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1.
Neurofilaments in mammalian nervous tissues have three subunit proteins. These subunit proteins have apparent molecular masses of 200 (NF200), 150 (NF150) and 68 (NF68) kD. Biochemical assembly studies have indicated that the NF68 protein forms the core of the filament and that the other two proteins are associated proteins. Electron microscopy immunolocalization studies have been performed previously on isolated filaments and on filaments from neurons in culture, and have confirmed the localization of NF68 as a core filament protein and NF200 as a peripheral protein. We have raised two monoclonal antibodies to the NF200 components. Using immunogold labelled protein A, we have been able to localize these antibodies to tissue sections of adult cerebellum at the EM level. With this method, we have found that one of the monoclonal antibodies (NF2) shows a linear arrangement of gold particles directly on the filament, whereas the second monoclonal antibody (NF111) reacts with the filaments to give a periodic arrangement of gold particles. By immunoblotting against chymotryptic fragments of the NF200 protein, we have found that the mAB-NF111 reacts solely with a 160 kD piece, whereas the other monoclonal antibody reacts with both the 160 kD piece and the 40 kD piece. The latter piece was shown to be associated to the filament by binding studies with iodinated NF68. Thus the EM localization studies and the biochemical studies indicate that the two monoclonal antibodies react with different parts of the NF200 molecule, one binding to a part of the molecule which is located closer to the filament, and one to a more peripheral part of the molecule.  相似文献   

2.
Two monoclonal antibodies that recognize Alzheimer's neurofibrillary tangles (ANTs), AD10 and AB18, have been characterized by immunoblotting against human and calf spinal cord neurofilament (NF) and calf brain microtubule preparations. Both antibodies bind to the 200-kilodalton (kd) (NF-H) and 160-kd (NF-M) but not to the 68-kd (NF-L) NF triplet proteins. They also bind to high-molecular-weight microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and tau. AD10 immunostains MAP2 and MAP1 families, whereas AB18 stains mainly MAP1 bands. Preincubation of intact filament preparation or nitrocellulose strips containing electroblotted NF proteins with Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase completely blocks AD10 binding and partially blocks binding of AB18. These results suggest that the determinants recognized by these antibodies are phosphorylated. Immunoblotting of peptide fragments generated by limited proteolysis of NF proteins with alpha-chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease shows that the localization of the antigenic determinants to AD10 and AB18 in NF-H is approximately 100 and 60 kd, respectively, away from the carboxy terminal, a region previously shown to form the NF projection side arm. In NF-M, the antigenic determinants to both antibodies are located also in the projection side arm, in a 60-kd polypeptide adjacent to the alpha-helical filament core. The results show that ANTs contain at least two phosphorylated antigenic sites that are present in NF and MAPs, a finding suggesting that ANTs may be composed of proteins or their fragments with epitopes shared by cytoskeletal proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Antisera to chicken brain antigen (CBA) isolated by hydroxyapatite chromatography from 8 M urea extracts following repeated extractions with phosphate buffer selectively decorate neurofilaments (NF) in neuronal perikarya, dendrites and axons. The antisera also reacted with GFA protein, the astrocyte-specific intermediate filament protein, as indicated by the adsorption of NF immunoreactivity following passage of the antisera through columns prepared with purified GFA protein. Moreover, the antisera stained the polypeptides of the NF triplet (70 kd, 150 kd, 200 kd) and GFA protein by the immunoblotting procedure. Monoclonal antibodies selectively decorating NF in tissue sections were isolated from a fusion of mouse myeloma cells with spleen cells of mice immunized with CBA. By the immunoblotting procedure the antibodies decorated the 150 kd NF polypeptide and GFA protein. No staining of glial filaments or any other structure on tissue sections was also observed with antibodies derived from another fusion strongly reacting with GFA protein on immunoblots. All antibodies (monoclonal and polyclonal) appeared to react with the same region of the GFA polypeptide as indicated by immunoblots of cleavage products.  相似文献   

4.
Electron microscopy of myosin-II molecules and filaments reacted with monoclonal antibodies demonstrates directly where the antibodies bind and shows that certain antibodies can inhibit the polymerization of myosin-II into filaments. The binding sites of seven of 23 different monoclonal antibodies were localized by platinum shadowing of myosin monomer-antibody complexes. The antibodies bind to a variety of sites on the myosin-II molecule, including the heads, the proximal end of the tail near the junction of the heads and tail, and the tip of the tail. The binding sites of eight of the 23 antibodies were also localized on myosin filaments by negative staining. Antibodies that bind to either the myosin heads or to the proximal end of the tail decorate the ends of the bipolar filaments. Some of the antibodies that bind to the tip of the myosin-II tail decorate the bare zone of the myosin-II thin filament with 14-nm periodicity. By combining the data from these electron microscope studies and the peptide mapping and competitive binding studies we have established the binding sites of 16 of 23 monoclonal antibodies. Two of the 23 antibodies block the formation of myosin-II filaments and given sufficient time, disassemble preformed myosin-II filaments. Both antibodies bind near one another at the tip of the myosin-II tail and are those that decorate the bare zone of preformed bipolar filaments with 14-nm periodicity. None of the other antibodies affect myosin filament formation, including one that binds to another site near the tip of the myosin-II tail. This demonstrates that antibodies can inhibit polymerization of myosin-II, but only when they bind to key sites on the tail of the molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Two monoclonal antibodies, FIFI and PHIL, have been prepared using detergent-washed myogenic cells as immunogen. On Western blots of total protein extracts of muscle cells, both antibodies bind to vimentin (52 kD) and its degradation products (major band at 42 kD), but do not bind to mouse proteins or to actin (42 kD). Specificity for a determinant common to vimentin and desmin was confirmed by 2-D gel electrophoresis of muscle cell extracts and purified desmin. Western blots with FIFI reveal particularly well the extreme sensitivity of intermediate filaments (IFs) to proteolysis, which was preventable in brain tissue only by boiling in 1% SDS, although it could be reduced in both brain and muscle by less extreme methods. Western blots suggest a large increase in IF content of differentiating myoblast cell cultures at the time of cell fusion and an increase of at least 4-fold is confirmed by a quantitative immunoassay using a direct ELISA method. Immunofluorescence microscopy shows that this increase is due to the appearance of high concentrations of the intermediate filament antigen at the ends of early myotubes, preceding the appearance of cross-striations in myofibrils. Furthermore, whereas the polar filaments detected by FIFI run right to the ends of the early myotubes and only sparingly penetrate the central area, cross-striated myofibrils (as detected by the monoclonal antibody, SAM) run the length of the myotube but do not reach the ends. Colcemid and colchicine cause the vimentin filaments in fibroblasts to collapse into perinuclear rings or caps, but do not have this effect on the polar fluorescence in early myotubes. Heat shock (2 h at 45 degrees C) has a similar differential effect. The results suggest that early in muscle differentiation intermediate filament proteins accumulate rapidly at myotube ends, where they are organized differently from those in fibroblasts.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Treatment of freshly isolated, bovine neurofilaments with Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase removes over 90% of the phosphate groups from serine residues of the Mr 200,000 and 150,000 polypeptide components (NF200 and NF150). Dephosphorylated NF200 and NF150 remain associated with filaments, but migrate in sodium dodecyl sulfate gels with reduced apparent molecular weights. Unusual migration appears to be due to modification at regions of these polypeptides that are peripheral to the neurofilament backbone as defined by limited chymotryptic digestion. Over 90 monoclonal antibodies recognizing epitopes located within the peripheral domain of native NF200 all show reduced affinity for dephosphorylated NF200. A single monoclonal antibody binds within the filament-associated domain of NF200 and its recognition of NF200 is unaffected upon treatment of neurofilaments with phosphatase. Around 50% of our monoclonal antibodies that bind NF150 monospecifically and at epitopes within its peripheral domain have reduced affinities for NF150 from phosphatase-treated filaments, while the remaining 50% bind native and dephosphorylated NF150 equally well. The smallest neurofilament component (NF70) contains few phosphate groups, most of which remain after treatment of neurofilaments with phosphatase. The resulting form of NF70 migrates normally in gels and its recognition by antibodies is unchanged. We conclude that phosphorylation modifies the structure of the two larger neurofilament polypeptides along domains that are peripheral to the filamentous backbone and that these effects are more pronounced for NF200 than for NF150.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper we describe a 66-kD protein that co-purifies with intermediate filaments from rat optic nerve and spinal cord but can be separated further by ion-exchange chromatography. This protein is distinct from the 68-kD neurofilament subunit protein as judged by isoelectric focusing, immunoblotting, peptide mapping, and tests of polymerization competence. This protein is avidly recognized by the monoclonal anti-intermediate filament antigen antibody, previously demonstrated to recognize a common antigenic determinant in all five known classes of intermediate filaments. Also, when isolated this protein binds to various intermediate filament subunit proteins, which suggests an in vivo interaction with the intermediate filament cytoskeleton, and it appears to be axonally transported in the rat optic nerve. Because of this ability to bind to intermediate filaments in situ and in vitro we have named this protein alpha-internexin. A possible functional role for the protein in organizing filament assembly and distribution is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The state of phosphorylation in neurofilament (NF) proteins is studied by the 31P NMR technique. The 31P NMR spectrum of intact NF proteins at pH 7.0 is comprised of a major resonance at 4.18 ppm and a minor resonance at 3.53 ppm. The chemical shifts of the major and minor resonances are strongly dependent on pH and have pKa values for phosphoserine of 5.85 and for phosphothreonine of 6.00, respectively. 31P NMR spectra of isolated NF polypeptides show nonequivalent phosphoserine clusters in NF150 and in NF200. Their chemical shifts are very similar in both polypeptides, but the intensities of homologous resonances are different. NF68 has no detectable 31P resonance signal. Phosphate-specific monoclonal antibodies to NF200 can distinguish phosphates of various clusters. Microtubule proteins can also produce specific alteration of the 31P resonances of NF200. NF proteins digested by calcium-activated neutral protease (CANP) show relatively little change in 31P resonances.  相似文献   

10.
The appearance and in vivo phosphorylation of the 210 kDalton (kD) neurofilament protein (NF210K) in newborn rat brain, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve were invetigated. Electron microscopic examination of neurofilaments isolated from newborn rat brain and spinal cord demonstrated morphologically distinct filaments which contained cross-bridging side arms. Neurofilament proteins, phosphorylated in vivo, were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gel electrophoresis and were transferred from acrylamide gels to nitrocellulose sheets. The nitrocellulose sheets were treated with antiserum to the 70 kD, 145 kD and 210 kD neurofilament proteins by the immunoblot technique. The three neurofilament proteins were found to be present in newborn brain, spinal cord and sciatic nerve. The presence of NF210K in newborn rat brain was further confirmed by 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by indentification of this protein by the immunoblot technique. Exposure of the immunostained nitrocellulose sheets to x-ray film revealed that the NF210K, NF145K, and NF70K proteins were phosphorylated in filaments prepared from newborn rat central and peripheral nervous systems. These results suggest that the synthesis and posttranslational modification of the neurofilament proteins may be synchronized or developmentally regulated. It is feasible that phosphorylation of the NF210K subunit may be a prerequisite for the formation of neurofilament cross-bridging elements which are necessary for radial growth of axons.  相似文献   

11.
Filaggrin and a phosphorylated form of filaggrin, which has been shown by pulse-chase studies to be a precursor form of the protein [Dale, B. A., & Ling, S. Y. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 3539-3546], were compared for functional, biochemical, and physical properties. Filaggrin reacts with keratin filaments to form visible macrofibrils, unlike the precursor which does not. Biochemical and peptide-mapping studies suggest that the two proteins have similar, perhaps identical, amino acid sequences. The major differences between the two proteins are in molecular weight (precursor, 44 200 g/mol; filaggrin, 38 400 g/mol), the existence of oligomeric forms of the precursor, and the presence of phosphate in the precursor (15-20 mol/mol of protein). Phosphoserine was identified in the precursor, but neither phosphothreonine nor phosphotyrosine was observed. The results of proteolytic digests of [32P]phosphate-radiolabeled precursor show that the phosphate is unevenly distributed throughout the molecule and may be localized in approximately 30% of the precursor. A discrete localization of the phosphate in the precursor may block a specific keratin filament combining site and so prevent premature aggregation of these filaments during epidermal differentiation. It is suggested that a specific phosphatase is involved in the dephosphorylation, because several phosphatases of general specificity, including rat epidermal lysosomal acid phosphatase, did not catalyze this conversion.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian neurofilament triplet proteins (68 K, 160 K and 200 K) have been correlated by a biochemical, immunological and protein chemical study. The 160 K and 200 K triplet proteins are intermediate filament proteins in their own right, since they reveal the alpha-helical coiled-coil rod domain analyzed in detail for the 68 K protein. Triplet proteins display two distinct arrays. Their amino-terminal region built analogously to non-neuronal intermediate filament proteins should allow a co-polymerization process via the interaction of coiled-coil domains. The extra mass of all triplet proteins is allocated to carboxy-terminally located extensions of increasing size and unique amino acid sequences. These may provide highly charged scaffolds suitable for interactions with other neuronal components. Such a domain of 68 K reveals, in sequence analysis, 47 glutamic acids within 106 residues. The epitope recognized by a monoclonal antibody reacting probably with all intermediate filament proteins has been mapped. It is located within the last 20 residues of the rods, where six distinct intermediate filament proteins point to a consensus sequence.  相似文献   

13.
An intrahippocampal injection of N-methyl-D-aspartate induced the appearance of degradation products of both the 68 kiloDalton neurofilament protein and the glial fibrillary acidic protein, as revealed by immunoblot techniques. The degradation of these two filament proteins was maximal at 10 days after the lession. The degradation patterns were similar to those induced with calpains or calcium in vitro. There were no degradation effects on the 200 kD neurofilament protein as tested with both mono- and polyclonal antibodies. Consequently, the neuronal degeneration after excessive activation of NMDA receptors appears to involve calcium activation of proteolytic enzymes. The effects on the glial proteins are probably secondary to neuronal damage but could be related to calcium dependent processes.  相似文献   

14.
Twelve monoclonal antibodies have been raised against proteins in preparations of Z-disks isolated from Drosophila melanogaster flight muscle. The monoclonal antibodies that recognized Z-band components were identified by immunofluorescence microscopy of flight muscle myofibrils. These antibodies have identified three Z-disk antigens on immunoblots of myofibrillar proteins. Monoclonal antibodies alpha:1-4 recognize a 90-100-kD protein which we identify as alpha-actinin on the basis of cross-reactivity with antibodies raised against honeybee and vertebrate alpha-actinins. Monoclonal antibodies P:1-4 bind to the high molecular mass protein, projectin, a component of connecting filaments that link the ends of thick filaments to the Z-band in insect asynchronous flight muscles. The anti-projectin antibodies also stain synchronous muscle, but, surprisingly, the epitopes here are within the A-bands, not between the A- and Z-bands, as in flight muscle. Monoclonal antibodies Z(210):1-4 recognize a 210-kD protein that has not been previously shown to be a Z-band structural component. A fourth antigen, resolved as a doublet (approximately 400/600 kD) on immunoblots of Drosophila fibrillar proteins, is detected by a cross reacting antibody, Z(400):2, raised against a protein in isolated honeybee Z-disks. On Lowicryl sections of asynchronous flight muscle, indirect immunogold staining has localized alpha-actinin and the 210-kD protein throughout the matrix of the Z-band, projectin between the Z- and A-bands, and the 400/600-kD components at the I-band/Z-band junction. Drosophila alpha-actinin, projectin, and the 400/600-kD components share some antigenic determinants with corresponding honeybee proteins, but no honeybee protein interacts with any of the Z(210) antibodies.  相似文献   

15.
A novel monoclonal antibody, designated M1.4, recognizes the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein MAP1A (ca. Mr 380 kD) in both bovine and rat brain. In HeLa cells, however, M1.4 binds to a 240 kD polypeptide on immunoblots and co-localizes with both vimentin and cytokeratin filaments using double-label immunofluorescence microscopy. Immunoelectron microscopy indicates that the 240 kD polypeptide localizes along bundled intermediate filaments in a periodic manner. Two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis indicates that the 240 kD polypeptide has a basic pI of 7.7. When HeLa cell intermediate filaments are isolated using standard non-ionic detergent/high-salt conditions the 240 kD polypeptide does not sediment with the intermediate filaments, unlike the established intermediate filament-associated protein plectin. Immunoblot analysis with M1.4 shows the 240 kD polypeptide is expressed in a number of mammalian cell lines. Additionally, double-label immunofluorescence shows the 240 kD polypeptide to associate with vimentin filaments in African Green Monkey kidney (CV-1) and JC neuroblastoma cells. Due to its unique biochemical and biological characteristics, the 240 kD polypeptide is clearly a novel intermediate filament-associated protein for which we have proposed the designation gyronemin (Gr. gyros: around; nemin: filament).  相似文献   

16.
Our previous paper (Rodionov et al., 1985) reported production of monoclonal antibodies RN-17 reacting in cultured fibroblasts with a protein having a molecular weight of 100 kD. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy showed that this protein was a component of microtubules, intermediate filaments and coated vesicles. We challenged a possibility whether these coated vesicles containing the 100 kD protein may take part in the receptor-mediated endocytosis. alpha 2-Macroglobulin conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate or 20 nm colloidal gold particles was used as a marker of the receptor-mediated endocytosis. Mouse embryo fibroblasts or Swiss 3T3 cells were incubated with labeled alpha 2 M, fixed and "stained" with DN-17 antibody, and the distribution of alpha 2 M and 100 kD protein was examined within the same cells. In both cell lines the endocytic vesicles contained 100 kD protein and alpha 2 M. Therefore 100 kD protein is a component of endocytic vesicles. Probably this protein mediates microtubule-dependent transport of endocytic vesicles in the cells.  相似文献   

17.
The tonofilament-associated protein antigens recognized in epithelial cells by a group of six monoclonal antibodies have been studied by immunofluorescence and gel immunoautoradiography. The monoclonal antibodies were generated against detergent insoluble cytoskeleton extracts from a cultured simple epithelium derived cell line, Ptk1 cells. They show various tissue specificities, and while they all recognize components at the low end of the molecular weight range for intermediate filament proteins, they confirm that single antibody species can react with multiple polypeptides of different molecular weights in the tonofilament complex. The monoclonal antibodies described here demonstrate the presence of a simple epithelium antigenic determinant associated with intermediate filaments that is not detectable in the specialized cells of squamous and keratinizing epithelia but can reappear in such cells after transformation.  相似文献   

18.
A monomeric sialoglycoprotein of 130,000 molecular weight (gp 130) is a membrane protein detected by mouse monoclonal antibodies on human melanoma cells and in lesser amounts on a wide range of normal and malignant cell types. Eight monoclonal antibodies reacting with gp 130 detect at least four spatially distinct epitopes on the exposed surface of the gp 130 molecule. Biosynthetic studies have shown that gp 130 is synthesized through two precursor forms: a 100 kD glycosylated species and an 80 kD unglycosylated species, presumably the primary translational product of the encoding mRNA.  相似文献   

19.
Affinity-purified antibodies raised against three flagellar tektins (tektin A, B, and C) from each of two sea urchin species (Lytechinus pictus and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) were used to study the immunological relationship between tektins and intermediate filament proteins. By immunofluorescence microscopy, several antitektins revealed a staining of intermediate filament-like arrays in three vertebrate cell lines tested. Immunoelectron microscopy substantiated the cross reaction of antitektins with intermediate filaments. When the cells were treated with cytochalasin B, the arrangement of the filaments recognized by anti-(Lp)-tektin B was altered; the alteration observed is typical for keratin filaments. By immunoblot, it was found that anti-(Lp)-tektin B cross reacted with two isoforms or different proteins of approximately 54 kD with pIs of 6.1 and 6.2 in human carcinoma epithelia (HeLa) cells and with two isoforms or different proteins of approximately 55 kD with pIs of 6.1 and 6.3 in pig kidney epithelia (LLC-PK1) cells. Furthermore, when antitektin antibodies were affinity purified with the 54 kD HeLa keratin, these keratin-specific antibodies again restained the original tektins on immunoblots. From these observations, it can be concluded that tektins and keratins are to a certain extent immunologically related. To determine the degree of the immunological relationship, tektin filaments and purified intermediate filaments from HeLa cells were cleaved with alpha-chymotrypsin and examined by quantitative immunoblot analysis. On immunoblots of digested tektins from L. pictus, anti-(Lp)-tektin B recognized several cleavage products in the range of 20 kD to 46 kD. However, when immunoblots of digested intermediate filaments from HeLa cells were probed, the cross reaction of anti-(Lp)-tektin B with HeLa keratins was eliminated by more than 98% within 2 min, suggesting that tektins have epitopes in common with the end domains of certain keratins.  相似文献   

20.
In order to examine the relationship between the intermediate filaments from Purkinje fibres of the cow heart conduction system and five proposed subclasses of mammalian intermediate filaments, the gel electrophoresis-derived enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (GEDELISA) has been used to examine the specificity and crossreactivity of our antibodies against the Purkinje fibre intermediate filament protein, skeletin. Bovine tissues known to contain intermediate filaments of the five main subclasses were examined with antiskeletin and with preimmune serum and the specific antiserum absorbed with pure skeletin as controls. The antibodies raised against Purkinje fibre skeletin reacted with all three polypeptides of the "neurofilament triplet", with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), with smooth muscle desmin and also slightly with some prekeratin subunits and with endothelial vimentin. From studies with monoclonal antibodies and amino acid sequencing, certain regions of all intermediate filaments are suggested to be structurally related. Here we show that Purkinje fibre skeletin seems to share antigenic determinants with the proposed five main classes of intermediate filaments. Our antibody is the first carefully controlled experimentally induced antibody having such properties. This might be due to the special attributes of the intermediate filament system in Purkinje fibres, which themselves have unique properties.  相似文献   

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