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1.
Incubation of native alpha-actinin with trypsin leads to the formation of intermediate fragments that are quite resistant to further enzyme action (M 98, 85, 80, 70, 64, 55, 38, 30, 15 kDa). Analysis of these fragments made it possible to elucidate the course of trypsinolysis and to localize the fragments in the polypeptide chain of alpha-actinin subunit.  相似文献   

2.
Substructure of chicken gizzard smooth muscle alpha-actinin molecule was deduced by domainal mapping of the proteolytic fragments with alpha-chymotrypsin. There were three chymotryptic cleavage sites (Sites I, II, and III, from the amino terminus). Cleavage at Site I generated two fragments, i.e. an NH2-terminal 36-kDa fragment and a COOH-terminal 70-kDa fragment. The 70-kDa fragment generated either a 55-kDa fragment by cleavage at Site II or a 65-kDa fragment by cleavage at Site III. Purified NH2-terminal 36-kDa fragment bound to F-actin, whereas the 55-kDa fragment formed a dimeric molecule. Circular dichroism and electron microscopic experiments demonstrated that the alpha-helical content of the 55-kDa fragment was 14% higher than that of native gizzard alpha-actinin, coinciding with the apparently rod-shaped configuration of this fragment. A 110-kDa product was generated from two 55-kDa fragments in a cross-linking study with the zero-length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. Two cross-linkable sites in the 55-kDa, A- and B-site, were shown to be involved in this reaction. Further, it was demonstrated by using N-(7-dimethylamino-4-methyl-3-coumarinyl)maleimide labeling and immunoblotting analyses that the A-site on one 55-kDa fragment was cross-linked to the B-site on the other. These results suggest that smooth muscle alpha-actinin formed an antiparallel dimeric molecule in which the 55-kDa fragments connected the two actin-binding domains composed of the 36-kDa fragments.  相似文献   

3.
Young P  Gautel M 《The EMBO journal》2000,19(23):6331-6340
The assembly of stable cytoskeletal structures from dynamically recycled molecules requires developmental and spatial regulation of protein interactions. In muscle, titin acts as a molecular ruler organizing the actin cytoskeleton via interactions with many sarcomeric proteins, including the crosslinking protein alpha-actinin. An interaction between the C-terminal domain of alpha-actinin and titin Z-repeat motifs targets alpha-actinin to the Z-disk. Here we investigate the cellular regulation of this interaction. alpha-actinin is a rod shaped head-to-tail homodimer. In contrast to C-terminal fragments, full-length alpha-actinin does not bind Z-repeats. We identify a 30-residue Z-repeat homologous sequence between the actin-binding and rod regions of alpha-actinin that binds the C-terminal domain with nanomolar affinity. Thus, Z-repeat binding is prevented by this 'pseudoligand' interaction between the subunits of the alpha-actinin dimer. This autoinhibition is relieved upon binding of the Z-disk lipid phosphatidylinositol-bisphosphate to the actin-binding domain. We suggest that this novel mechanism is relevant to control the site-specific interactions of alpha-actinin during sarcomere assembly and turnover. The intramolecular contacts defined here also constrain a structural model for intrasterical regulation of all alpha-actinin isoforms.  相似文献   

4.
The yeast two-hybrid system was used to search for interaction partners of human zyxin. Screening of two different cDNA libraries, one prepared from human placenta, the other from human heart, yielded several positive clones that occurred in both searches, including clones coding for cyclophilin, nebulette, and alpha-actinin. The zyxin/alpha-actinin interaction was analyzed in detail. By site-directed mutagenesis, a linear motif of 6 amino acids (Phe-Gly-Pro-Val-Val-Ala) present at the N terminus of zyxin was found to play a critical role. Replacement of a single amino acid within this motif abolished binding to alpha-actinin in blot overlays as well as in living cells. On the other hand, the interaction site in alpha-actinin was mapped to a conformational determinant present in the center of the protein as demonstrated by a fragment deletion analysis. This binding site involved a tandem array of two complete spectrin-like domains. Only fragments that were able to dimerize in yeast also bound to zyxin, suggesting that dimerization of alpha-actinin is essential for zyxin binding.  相似文献   

5.
Alpha-actinin can be proteolytically cleaved into major fragments of 27 and 53 kD using the enzyme thermolysin. The 27-kD fragment contains an actin-binding site and we have recently shown that the 53-kD fragment binds to the cytoplasmic domain of beta 1 integrin in vitro (Otey, C. A., F. M. Pavalko, and K. Burridge. 1990. J. Cell Biol. 111:721-729). We have explored the behavior of the isolated 27- and 53-kD fragments of alpha-actinin after their microinjection into living cells. Consistent with its containing a binding site for actin, the 27-kD fragment was detected along stress fibers within 10-20 min after injection into rat embryo fibroblasts (REF-52). The 53-kD fragment of alpha-actinin, however, concentrated in focal adhesions of REF-52 cells 10-20 min after injection. The association of this fragment with focal adhesions in vivo is consistent with its interaction in vitro with the cytoplasmic domain of the beta 1 subunit of integrin, which was also localized at these sites. When cells were injected with greater than 5 microM final concentration of either alpha-actinin fragment and cultured for 30-60 min, most stress fibers were disassembled. At this time, however, many of the focal adhesions, particularly those around the cell periphery, remained after most stress fibers had gone. By 2 h after injection only a few small focal adhesions persisted, yet the cells remained spread. Identical results were obtained with other cell types including primary chick fibroblasts, BSC-1, MDCK, and gerbil fibroma cells. Stress fibers and focal adhesions reformed if cells were allowed to recover for 18 h after injection. These data suggest that introduction of the monomeric 27-kD fragment of alpha-actinin into cells may disrupt the actin cytoskeleton by interfering with the function of endogenous, intact alpha-actinin molecules along stress fibers. The 53-kD fragment may interfere with endogenous alpha-actinin function at focal adhesions or by displacing some other component that binds to the rod domain of alpha-actinin and that is needed to maintain stress fiber organization.  相似文献   

6.
Isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding a chick alpha-actinin   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
We have isolated and sequenced a 2.1-kilobase cDNA encoding 86% of the sequence of alpha-actinin. The cDNA clone was isolated from a chick embryo fibroblast cDNA library constructed in the expression vector lambda gt11. Identification of this sequence as alpha-actinin was confirmed by immunological methods and by comparing the deduced protein sequence with the sequence of several CNBr fragments obtained from adult chicken smooth muscle (gizzard) alpha-actinin. The deduced protein sequence shows two distinct domains, one of which consists of four repeats of approximately 120 amino acids. This region corresponds to a previously identified 50-kDa tryptic peptide involved in formation of the alpha-actinin dimer. The last 19 residues of C-terminal sequence display an homology with the so-called E-F hand of Ca2+-binding proteins. Hybridization analysis reveals only one size of mRNA (approximately 3.5 kilobases) in fibroblasts, but multiple bands in genomic cDNA.  相似文献   

7.
Z-band alternatively spliced PDZ-containing protein (ZASP/Cypher) has an important role in maintaining Z-disc stability in striated and cardiac muscle. ZASP/Cypher interacts through its PDZ domain with the major Z-disc actin cross-linker, alpha-actinin. ZASP/Cypher also has a conserved sequence called the ZM-motif, and it is found in two alternatively spliced exons 4 and 6. We have shown earlier that the ZM-motif containing internal regions of two related proteins ALP and CLP36 interact with alpha-actinin rod region, and that the ZM-motif is important in targeting ALP to the alpha-actinin containing structures in cell. Here, we show that the ZASP/Cypher internal fragments containing either ZM exon 4 or 6 co-localized with alpha-actinin in cultured myoblasts and nonmuscle cells. Fragments of 130 residues around the ZM-consensus were sufficient for localization, which is similar to our previous results of ALP. Moreover, ZASP/Cypher protein interacted directly with the alpha-actinin rod and competed with ALP in binding to the rod. During the inhibition of stress fiber assembly ZASP/Cypher and alpha-actinin co-localization could be partially disturbed, suggesting that ZASP/Cypher is bound to alpha-actinin mainly when alpha-actinin is localizing in stress fibers. Many point mutations found in cardiomyopathy patients are located in the internal region of ZASP/Cypher. However, we found no evidence that human patient mutations in the internal domain would affect the ZASP/Cypher co-localization with alpha-actinin, or that the mutations would destabilize the ZASP/Cypher protein.  相似文献   

8.
In the present study, the interaction of alpha-actinin and calmodulin with clathrin heavy chain are demonstrated using Western blot analysis and rotary shadowing electron microscopy. The results show that alpha-actinin and calmodulin bind the clathrin heavy chain. The interaction is specific and affected by calcium. However, the interaction of both proteins with the clathrin heavy chain is distinct; the proteins do not block each other's ability to bind, and they interact with different protein fragments of the clathrin heavy chain. Furthermore, using rotary shadowing the results show that alpha-actinin differentially affected the terminal region of the clathrin trimer. Whereas, the effects of calmodulin were most noticeably detected along the length of trimer arms. The possible existence of distinct binding sites on the arms of the clathrin trimer for these cytosolic proteins supports the contention that these cytosolic proteins play an important role in cellular trafficking.  相似文献   

9.
Platelet activation triggers integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3)-dependent signals and the induction of tyrosine phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal protein alpha-actinin. We have previously reported that alpha-actinin is phosphorylated by the focal adhesion kinase (FAK). In this study, a phosphatase of 68 kDa that dephosphorylated alpha-actinin in vitro was isolated from platelet lysates by three sequential chromatography steps. The phosphatase was identified as SHP-1 by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. alpha-Actinin was dephosphorylated in vitro by recombinant SHP-1 and by SHP-1 immunoprecipitated from unstimulated or thrombin-stimulated platelet lysates. SHP-1 immunoprecipitated from lysates of platelets adherent to fibrinogen, however, failed to dephosphorylate alpha-actinin. In contrast, the activity of SHP-1 against a synthetic substrate was not affected by the mode of platelet activation. The robust and sustained phosphorylation of alpha-actinin detected in platelets adherent to fibrinogen thus correlates with a decrease in the activity of SHP-1 toward it. Tyrosine phosphorylation of alpha-actinin is seen in vanadate-treated COS-7 cells that are co-transfected with alpha-actinin and wild type FAK. Triple transfection of the cells with cDNAs encoding for alpha-actinin, FAK, and wild type SHP-1 abolished the phosphorylation of alpha-actinin. The phosphorylation of FAK, however, was barely affected by the expression of wild type SHP-1. Both alpha-actinin and FAK were phosphorylated in cells co-expressing alpha-actinin, FAK, and a catalytic domain mutant (C453S) of SHP-1. These findings establish that SHP-1 can dephosphorylate alpha-actinin in vitro and in vivo and suggest that SHP-1 may regulate the tethering of receptors to the cytoskeleton and/or the extent of cross-linking of actin filaments in cells such as platelets.  相似文献   

10.
11.
J Q Zhang  B Elzey  G Williams  S Lu  D J Law  R Horowits 《Biochemistry》2001,40(49):14898-14906
N-RAP is a recently discovered muscle-specific protein found at cardiac intercalated disks. Double immunogold labeling of mouse cardiac muscle reveals that vinculin is located immediately adjacent to the fascia adherens region of the intercalated disk membrane, while N-RAP extends approximately 100 nm further toward the interior of the cell. We partially purified cardiac intercalated disks using low- and high-salt extractions followed by density gradient centrifugation. Immunoblots show that this preparation is highly enriched in desmin and junctional proteins, including N-RAP, talin, vinculin, beta1-integrin, N-cadherin, and connexin 43. Electron microscopy and immunolabeling demonstrate that N-RAP and vinculin are associated with the large fragments of intercalated disks that are present in this preparation, which also contains numerous membrane vesicles. Detergent treatment of the partially purified intercalated disks removed the membrane vesicles and extracted vinculin and beta1-integrin. Further separation on a sucrose gradient removed residual actin and myosin and yielded a fraction morphologically similar to fasciae adherentes that was highly enriched in N-RAP, N-cadherin, connexin 43, talin, desmin, and alpha-actinin. The finding that N-RAP copurifies with detergent-extracted intercalated disk fragments even though beta-integrin and vinculin have been completely removed suggests that N-RAP association with the adherens junction region is mediated by the cadherin system. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found that recombinant N-RAP fragments bind alpha-actinin in a gel overlay assay. In addition, immunofluorescence shows that N-RAP remains bound at the ends of isolated, detergent-treated cardiac myofibrils. These results demonstrate that N-RAP remains tightly bound to myofibrils and fasciae adherentes during biochemical purification and may be a key constituent in the mechanical link between these two structures.  相似文献   

12.
Panasenko OO  Gusev NB 《IUBMB life》2000,49(4):277-282
Interaction of calponin and alpha-actinin with actin was analyzed by means of cosedimentation and electron microscopy. G-actin was polymerized in the presence of calponin, alpha-actinin, or both of these actin-binding proteins (ABPs). The single and bundled actin filaments were separated, and the stoichiometry of ABPs and actin in both types of filaments was determined. Binding of calponin to the single or bundled actin filaments was not dependent on the presence of alpha-actinin and did not displace alpha-actinin from actin. In the presence of calponin, however, less alpha-actinin was bound to the bundled actin filaments, and the binding of alpha-actinin was accompanied by a partial decrease in the calponin/actin stoichiometry in the bundles of actin filaments. Calponin had no influence on the binding of alpha-actinin to the single actin filaments. The structure of actin bundles formed in the presence of the two ABPs differed from that formed in the presence of either one singly. We conclude that calponin and alpha-actinin can coexist on actin and that nearly each actin monomer can bind one of these ABPs.  相似文献   

13.
W Witke  W Nellen    A Noegel 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(13):4143-4148
Mutation of the alpha-actinin gene in Dictyostelium has been achieved by transforming cells with the Dictyostelium transformation vector pDNeoII containing a 1.2 kb fragment of the alpha-actinin gene. Transformants deficient in alpha-actinin, an actin-binding protein, produced an altered mRNA that lacked the 3' portion of the coding region. The defect in alpha-actinin production was not due to integration of the vector within the gene, but was apparently caused by errors produced during homologous recombination between the introduced alpha-actinin sequence and its complementary sequence in the coding region of the endogenous gene.  相似文献   

14.
alpha-Actinin purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle was characterized in comparison with alpha-actinins from chicken striated muscles, or fast-skeletal muscle, slow-skeletal muscle, and cardiac muscle. The gizzard alpha-actinin molecule consisted of two apparently identical subunits with a molecular weight of 100,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, as do striated-muscle alpha-actinins. Its isoelectric points in the presence of urea were similar to the striated-muscle counterparts. Despite these similarities, distinctive amino acid sequences between smooth-muscle alpha-actinin and striated-muscle alpha-actinins were revealed by peptide mapping using limited proteolysis in SDS. Gizzard alpha-actinin was immunologically distinguished from striated-muscle alpha-actinins. Gizzard alpha-actinin formed bundles of gizzard F-actin as well as of skeletal-muscle F-actin, but could not form any cross-bridges between adjacent actin filaments under conditions where skeletal-muscle alpha-actinin could. Temperature-dependent competition between gizzard alpha-actinin and tropomyosin on binding to gizzard thin filaments was demonstrated by electron microscopic observations. Gizzard alpha-actinin promoted Mg2+-ATPase activity of reconstituted skeletal actomyosin, gizzard acto-skeletal myosin, and gizzard actomyosin. This promoting effect was depressed by the addition of gizzard tropomyosin. These findings imply that, despite structural differences between gizzard and striated-muscle alpha-actinin molecules, they function similarly in vitro, and that gizzard alpha-actinin can interact not only with smooth-muscle actin (gamma- and beta-actin) but also with skeletal-muscle actin (alpha-actin).  相似文献   

15.
In order to investigate the mechanism of the formation of the mesodermal layer during chick gastrulation, we observed the behavior of fragments of mesodermal cells explanted and cultured on substrata coated with parallel lines of fibronectin (FN). We also examined the distribution of F-actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin in explanted fragments by immunocytochemical methods noting particularly their distribution with respect to FN lines. Explants of mesodermal cells flattened on FN-coated substrata and then became elliptical with the major axis of the ellipse oriented along the FN lines and migrated along them. The peripheral cells of explants extended filopodia and lamellipodia which attached preferentially to FN lines and then contracted, pulling other mesodermal cells in explants along passively. Vinculin and alpha-actinin in peripheral anchoring filopodia and lamellipodia co-localized with the terminations of F-actin bundles and with FN lines, suggesting that the peripheral cells were the moving force for explant translocation. We propose based on these results that in vivo, peripheral cells of invaginated cell mass are guided by the known FN-rich fibrous extracellular matrix on the basal surface of epiblast to move outwards; the rest linked to the peripheral cells are pulled away from the primitive streak to spread in tandem to form the mesodermal layer.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescently labeled alpha-actinin, isolated from chicken gizzards, breast muscle, or calf brains, was microinjected into cultured embryonic myotubes and cardiac myocytes where it was incorporated into the Z-bands of myofibrils. The localization in injected, living cells was confirmed by reacting permeabilized myotubes and cardiac myocytes with fluorescent alpha-actinin. Both living and permeabilized cells incorporated the alpha-actinin regardless of whether the alpha-actinin was isolated from nonmuscle, skeletal, or smooth muscle, or whether it was labeled with different fluorescent dyes. The living muscle cells could beat up to 5 d after injection. Rest-length sarcomeres in beating myotubes and cardiac myocytes were approximately 1.9-2.4 microns long, as measured by the separation of fluorescent bands of alpha-actinin. There were areas in nearly all beating cells, however, where narrow bands of alpha-actinin, spaced 0.3-1.5 micron apart, were arranged in linear arrays giving the appearance of minisarcomeres. In myotubes, alpha-actinin was found exclusively in these closely spaced arrays for the first 2-3 d in culture. When the myotubes became contraction-competent, at approximately day 4 to day 5 in culture, alpha-actinin was localized in Z-bands of fully formed sarcomeres, as well as in minisarcomeres. Video recordings of injected, spontaneously beating myotubes showed contracting myofibrils with 2.3 microns sarcomeres adjacent to noncontracting fibers with finely spaced periodicities of alpha-actinin. Time sequences of the same living myotube over a 24-h period revealed that the spacings between the minisarcomeres increased from 0.9-1.3 to 1.6-2.3 microns. Embryonic cardiac myocytes usually contained contractile networks of fully formed sarcomeres together with noncontractile minisarcomeres in peripheral areas of the cytoplasm. In some cells, individual myofibrils with 1.9-2.3 microns sarcomeres were connected in series with minisarcomeres. Double labeling of cardiac myocytes and myotubes with alpha-actinin and a monoclonal antibody directed against adult chicken skeletal myosin showed that all fibers that contained alpha-actinin also contained skeletal muscle myosin. This was true whether alpha-actinin was present in Z-bands of fully formed sarcomeres or present in the closely spaced beads of minisarcomeres. We propose that the closely spaced beads containing alpha-actinin are nascent Z-bands that grow apart and associate laterally with neighboring arrays containing alpha-actinin to form sarcomeres during myofibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Specific interaction of vinculin with alpha-actinin   总被引:33,自引:0,他引:33  
Vinculin and alpha-actinin are cytoskeletal proteins present at focal contacts of the ventral surface of cultured fibroblasts. We labelled alpha-actinin with an acceptor fluorophore and vinculin with a donor. A mixture of vinculin and alpha-actinin showed a 28% quench, due to energy transfer, suggesting an interaction. Quench of vinculin was dependent on the concentration of alpha-actinin; Scatchard analysis gives a dissociation constant in the microM range. Quench was inhibited by excess unlabelled alpha-actinin, and by reaction of the acceptor protein with p-chloromercuribenzoate. We found that vinculin had a slightly greater elution volume in a gel filtration column equilibrated with alpha-actinin, indicating a higher effective Stokes radius due to the interaction of the two proteins.  相似文献   

18.
alpha-Actinin is an evolutionarily conserved actin filament crosslinking protein with functions in both muscle and non-muscle cells. In non-muscle cells, interactions between alpha-actinin and its many binding partners regulate cell adhesion and motility. In Drosophila, one non-muscle and two muscle-specific alpha-actinin isoforms are produced by alternative splicing of a single gene. In wild-type ovaries, alpha-actinin is ubiquitously expressed. The non-muscle alpha-actinin mutant Actn(Delta233), which is viable and fertile, lacks alpha-actinin expression in ovarian germline cells, while somatic follicle cells express alpha-actinin at late oogenesis. Here we show that this latter population of alpha-actinin, termed FC-alpha-actinin, is absent from the dorsoanterior follicle cells, and we present evidence that this is the result of a negative regulation by combined Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and Decapentaplegic signalling. Furthermore, EGFR signalling increased the F-actin bundling activity of ectopically expressed muscle-specific alpha-actinin. We also describe a novel morphogenetic event in the follicle cells that occurs during egg elongation. This event involves a transient repolarisation of the basal actin fibres and the assembly of a posterior beta-integrin-dependent adhesion site accumulating alpha-actinin and Enabled. Clonal analysis using Actn null alleles demonstrated that although alpha-actinin was not necessary for actin fibre formation or maintenance, the cytoskeletal remodelling was perturbed, and Enabled did not localise in the posterior adhesion site. Nevertheless, epithelial morphogenesis proceeded normally. This work provides the first evidence that alpha-actinin is involved in the organisation of the cytoskeleton in a non-muscle tissue in Drosophila.  相似文献   

19.
The complete 897-amino-acid sequence of chicken skeletal muscle alpha-actinin and the 856-amino-acid sequence (97% of the entire sequence) of chicken fibroblast alpha-actinin have been determined by cloning and sequencing the cDNAs. Genomic Southern analysis with the cDNA sequences shows that skeletal and fibroblast alpha-actinins are encoded by separate single-copy genes. RNA blot analyzes show that the skeletal alpha-actinin gene is expressed in the pectoralis muscle and that the fibroblast gene is expressed in the gizzard smooth muscle as well as in the fibroblast. The deduced skeletal alpha-actinin molecule has a calculated Mr of 104 x 10(3), and each alpha-actinin can be divided into three domains: (1) the NH2-terminal highly conserved actin-binding domain, which shows similarity to the product of the Duchenne's muscular dystrophy locus; (2) the middle rod-shaped dimer-forming domain, which contains the spectrin-type repeat units; and (3) the COOH-terminal two EF-hand consensus regions. Comparison of the skeletal alpha-actinin sequence with the fibroblast and smooth muscle alpha-actinin sequences demonstrated that the EF-hand structure was conserved in all of these alpha-actinin sequences, despite the reported variability of the Ca2+ sensitivities of the actin-gelation by various alpha-actinin isoforms.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2451-2461
Isolated cell preparations from chicken gizzard smooth muscle typically contain a mixture of cell fragments and whole cells. Both species are spontaneously permeable and may be preloaded with externally applied phalloidin and antibodies and then induced to contract with Mg ATP. Labeling with antibodies revealed that the cell fragments specifically lacked certain cytoskeletal proteins (vinculin, filamin) and were depleted to various degrees in others (desmin, alpha-actinin). The cell fragments showed a unique mode of supercontraction that involved the protrusion of actin filaments through the cell surface during the terminal phase of shortening. In the presence of dextran, to minimize protein loss, the supercontracted products were star-like in form, comprising long actin bundles radiating in all directions from a central core containing myosin, desmin, and alpha-actinin. It is concluded that supercontraction is facilitated by an effective uncoupling of the contractile apparatus from the cytoskeleton, due to partial degradation of the latter, which allows unhindered sliding of actin over myosin. Homogenization of the cell fragments before or after supercontraction produced linear bipolar dimer structures composed of two oppositely polarized bundles of actin flanking a central bundle of myosin filaments. Actin filaments were shown to extend the whole length of the bundles and their length averaged integral to 4.5 microns. Myosin filaments in the supercontracted dimers averaged 1.6 microns in length. The results, showing for the first time the high actin to myosin filament length ratio in smooth muscle are readily consistent with the slow speed of shortening of this tissue. Other implications of the results are also discussed.  相似文献   

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