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1.
Prothymosin alpha, a polypeptide of 109 to 111 amino acid residues, contains the entire thymosin alpha 1 sequence (residues 1-28) at its amino terminal. Human peripheral blood monocytes incubated with prothymosin alpha release thymosin alpha 1 in the culture supernatants. In addition total RNA is found to increase. The production of thymosin alpha 1 involves de novo protein synthesis as shown by the kinetics of this release and its inhibition by actinomycin D and cycloheximide. Thymosin alpha 1 release, possibly in association with HLA-DR, stimulates the proliferation of the T cell population.  相似文献   

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Prothymosin alpha, a small and highly acidic nuclear protein related to cell proliferation, is known to be covalently attached to a small unidentified cytoplasmic RNA in mammalian cells. Here we demonstrate that recombinant rat prothymosin a links covalently to an RNA when overproduced in Escherichia coli cells. The RNA species of this complex is represented by a wide range of bacterial tRNAs. tRNA(Lys), tRNA(3Ser), tRNA(2Ile), and tRNA(mMet) were identified by sequencing. Prothymosin alpha appears to be linked to the 5' terminus of tRNA. tRNA attachment site lies close to the carboxy-terminus of prothymosin alpha. Furthermore, the carboxy-terminal peptide of prothymosin alpha is also competent for tRNA binding. The site of tRNA attachment coincides with the nuclear localization signal of prothymosin alpha, and tRNA binding might be expected to affect subcellular localization of this protein.  相似文献   

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Background  

MiR-1 (microRNA-1) has been used as a positive control in some microRNA experiments. We found that miR-1 transfection of nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells reveals a typical apoptotic process as shown by time-lapse microscopy so we investigated the mechanisms of miR-1 inducing apoptosis.  相似文献   

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Prothymosin alpha (ProT alpha) is a nuclear protein that is widely distributed in mammalian tissues, and is thought to play a role in cell proliferation. In an attempt to shed light on this role, affinity chromatography on ProT alpha-Sepharose columns was used to identify proteins in subcellular extracts of transformed human lymphocytes (NC37 cells) that interact with ProT alpha in vitro, and thus may interact with ProT alpha in vivo. Immunoblotting techniques were used to screen the ProT alpha-binding fractions for histones and other proteins involved in nuclear transport and cell-cycle control. The most abundant ProT alpha-binding proteins were histones H2A, H2B, H3, and H4. Of the nuclear-transport proteins, karyopherin beta1, Rch-1, Ran, and RCC1 were detected at high concentrations; NTF2, nucleoporin p62, and Hsp70 were detected at low concentrations; while tranportin, CAS, and Ran BPI were not detected. Of the cell-cycle control proteins, PCNA, Cdk2, and cyclin A were detected at high concentrations; cdc2, Cdk4, and cyclin B were detected at very low concentrations; while cyclin D1, cyclin D3, Cip1, and Kip1 were not detected. These results suggest (i) that ProT alpha is transported into the nucleus by the karyopherin beta1-Rch-1 complex, and (ii) that ProT alpha may interact in the nucleus with proteins involved in DNA metabolism and cell-cycle control.  相似文献   

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A proliferation-related human protein prothymosin alpha displays exclusively nuclear localization when produced in human and Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells, whereas its isolated bipartite NLS confers nuclear targeting of the GFP reporter in human but not in yeast cells. To test whether this observation is indicative of the existence of specific requirements for nuclear targeting of proteins in yeast, a set of prothymosin alpha deletion mutants was constructed. Subcellular localization of these mutants fused to GFP was determined in yeast and compared with their ability to bind yeast importin alpha (Srp1p) in vitro. The NLS of prothymosin alpha turned out to be both necessary and sufficient to provide protein recognition by importin alpha. However, the NLS-importin alpha interaction did not ensure nuclear targeting of prothymosin alpha derivatives. This defect could be complemented by adding distinct prothymosin alpha sequences to the NLS-containing import substrate, possibly by providing binding site(s) for additional components of the yeast nuclear import machinery.  相似文献   

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Many apoptotic signals are known to induce release to cytosol of cytochrome c, a small mitochondrial protein with positively charged amino acid residues dominating over negatively charged ones. On the other hand, in this group, it was shown that prothymosin alpha (PT), a small nuclear protein where 53 of 109 amino acid residues are negatively charged, is truncated to form a protein of 99 amino acid residues which accumulates in cytosol during apoptosis [FEBS Lett. 467 (2000) 150]. It was suggested that positively charged cytochrome c and negatively charged truncated prothymosin alpha (tPT), when meeting in cytosol, can interact with each other. In this paper, such an interaction is shown. (1) Formation of cytochrome cz.ccirf;tPT complex is demonstrated by a blot-overlay assay. (2) Analytical centrifugation of solution containing cytochrome c and tPT reveals formation of complexes of molecular masses higher than those of these proteins. The masses increase when the cytochrome c/tPT ratio increases. High concentration of KCl prevents the complex formation. (3) In the complexes formed, cytochrome c becomes autoxidizable; its reduction by superoxide or ascorbate as well as its operation as electron carrier between the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes appear to be inhibited. (4) tPT inhibits cytochrome c oxidation by H(2)O(2), catalyzed by peroxidase. Thus, tPT abolishes all antioxidant functions of cytochrome c which, in the presence of tPT, becomes in fact a pro-oxidant. A possible role of tPT in the development of reactive oxygen species- and cytochrome c-mediated apoptosis is discussed.  相似文献   

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Human prothymosin alpha: amino acid sequence and immunologic properties   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Prothymosin alpha has been purified from human thymus and its amino acid sequence determined, except for a 15 amino acid segment including 10 glutamyl residues near the middle of the molecule. Like prothymosin alpha from rat thymus [A. A. Haritos, R. Blacher, S. Stein, J. Caldarella, and B. L. Horecker (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 343-346], human prothymosin contains the thymosin alpha 1 sequence at its NH2-terminus. It contains a total of 109-110 residues compared to 111-112 for rat prothymosin alpha, with deletions corresponding to positions Gln39 and Lys108 of the rat polypeptide. Human prothymosin alpha also differs from rat prothymosin alpha at positions corresponding to residues 87, 92, and 102 of the latter, with substitutions of alanine for proline, alanine for valine, and aspartic acid for glutamic acid, respectively. Human prothymosin is significantly less active than rat prothymosin in protecting mice against infection with Candida albicans and in stimulating release in vivo of migration inhibitory factor. Thus, the differences in amino acid sequences, present mainly the COOH-terminal half of the polypeptides, may determine species specificity in biological properties.  相似文献   

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Prothymosin alpha, an immunoactive polypeptide of 12 kDa, has been isolated from porcine thymus, spleen, lung and kidney. It lacks aromatic and sulfur-containing amino acids and has a high content of glutamic and aspartic acids. Tryptic digestion of porcine thymus prothymosin alpha yielded peptides which on separation, amino acid analysis and alignment with the known sequence of prothymosin alpha from rat and man showed that the amino terminal portion of the molecule is conserved and the few differences present are confined to the carboxy terminal.  相似文献   

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ARMc8 (armadillo-repeat-containing protein 8) is a key component of the CTLH (C-terminal to lissencephaly type-1-like homology motif) complex in mammalian cells. This complex is well conserved in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and has been characterized as a FBPase (fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase)-degrading complex. The yeast homologue of ARMc8, Gid (glucose-induced degradation) 5p, plays an essential role in the ubiquitin- and proteasome-dependent degradation of FBPase. To elucidate the function of ARMc8, we used a yeast two-hybrid system to screen a human skeletal muscle cDNA library. alpha-Catenin was isolated as a binding protein of ARMc8alpha. This association was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation assay using MDCK (Madin-Darby canine kidney) cells in which exogenous alpha-catenin and ARMc8alpha were overexpressed. The association was also confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation assay using endogenous proteins in untransfected MDCK cells. We then used immunofluorescence microscopy of MDCK cells and C2C12 cells to investigate the intracellular distribution of ARMc8. Exogenously expressed ARMc8 was co-localized with alpha-catenin and beta-catenin along the cell membrane, suggesting an association between alpha-catenin and ARMc8 in the cells. To compare the binding domain of alpha-catenin with ARMc8alpha with that of beta-catenin, we performed a co-immunoprecipitation assay, again using 5'- and 3'-deletion constructs of alpha-catenin. The N-terminal sequence (amino acids 82-148) of alpha-catenin was sufficient to bind to both ARMc8alpha and beta-catenin. Next, we investigated the proteasome-dependent degradation of alpha-catenin by immunoblotting using proteasome inhibitors. Co-expression of ARMc8alpha with alpha-catenin resulted in rapid degradation of the exogenous alpha-catenin. Furthermore, ARMc8 knockdown inhibited alpha-catenin degradation and prolonged the half-life of alpha-catenin. We conclude that ARMc8alpha associates with alpha-catenin and up-regulates its degradation.  相似文献   

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Human prothymosin alpha is a proliferation-related nuclear protein undergoing caspase-mediated fragmentation in apoptotic cells. We show here that caspase-3 is the principal executor of prothymosin alpha fragmentation in vivo. In apoptotic HeLa cells as well as in vitro, caspase-3 cleaves prothymosin alpha at one major carboxy terminal (DDVD(99)) and several suboptimal sites. Prothymosin alpha cleavage at two amino-terminal sites (AAVD(6) and NGRD(31)) contributes significantly to the final pattern of prothymosin alpha fragmentation in vitro and could be detected to occur in apoptotic cells. The major caspase cleavage at D(99) disrupts the nuclear localization signal of prothymosin alpha, which leads to a profound alteration in subcellular localization of the truncated protein. By using a set of anti-prothymosin alpha monoclonal antibodies, we were able to observe nuclear escape and cell surface exposure of endogenous prothymosin alpha in apoptotic, but not in normal, cells. We demonstrate also that ectopic production of human prothymosin alpha and its mutants with nuclear or nuclear-cytoplasmic localization confers increased resistance of HeLa cells toward the tumor necrosis factor-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

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Fifteen years of prothymosin alpha: contradictory past and new horizons   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Piñeiro A  Cordero OJ  Nogueira M 《Peptides》2000,21(9):1433-1446
Prothymosin alpha (ProTalpha) is a highly acidic and small protein of only 111 amino acids with an unusual primary structure. One would expected it to play an essential role in the organism, as it has a wide distribution and is high conserved among mammals, yet its exact function remains elusive. Despite the number of effects described for ProTalpha, intracellular and extracellular, none are accepted as its physiological role. Furthermore, many other aspects of its biology still remain obscure. In this review, we discuss the structural properties, location, gene family, functions and immunomodulatory activities of and cellular receptors for ProTalpha. These topics are addressed in an attempt to reconcile opposing outlooks while emphasizing those points where scant investigations do exist. We have also re-evaluated some previous results in light of the structural properties of ProTalpha and have found that molecular mimetism could be the underlying basis. This molecular mimicry hypothesis provides a clue that must not be overlooked for a realistic appraisal of future results.  相似文献   

18.
By means of immunohistochemical methods, we have investigated the cellular distribution of prothymosin alpha and parathymosin in rat thymus and spleen, using specific antibodies raised against thymosin alpha-1 and against parathymosin. We observed prothymosin alpha immunoreactivity in lymphoid cells both in thymus and spleen. In the thymus, prothymosin alpha staining was more marked in cortex than in medulla. In the spleen, prothymosin alpha was found in lymphocytes of the periarteriolar lymphatic sheaths and was especially prominent in the germinal centers. Parathymosin immunoreactivity in the thymus was mainly localized in the medulla; positive cells were reticuloepithelial cells from the thymic reticulum and the blood barrier. Thymocytes were negative. In spleen, parathymosin was found in reticular cells arranged in a ring between the periarteriolar lymphatic sheath and the marginal zone. Our results do not support an exclusive role for these peptides as immune system hormones or cytokines.  相似文献   

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We have analyzed the RNA expression of prothymosin alpha (ProT alpha) gene during rat development in several tissues and compared it to that of two proteins related to cell proliferation: proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)/cyclin and histone H3 (H3). The expression of ProT alpha gene was found to be regulated in a developmental and tissue-specific manner. The mRNA levels of ProT alpha followed a similar time-course in liver, brain, kidney, and testis, being highly increased in the early periods of postnatal development. However, in thymus ProT alpha mRNA showed only moderate changes throughout development. Our findings suggest that ProT alpha participates in developmental processes like cell proliferation and/or differentiation.  相似文献   

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