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1.
Threonine phosphorylation is associated with mitosis in HeLa cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
J Y Zhao  J Kuang  R C Adlakha  P N Rao 《FEBS letters》1989,249(2):389-395
Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of proteins play an important role in the regulation of mitosis and meiosis. In our previous studies we have described mitosis-specific monoclonal antibody MPM-2 that recognizes a family of phosphopeptides in mitotic cells but not in interphase cells. These peptides are synthesized in S phase but modified by phosphorylation during G2/mitosis transition. The epitope for the MPM-2 is a phosphorylated site. In this study, we attempted to determine which amino acids are phosphorylated during the G2-mitosis (M) transition. We raised a polyclonal antibody against one of the antigens recognized by MPM-2, i.e. a protein of 55 kDa, that is present in interphase cells but modified by phosphorylation during mitosis. This antibody recognizes the p55 protein in both interphase and mitosis while it is recognized by the monoclonal antibody MPM-2 only in mitotic cells. Phosphoamino acid analysis of protein p55 from 32P-labeled S-phase and M-phase HeLa cell extracts after immunoprecipitation with anti-p55 antibodies revealed that threonine was extensively phosphorylated in p55 during G2-M but not in S phase, whereas serine was phosphorylated during both S and M phases. Tyrosine was not phosphorylated. Identical results were obtained when antigens recognized by MPM-2 were subjected to similar analysis. As cells completed mitosis and entered G1 phase phosphothreonine was completely dephosphorylated whereas phosphoserine was not. These results suggest that phosphorylation of threonine might be specific to some of the mitosis-related events.  相似文献   

2.
. The behavior of nuclear envelopes during mitosis in Amoeba proteus was studied by means of indirect immunofluo-rescence staining using a monoclonal antibody against a 220-kD membrane-associated protein of amoebae in conjunction with DAPI staining of chromatin. The antibody selectively recognized antigens on nuclear envelopes during interphase but did not react with the nuclear membranes during mitosis until after cytokinesis had been completed. Thus, it appeared that the membrane-associated protein reacting with the monoclonal antibody and normally present on the nuclear membranes was absent from fragmented nuclear membranes or nuclear membranes that were continuous but did not have the honey-comb lamina. The findings suggested that the 220-kD nuclear-membrane protein may be involved in the dissolution and reformation of the honey-comb lamina during mitosis in amoebae.  相似文献   

3.
The organization of intermediate-sized filaments (IF) of the cytokeratin type was studied in cultures of PtK2 cells in which typical IF structures are maintained during mitosis, using a monoclonal antibody (KG 8.13). This antibody reacts, in immunoblotting experiments, with the larger of the two major cytokeratin polypeptides present in these cells but, using standard immunofluorescence microscopy procedures, does not react with the cytokeratin filaments abundant in interphase cells, in striking contrast to various antisera and other monoclonal cytokeratin antibodies. In the same cell cultures, however, the antibody does react with cytokeratin filaments of mitotic and early postmitotic cells. The specific reaction with cytokeratin filaments of mitotic cells only is due to the exposure of the specific immunologic determinant in mitosis and its masking in interphase cells. Treatment of interphase cells with both Triton X-100 as well as with methanol and acetone alters the cytokeratin filaments and allows them to react with this monoclonal antibody. A similar unmasking was noted after treatment with buffer containing 2 M urea or low concentrations of trypsin. We conclude that the organization of cytokeratin, albeit still arranged in typical IF, is altered during mitosis of PtK2 cells.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the behaviour in interphase and mitotic human cells of a 125 kDa (pI 6.5) antigen, associated with the nuclear matrix and detected in proliferating cells. Indirect immunofluorescence with a specific monoclonal antibody reveals that during interphase in WISH and Namalwa cells, as well as phytohaemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes, the antigen displays a speckled distribution in the nucleoplasm of all cells. At early prophase the fluorescence intensity of the coalesced speckles increases markedly. During metaphase and anaphase the antigen gives maximal fluorescence distributed diffusely in the nucleoplasm, while chromosomes remain negative. At anaphase and cytokinesis the antigen is still cytoplasmic, but fluorescence intensity decreases. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting reveal that the p125/6.5 antigen displays a net increase in isolated mitotic cells as compared to interphase cells. These results suggest that the p125/6.5 protein participates in late G2 phase and G2/M transition events preparing the cell for mitosis.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of U snRNAs during mitosis was studied by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy with snRNA cap-specific anti-m3G antibodies. Whereas the snRNAs are strictly nuclear at late prophase, they become distributed in the cell plasm at metaphase and anaphase. They re-enter the newly formed nuclei of the two daughter cells at early telophase, producing speckled nuclear fluorescent patterns typical of interphase cells. While the snRNAs become concentrated at the rim of the condensing chromosomes and at interchromosomal regions at late prophase, essentially no association of the snRNAs was observed with the condensed chromosomes during metaphase and anaphase. Independent immunofluorescent studies with anti-(U1)RNP autoantibodies, which react specifically with proteins unique to the U1 snRNP species, showed the same distribution of snRNP antigens during mitosis as was observed with the snRNA-specific anti-m3G antibody. Immunoprecipitation studies with anti-(U1)RNP and anti-Sm autoantibodies, as well as protein analysis of snRNPs isolated from extracts of mitotic cells, demonstrate that the snRNAs remain associated in a specific manner with the same set of proteins during interphase and mitosis. The concept that the overall structure of the snRNPs is maintained during mitosis also applies to the coexistence of the snRNAs U4 and U6 in a single ribonucleoprotein complex. Particle sedimentation studies in sucrose gradients reveal that most of the snRNPs present in sonicates of mitotic cells do not sediment as free RNP particles, but remain associated with high molecular weight (HMW) structures other than chromatin, most probably with hnRNA/RNP.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Chromatin associated with the nuclear envelope appears in the interphase nuclei as a layer of anchorosomes, granules 20-25 nm in diameter. The fraction of chromatin directly associated with the nuclear envelope is resistant to decondensation, shows a low level of DNA methylation, and contains specific acid-soluble proteins. However, mechanisms underlying the interaction of chromatin with the nuclear envelope are not fully understood. Specifically, it is not known whether anchorosomes are permanent structures or if they undergo reversible disassembly during mitosis, when contacts between chromatin and the nuclear envelope are destroyed. We obtained immune serum recognizing a 68 kDa protein from the nuclear envelopes fraction and studied the localization of this protein in interphase and mitotic cells. We show that this protein present in the NE/anchorosomal fraction does not remain bound with chromosomes during mitosis. It dissociates from chromosomes at the beginning of the prophase and then can be identified again at the periphery of the newly forming nuclei in the telophase.  相似文献   

8.
The distribution of 2 nuclear antigens in the interphase nuclei of liver of Pleurodeles waltl was determined with the help of monoclonal antibodies, using immunofluorescence for light microscopy and indirect immunoperoxidase and immunogold labeling procedures for electron microscopic localization. The antibodies C36/1 and A33/22 label antigens with relative molecular masses of 270 kDa and 80 kDa, and isoelectric points of 7.0 and 6.4, respectively. The liver of urodels is characterized by the presence of a peripheral layer of hematopoietic cells around the parenchymatous tissue formed by typical hepatocytes. The antibody C36/1 labels the nuclei of both types of cells, whereas the antibody A33/22 labels the nuclei of hepatocytes but not those of the peripheral hematopoietic cells. With both these antibodies, labeling, whenever observed, is restricted to fibrillar structures in the interchromatin space, i.e., to peri- and inter-chromatin fibrils; condensed chromatin, nucleoli, and nuclear envelope are not labeled.  相似文献   

9.
The gentle removal of chromatin uncovers a nuclear matrix consisting of two parts: a nuclear lamina connected to the intermediate filaments of the cytoskeleton and an internal matrix of thick, polymorphic fibers connecting the lamina to masses in the nuclear interior. This internal nuclear matrix can be further fractionated to uncover a highly branched network of 9 nm and 13 nm core filaments retaining some enmeshed bodies. The core filament network retains most of the nuclear RNA, as well as the fA12RNP antigen, and may be the most basic or core element of internal nuclear structure. One high molecular weight protein component of the core filament network, the H1B2 antigen, is normally masked in the interphase nucleus and is uncovered as the chromatin condenses at mitosis. This protein is associated with a fibrogranular network surrounding and connected to the chromosomes. The core filament-associated fA12 antigen also becomes associated with this perichromosomal network. We propose that the core filament nuclear matrix structure may not completely disassemble at mitosis but, rather, that parts remain as a structural network connected to chromosomes and other mitotic structures. These mitotic networks may, in turn, serve as the core structures on which the nuclear matrices of daughter cells are built.  相似文献   

10.
mAbs were generated against HeLa nuclear matrix proteins and one, HIB2, which selectively stained mitotic cells, was selected for further study. Western blot analysis showed H1B2 antibody detected a protein of 240 kD in the nuclear matrix fractions. The H1B2 antigen was completely masked in immunofluorescently stained interphase cells. However, removing chromatin with DNase I digestion and 0.25 M ammonium sulfate extraction exposed the protein epitope. The resulting fluorescence pattern was bright, highly punctate, and entirely nuclear. Further extraction of the nuclear matrix with 2 M NaCl uncovers an underlying, anastomosing network of 9-13 nm core filaments. Most of the H1B2 antigen was retained in the fibrogranular masses enmeshed in the core filament network and not in the filaments themselves. The H1B2 antigen showed remarkable behavior at mitosis. As cells approached prophase the antigen became unmasked to immunofluorescent staining without the removal of chromatin. First appearing as a bright spot, the antibody staining spread through the nucleus finally concentrating in the region around the condensed chromosomes. The antibody also brightly stained the spindle poles and, more weakly, in a punctate pattern in the cytoskeleton around the spindle. As the chromosomes separated at anaphase, H1B2 remained with the separating daughter sets of chromosomes. The H1B2 antigen returned to the reforming nucleus at telophase, but left a bright staining region in the midbody. Immunoelectron microscopy of resinless sections showed that, in the mitotic cell, the H1B2 antibody did not stain chromosomes and centrioles themselves, but decorated a fibrogranular network surrounding and connected to the chromosomes and a fibrogranular structure surrounding the centriole.  相似文献   

11.
CMF1 is a protein expressed in embryonic striated muscle with onset of expression preceding that of contractile proteins. Disruption of CMF1 in myoblasts disrupts muscle-specific protein expression. Preliminary studies indicate both nuclear and cytoplasmic distribution of CMF1 protein, suggesting functional roles in both cellular compartments. Here we examine the nuclear function of CMF1, using a newly characterized antibody generated against the CMF1 nuclear localization domain and a CMF1 nuclear localization domain-deleted stable myocyte line. The antibody demonstrates nuclear distribution of the CMF1 protein both in vivo and in cell lines, with clustering of CMF1 protein around chromatin during mitosis. In more differentiated myocytes, the protein shifts to the cytoplasm. The CMF1 NLS-deleted cell lines have markedly impaired capacity to differentiate. Specifically, these cells express less contractile protein than wild-type or full-length CMF1 stably transfected cells, and do not fuse properly into multinucleate syncytia with linear nuclear alignment. In response to low serum medium, a signal to differentiate, CMF1 NLS-deleted cells enter G0, but continue to express proliferation markers and will reenter the cell cycle when stimulated by restoring growth medium. These data suggest that CMF1 is involved in regulation the transition from proliferation to differentiation in embryonic muscle.  相似文献   

12.
Salt-extracted proteins of taxol-stabilized microtubules from Chinese hamster ovary cells arrested at mitosis were used to immunize mice for hybridoma production. From a group of related monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), one, C9, recognized an epitope on antigens localized by immunofluorescence microscopy to interphase centrosomes and nuclei. The availability of the nuclear antigen was cell cycle-dependent; however, permeabilization of cells before fixation revealed that the antigen was present throughout the cell cycle. The nuclear antigen was exposed during prophase and was released from the nucleus upon nuclear envelope breakdown filling the cytoplasm of the mitotic cell. Antigenic material re-accumulated at daughter nuclei and was concealed during G1 phase. Detergent extraction of the cytoplasmic antigen from mitotic cells enabled localization of antigens to centrosomes, kinetochores, and the furrowing region/midbody. Immunoblot analysis of cells of a variety of species of origin identified an approximate 250 kD polypeptide as corresponding to the nuclear antigen, whereas polypeptides of 107/117 kD as well as approximately 250 kD accounted for the mitotic cytoplasmic antigens. No polypeptides could be associated with antigens at centrosomes, kinetochores, or midbodies. This MAb joins the antibody preparations previously reported that describe nuclear antigens, or epitopes on antigens, enhanced at mitosis.  相似文献   

13.
K Riabowol  G Draetta  L Brizuela  D Vandre  D Beach 《Cell》1989,57(3):393-401
A homolog of the fission yeast cdc2-encoded protein kinase (p34) is a component of M phase promoting factor in Xenopus oocytes. The homologous kinase in human HeLa cells is maximally active during mitosis, suggesting a mitotic role in mammalian somatic cells. This has been directly investigated by microinjection of anti-p34 antibodies into serum-stimulated rat fibroblasts. DNA synthesis was unaffected but cell division was quantitatively blocked in injected cells. Injection of antibodies against p13suc1, a component of the p34 kinase complex, did not block mitosis but caused mitotic abnormalities resulting in cells containing multiple micronuclei in the subsequent interphase. p34 localized in the nucleus during interphase. During mitosis, a fraction tightly associated with centrosomes. p13 was more evenly distributed between the nucleus and cytoplasm. These observations demonstrate that cdc2 is a nuclear and centrosomal protein that is required for mitosis in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

14.
This laboratory has previously isolated a fraction from rat liver nuclei consisting of nuclear pore complexes associated with the proteinaceous lamina which underlies the inner nuclear membrane. Using protein eluted from sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gels, we have prepared antibodies in chickens to each of the three predominant pore complex- lamina bands. Ouchterlony double diffusion analysis shows that each of these individual bands cross-reacts strongly with all three antisera. In immunofluorescence localization performed on tissue culture cells with these antibodies, we obtain a pattern of intense staining at the periphery of the interphase nucleus, with little or no cytoplasmic reaction. Electron microscope immunoperoxidase staining of rat liver nuclei with these antibodies labels exclusively the nuclear periphery. Furthermore, reaction occurs in areas which contain the lamina, but not at the pore complexes. While our isolation procedure extracts the internal contents of nuclei completely, semiquantitative Ouchterlony analysis shows that it releases negligible amounts of these lamina antigens. Considered together, our results indicate that these three bands represent major components of a peripheral nuclear lamina, and are not structural elements of an internal "nuclear protein matrix." Fluorescence microscopy shows that the perinuclear interphase localization of these lamina proteins undergoes dramatic changes during mitosis. Concomitant with nuclear envelope disassembly in prophase, these antigens assume a diffuse localization throughout the cell. This distribution persists until telophase, when the antigens become progressively and completely localized at the surface of the daughter chromosome masses. We propose that the lamina is a biological polymer which can undergo reversible disassembly during mitosis.  相似文献   

15.
A monoclonal antibody (3C5) isolated from a mouse immunized with human chromatin stained the nuclei of all cultured cell types tested by indirect immunofluorescence. Experiments with HeLa and PtK1 cells demonstrated striking cell-cycle-related changes in the staining properties of the target antigen. A rapid increase in nuclear fluorescence was seen in prophase, with antigen located between the condensing chromosomes. In metaphase and anaphase cells antigen was present throughout the cytoplasm with the chromosomes apparently unstained. However, isolated metaphase chromosomes showed intense, peripheral staining. In telophase cells immunofluorescent staining was most intense among the decondensing chromosomes and by early G1 staining was predominantly nuclear. Nuclear fluorescence faded as cells progressed through interphase. By protein blotting and immunostaining, 3C5 recognized protein bands with subunit molecular weights of 130, 73, 50, 38, 32 and 22 to 25 kDa. These bands were present in all human and rodent cultured cell types tested. All bands were extracted by 6 M urea or 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) but not by Triton X-100. Our results provide evidence against the involvement of a common carbohydrate moiety, in vitro proteolysis or non-specific cross reaction in this multi-banded pattern. The same family of proteins was detected in mitotic and interphase cells, suggesting that the changes in immunofluorescent staining through mitosis are due to changes in antigen accessibility. Subcellular fractionation experiments showed that all major bands were present in the nuclear fraction. Only two (50 and 32 kDa) were detected also in the post-nuclear membrane fraction and none were present in the soluble cytoplasmic fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The lamin B receptor (LBR) is an integral protein of the inner nuclear membrane that interacts with lamin B in vitro. If contains a 204-amino acid nucleoplasmic amino-terminal domain and a hydrophobic carboxyl-terminal domain with eight putative transmembrane segments. We found cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation of LBR using phosphoamino acid analysis and phosphopeptide mapping of in vivo 32P-labeled LBR immunoprecipitated from chicken cells in interphase and arrested in mitosis. LBR was phosphorylated only on serine residues in interphase and on serine and threonine residues in mitosis. Some serine residues phosphorylated in interphase were not phosphorylated in mitosis. To identify a threonine residue specifically phosphorylated in mitosis and the responsible protein kinase, wild-type and mutant LBR nucleoplasmic domain fusion proteins were phosphorylated in vitro by p34cdc2-type protein kinase. Comparisons of phosphopeptide maps to those of in vivo 32P-labeled mitotic LBR showed that Thr188 is likely to be phosphorylated by this enzyme during mitosis. These phosphorylation/dephosphorylation events may be responsible for some of the changes in the interaction between the nuclear lamina and the inner nuclear membrane that occur during mitosis.  相似文献   

17.
Epac belongs to a new family of proteins that can directly mediate the action of the intracellular second messenger cAMP by activating a downstream small GTPase Rap1. The Epac/Rap1 pathway represents a novel cAMP-signaling cascade that is independent of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). In this study, we have used fluorescence microscopy to probe the intracellular targeting of Epac during different stages of the cell division cycle and the structural features that are important for Epac localization. Our results suggest Epac, endogenous or expressed as a green fluorescent protein fusion protein, is mainly localized to the nuclear membrane and mitochondria during interphase in COS-7 cells. Deletion mutagenesis analysis reveals that whereas the DEP domain is responsible for membrane association, the mitochondrial-targeting sequence is located at the N terminus. Although Epac predominantly exhibits perinuclear localization in interphase, the subcellular localization of Epac is cell cycle-dependent. Epac disassociates from the nuclear membrane and localizes to the mitotic spindle and centrosomes in metaphase. At the end of the cell cycle, Epac is observed to reassociate with the nuclear envelope and concentrate around the contractile ring. Furthermore, overexpression of Epac in COS-7 cells leads to an increase in multinuclear cell populations. These results suggest that Epac may play an important role in mitosis.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence for the presence of a Cdc2-like protein in Physarum polycephalum has been obtained using a peptide antibody directed against a highly conserved amino acid sequence near the N-terminal end of Cdc2, Cdc28 and Cdc2HS. The antibody detected a 34 kDa cytoplasmic protein, similar in apparent size to Cdc2 in yeast and Cdc2Hs in HeLa cells. A 60 kDa nuclear band was also detected in Physarum but not in yeast or HeLa. Evidence is presented that this is not related to the 34 kDa protein nor is it found in HeLa nuclei or yeast cells. The Cdc2-like protein level did not fluctuate over more than 10 h of the naturally synchronous cell cycle of Physarum. Several heat-shock experiments using regimens that either: delayed mitosis and S-phase; prevented mitosis or uncoupled S-phase from mitosis were performed. None had any effect on the level of the Cdc2-like protein. The induction of spherulation by starvation was shown to have no effect on the levels of the 34 kDa Cdc2 analog. The invariant level of the 34 kDa protein during the cell cycle and starvation is consistent with previous results obtained with yeast. Three heat-shock regimens which either delay mitosis, eliminate S-phase or uncouple mitosis from S-phase in Physarum also had no effect on the level of the 34 kDa protein. This result emphasizes the stable nature of this protein.  相似文献   

19.
20.
By indirect immunofluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy, we studied the behavior of intermediate filaments during mitosis in three human epithelial cell lines, derived from normal epidermis (PcaSE-1, from a cancer patient), stratified epithelium (CNE, from nasopharyngeal carcinoma) and simple epithelium (SPC-A-1 from lung adenocarcinoma) respectively. CNE cells and SPC-A-1 cells express two different intermediate filament systems; keratin filaments and vimentin filaments, but PcaSE-1 cells only express keratin filaments. The keratin filament system in PcaSE-1 cells remained intact and encircled the developing mitotic spindle as the cells entered mitosis. In contrast, in CNE cells and SPC-A-1 cells, keratin filaments appeared to disassemble into amorphous cytoplasmic bodies during mitosis. However, their vimentin filaments remained morphologically intact throughout mitosis. We propose; (1) The disassembly of keratin filaments in mitotic epithelial cells is more or less associated with the degree of their cell malignancy rather than with the abundance of keratin filaments in interphase. (2) Intermediate filaments may be involved in the positioning and/or centering of the spindle during mitosis. (3) The possible function of vimentin filament system in CNE cells is positioning and orientation of chromosomes.  相似文献   

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