor kinases have a minimal homo- or heterodimeric configuration to achieve specificity.  相似文献   

9.
We determined the organization of target (t) SNARE proteins on the basolateral endothelial plasma membrane (PM) and their role in the mechanism of caveolar fusion. Studies were performed in a cell-free system involving endothelial PM sheets and isolated biotin-labeled caveolae. We monitored the fusion of caveolae with the PM by the detection of biotin-streptavidin complexes using correlative high resolution fluorescence microscopy and gold labeling electron microscopy on ultrathin sections of PM sheets. Imaging of PM sheets demonstrated and biochemical findings showed that the t-SNARE proteins present in endothelial cells (SNAP-23 and syntaxin-4) formed cholesterol-dependent clusters in discrete areas of the PM. Upon fusion of caveolae with the target PM, 50% of the caveolae co-localized with the t-SNARE clusters, indicating that these caveolae were at the peak of the fusion reaction. Fluorescent streptavidin staining of PM sheets correlated with the ultrastructure in the same area. These findings demonstrate that t-SNARE clusters in the endothelial target PM serve as the fusion sites for caveolae during exocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
Qi D  DeYoung BJ  Innes RW 《Plant physiology》2012,158(4):1819-1832
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) RESISTANCE TO PSEUDOMONAS SYRINGAE5 (RPS5) disease resistance protein mediates recognition of the Pseudomonas syringae effector protein AvrPphB. RPS5 belongs to the coiled-coil-nucleotide-binding site-leucine-rich repeat (CC-NBS-LRR) family and is activated by AvrPphB-mediated cleavage of the protein kinase PBS1. Here, we present a structure-function analysis of the CC and LRR domains of RPS5 using transient expression assays in Nicotiana benthamiana. We found that substituting the CC domain of RPS2 for the RPS5 CC domain did not alter RPS5 specificity and only moderately reduced its ability to activate programmed cell death, suggesting that the CC domain does not play a direct role in the recognition of PBS1 cleavage. Analysis of an RPS5-super Yellow Fluorescent Protein fusion revealed that RPS5 localizes to the plasma membrane (PM). Alanine substitutions of predicted myristoylation (glycine-2) and palmitoylation (cysteine-4) residues affected RPS5 PM localization, protein stability, and function in an additive manner, indicating that PM localization is essential to RPS5 function. The first 20 amino acids of RPS5 were sufficient for directing super Yellow Fluorescent Protein to the PM. C-terminal truncations of RPS5 revealed that the first four LRR repeats are sufficient for inhibiting RPS5 autoactivation; however, the complete LRR domain was required for the recognition of PBS1 cleavage. Substitution of the RPS2 LRR domain resulted in the autoactivation of RPS5, indicating that the LRR domain must coevolve with the NBS domain. We conclude that the RPS5 LRR domain functions to suppress RPS5 activation in the absence of PBS1 cleavage and promotes RPS5 activation in its presence.  相似文献   

11.
The proteomic response to bacterial infection in a teleost fish (Paralichthys olivaceus) infected with Streptococcus parauberis was analyzed using label-free protein quantitation coupled with LC-MS(E) tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 82 proteins from whole kidney, a major lymphoid organ in this fish, were found to be differentially expressed between healthy and diseased fish analyzed 6, 24, 72 and 120 h post-infection. Among the differentially expressed proteins, those involved in mediating immune responses (e.g., heat shock proteins, cathepsins, goose-type lysozyme and complement components) were most significantly up-regulated by infection. In addition, cell division cycle 48 (CDC48) and calreticulin, which are associated with cellular recovery and glycoprotein synthesis, were up-regulated in the universal protein group, whereas the other proteins in that group were down-regulated. There was continuous activation of expression of immune-associated proteins during infection, but there was also loss of expression of proteins not involved in immune function. We expect that our findings regarding immune response at the protein level would offer new insight into the systemic response to bacterial infection of a major immune organ in teleost fish.  相似文献   

12.
The F-domain of rat HNF-4alpha1 has a crucial impact on the ligand binding affinity, ligand specificity and secondary structure of HNF-4alpha. (i) Fluorescent binding assays indicate that wild-type, full-length HNF-4alpha (amino acids 1-455) has high affinity (Kd=0.06-12 nm) for long chain fatty acyl-CoAs (LCFA-CoA) and low affinity (Kd=58-296 nm) for unesterified long chain fatty acids (LCFAs). LCFA-CoA binding was due to close molecular interaction as shown by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from full-length HNF-4alpha tryptophan (FRET donor) to bound cis-parinaroyl-CoA (FRET acceptor), which yielded an intermolecular distance of 33 A, although no FRET to cis-parinaric acid was detected. (ii) Deleting the N-terminal A-D-domains, comprising the AF1 and DNA binding functions, only slightly affected affinities for LCFA-CoAs (Kd=0.9-4 nm) and LCFAs (Kd=93-581 nm). (iii) Further deletion of the F-domain robustly reduced affinities for LCFA-CoA and reversed ligand specificity (i.e. high affinity for LCFAs (Kd=1.5-32 nm) and low affinity for LCFA-CoAs (Kd=54-302 nm)). No FRET from HNF-4alpha-E (amino acids 132-370) tryptophan (FRET donor) to bound cis-parinaroyl-CoA (FRET acceptor) was detected, whereas an intermolecular distance of 28 A was calculated from FRET between HNF-4alpha-E and cis-parinaric acid. (iv) Circular dichroism showed that LCFA-CoA, but not LCFA, altered the secondary structure of HNF-4alpha only when the F-domain was present. (v) cis-Parinaric acid bound to HNF-4alpha with intact F-domain was readily displaceable by S-hexadecyl-CoA, a nonhydrolyzable thioether analogue of LCFA-CoAs. Truncation of the F-domain significantly decreased cis-parinaric acid displacement. Hence, the C-terminal F-domain of HNF-4alpha regulated ligand affinity, ligand specificity, and ligand-induced conformational change of HNF-4alpha. Thus, characteristics of F-domain-truncated mutants may not reflect the properties of full-length HNF-4alpha.  相似文献   

13.
Insect olfactory receptors (ORs) are a novel family of ligand-gated cation channels that can respond to volatile organic compounds at low concentrations. They are involved in the detection of odorants associated with mate recognition, food localisation and predator avoidance. These receptors form a complex that is currently thought to contain at least two subunit members: the non-canonical Orco ion channel subunit and a ligand-binding receptor subunit. The integral membrane proteins SNMP1 and 2 are also associated with olfactory function, with SNMP1 required for cis-vaccinyl acetate reception in Drosophila melanogaster. In order to investigate protein–protein interactions among these membrane proteins we measured intermolecular Förster/Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) in live insect cells by acceptor photobleaching. Fusion proteins containing Cyan Fluorescent Protein or Yellow Fluorescent Protein were produced using baculovirus-mediated expression in High Five? cells. The majority of the recombinant products were of the expected size for the fusion proteins and located within intracellular membranes. We were able to show FRET efficiencies providing evidence for homomeric and heteromeric interactions of the ligand-binding OR, Or22a, and Orco (Or22a–Or22a, Or22a–Orco, Orco–Orco). There was no evidence for an interaction between SNMP1 and Orco or between SNMP2 and Orco or Or22a. However, fusion proteins of SNMP1 and Or22a did show an interaction by FRET, suggesting SNMP1 may interact with at least some insect olfactory receptor complexes. In summary, this study supports previously observed homomeric and heteromeric interactions between Orco and the ligand-binding OR, Or22a, and identifies a novel interaction between Or22a and SNMP1.  相似文献   

14.
The monocarboxylate (lactate) transporters MCT1 and MCT4 require the membrane-spanning glycoprotein CD147 for their correct plasma membrane expression and function. We have successfully expressed CD147 and MCT1 tagged on their C or N termini with either the cyan (CFP) or yellow (YFP) variants of green fluorescent protein. The tagged proteins were correctly targeted to the plasma membrane of COS-7 cells and were functionally active. Measurements of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between all combinations of the tagged proteins were made. FRET was observed when either the C or N terminus of MCT1 (intracellular) is tagged with CFP or YFP and co-expressed with CD147 tagged with YFP or CFP on the C terminus (intracellular) but not the N terminus (extracellular). FRET was also observed between two CD147 molecules when both YFP and CFP were on the C terminus but not when both were on the N terminus or one on either end. No FRET was observed between MCT1-YFP and MCT-CFP in any combination. A wide range of controls including photobleaching were employed to confirm that where FRET was observed, it was not an artifact of direct excitation of YFP by the CFP excitation laser. It was also shown that nonspecific overcrowding of proteins did not induce FRET. Because FRET only occurs between two fluorophores if they are less than 100 A apart and in a suitable orientation, our data provide important information on the topology of CD147 and MCT1 within the plasma membrane. The minimum configuration consistent with the data is a dimer of CD147 associating with two MCT1 molecules such that the C terminus of CD147 in the cytosol is close to the C terminus of its partner CD147 and to the C and N termini of an associated MCT1 molecule. FRET may provide a non-invasive technique for measuring changes in these interactions in living cells.  相似文献   

15.
Fluorescent protein (FP) insertions have often been used to localize primary structure elements in mid-resolution 3D cryo electron microscopic (EM) maps of large protein complexes. However, little is known as to the precise spatial relationship between the location of the fused FP and its insertion site within a larger protein. To gain insights into these structural considerations, F?rster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements were used to localize green fluorescent protein (GFP) insertions within the ryanodine receptor type 1 (RyR1), a large intracellular Ca(2+) release channel that plays a key role in skeletal muscle excitation contraction coupling. A series of full-length His-tagged GFP-RyR1 fusion constructs were created, expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293T cells and then complexed with Cy3NTA, a His-tag specific FRET acceptor. FRET efficiency values measured from each GFP donor to Cy3NTA bound to each His tag acceptor site were converted into intermolecular distances and the positions of each inserted GFP were then triangulated relative to a previously published X-ray crystal structure of a 559 amino acid RyR1 fragment. We observed that the chromophoric centers of fluorescent proteins inserted into RyR1 can be located as far as 45 ? from their insertion sites and that the fused proteins can also be located in internal cavities within RyR1. These findings should prove useful in interpreting structural results obtained in cryo EM maps using fusions of small fluorescent proteins. More accurate point-to-point distance information may be obtained using complementary orthogonal labeling systems that rely on fluorescent probes that bind directly to amino acid side chains.  相似文献   

16.
The 12-kDa FK506-binding proteins (FKBP12 and FKBP12.6) are regulatory subunits of ryanodine receptor (RyR) Ca2+ release channels. To investigate the structural basis of FKBP interactions with the RyR1 and RyR2 isoforms, we used site-directed fluorescent labeling of FKBP12.6, ligand binding measurements, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). Single-cysteine substitutions were introduced at five positions distributed over the surface of FKBP12.6. Fluorescent labeling at position 14, 32, 49, or 85 did not affect high affinity binding to the RyR1. By comparison, fluorescent labeling at position 41 reduced the affinity of FKBP12.6 binding by 10-fold. Each of the five fluorescent FKBPs retained the ability to inhibit [3H]ryanodine binding to the RyR1, although the maximal extent of inhibition was reduced by half when the label was attached at position 32. The orientation of FKBP12.6 bound to the RyR1 and RyR2 was examined by measuring FRET from the different labeling positions on FKBP12.6 to an acceptor attached within the RyR calmodulin subunit. FRET was dependent on the position of fluorophore attachment on FKBP12.6; however, for any given position, the distance separating donors and acceptors bound to RyR1 versus RyR2 did not differ significantly. Our results show that FKBP12.6 binds to RyR1 and RyR2 in the same orientation and suggest new insights into the discrete structural domains responsible for channel binding and inhibition. FRET mapping of RyR-bound FKBP12.6 is consistent with the predictions of a previous cryoelectron microscopy study and strongly supports the proposed structural model.  相似文献   

17.
Recent studies show that markers for lipid rafts are among the plasma membrane components most likely to be internalized independently of clathrin-coated pits, and there is evidence to suggest that lipid rafts may play a functional role in endocytic trafficking [1-5]. However, lipid rafts themselves are commonly defined purely in biochemical terms, by resistance to detergent extraction. The existence of rafts in live-cell membranes remains controversial [6-8], and their distribution relative to endocytic machinery has not been investigated. This study employs fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to show that in the plasma membrane (PM) of living cells the glycosphingolipid GM1, labeled with cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) [9,10], is found at least in part within clusters that also include GPI-linked proteins. These clusters are cholesterol-dependent and exclude non-raft proteins such as transferrin receptor and so possess predicted properties of lipid rafts. This type of lipid raft is largely excluded from clathrin-positive regions of the PM. They are found within Caveolin-positive regions at the same concentration as at the rest of the cell surface. The data provide evidence for a model in which lipid rafts are distributed uniformly across most of the PM of nonpolarized cells but are prevented from entering clathrin-coated pits.  相似文献   

18.
19.
CELL DIVISION CONTROL PROTEIN48 (CDC48) is essential for membrane fusion, protein degradation, and other cellular processes. Here, we revealed the crucial role of CDC48B in regulating periclinal cell division in roots by analyzing the recessive gen1 mutant. We identified the GEN1 gene through map-based cloning and verified that GEN1 encodes CDC48B. gen1 showed severely inhibited root growth, increased periclinal cell division in the endodermis, defective middle cortex (MC) formation, and altered ground tissue patterning in roots. Consistent with these phenotypes, CYCLIND 6;1(CYCD6;1), a periclinal cell division marker, was upregulated in gen1 compared to Col-0. The ratio of SHRpro:SHR-GFP fluorescence in pre-dividing nuclei vs. the adjacent stele decreased by 33% in gen1, indicating that the trafficking of SHORT-ROOT (SHR) decreased in gen1 when endodermal cells started to divide. These findings suggest that the loss of function of CDC48B inhibits the intercellular trafficking of SHR from the stele to the endodermis, thereby decreasing SHR accumulation in the endodermis. These findings shed light on the crucial role of CDC48B in regulating periclinal cell division in roots.  相似文献   

20.
The high affinity iron uptake complex in the yeast plasma membrane (PM) consists of the ferroxidase, Fet3p, and the ferric iron permease, Ftr1p. We used a combination of yeast two-hybrid analysis, confocal fluorescence microscopy, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) quantification to delineate the motifs in the two proteins required for assembly and maturation into an uptake-competent complex. The cytoplasmic, carboxyl-terminal domain of each protein contains a four-residue motif adjacent to the cytoplasm-PM interface that supports an interaction between the proteins. This interaction has been quantified by two-hybrid analysis and is required for assembly and trafficking of the complex to the PM and for the approximately 13% maximum FRET efficiency determined. In contrast, the Fet3p transmembrane domain (TM) can be exchanged with the TM domain from the vacuolar ferroxidase, Fet5p, with no loss of assembly and trafficking. A carboxyl-terminal interaction between the vacuolar proteins, Fet5p and Fth1p, also was quantified. As a measure of the specificity of interaction, no interaction between heterologous ferroxidase permease pairs was observed. Also, whereas FRET was quantified between fluorescent fusions of the copper permease (monomers), Ctr1p, none was observed between Fet3p and Ctr1p. The results are consistent with a (minimal) heterodimer model of the Fet3p.Ftr1p complex that supports the trafficking of iron from Fet3p to Ftr1p for iron permeation across the yeast PM.  相似文献   

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