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1.
A number of cell surface proteins have been shown to be anchored to the plasma membrane by a covalently attached glycoinositol phospholipid (GPL) in amide linkage to the C-terminus of the mature protein. We applied several criteria to establish that folate binding protein (FBP) in brush border membranes of rat kidney contains a GPL anchor. Brush border membranes were isolated and labeled with [3H]folate, and the complex of FBP and [3H]folate was shown to be released to the supernatant by incubation with purified bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PIPLC) but not by incubation with a purified bacterial phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C. The FBP-[3H]folate complex both in crude extracts and after FBP purification by ligand-directed affinity chromatography interacted with Triton X-114 micelles, and prior incubation with PIPLC prevented this detergent interaction. Individual residues characteristic of GPL anchors were found to be covalently associated with FBP following polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. These included glucosamine and ethanolamine, which were radiolabeled by reductive methylation and identified by chromatography on an amino acid analyzer, and inositol phosphate, which was inferred by Western blotting with an anti-CRD antisera. This antisera gave positive immunostaining only after FBP had been cleaved by PIPLC, a reliable diagnostic of a GPL anchor. The relationship between GPL-anchored FBP in biological membranes and soluble FBP in biological fluids also is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The procyclic acidic repetitive protein (PARP) of Trypanosoma brucei was purified by cell fractionation followed by ion-exchange and concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. PARP is membrane-bound and comprises about 1% of the total procyclic trypanosome protein or 6 x 10(6) molecules per parasite. The results of NH2-terminal sequencing and amino acid analysis indicate that PARP is processed by removal of an N-terminal signal sequence and the hydrophobic COOH terminus. Metabolic labeling of PARP with [3H] ethanolamine is consistent with attachment of the protein to the membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. The glycolipid can be removed by base hydrolysis or nitrous acid deamination but is not susceptible to bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C.  相似文献   

3.
Biosynthetic labelling experiments with cercariae and schistosomula of the multicellular parasitic trematode Schistosoma mansoni were performed to determine whether [3H]palmitate or [3H]ethanolamine was incorporated into proteins. Parasites incorporated [3H]palmitate into numerous proteins, as judged by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and fluorography. The radiolabel was resistant to extraction with chloroform, but sensitive to alkaline hydrolysis, indicating the presence of an ester bond. Further investigation of the major 22 kDa [3H]palmitate-labelled species showed that the label could be recovered in a Pronase fragment which bound detergent and had an apparent molecular mass of 1200 Da as determined by gel filtration on Sephadex LH-20. Schistosomula incubated with [3H]ethanolamine for up to 24 h incorporated this precursor into several proteins; labelled Pronase fragments recovered from the three most intensely labelled proteins were hydrophilic and had a molecular mass of approx. 200 Da. Furthermore, reductive methylation of such fragments showed that the [3H]ethanolamine bears a free amino group, indicating the lack of an amide linkage. We also evaluated the effect of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Staphylococcus aureus: [3H]palmitate-labelled proteins of schistosomula and surface-iodinated proteins were resistant to hydrolysis with this enzyme. In conclusion, [3H]palmitate and [3H]ethanolamine are incorporated into distinct proteins of cercariae and schistosomula which do not bear glycophospholipid anchors. The [3H]ethanolamine-labelled proteins represent a novel variety of protein modification.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphatidylinositol anchor of HeLa cell alkaline phosphatase   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
R Jemmerson  M G Low 《Biochemistry》1987,26(18):5703-5709
Alkaline phosphatase from cancer cells, HeLa TCRC-1, was biosynthetically labeled with either 3H-fatty acids or [3H]ethanolamine as analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography of immunoprecipitated material. Phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) released a substantial proportion of the 3H-fatty acid label from immunoaffinity-purified alkaline phosphatase but had no effect on the radioactivity of [3H]ethanolamine-labeled material. PI-PLC also liberated catalytically active alkaline phosphatase from viable cells, and this could be selectively blocked by monoclonal antibodies to alkaline phosphatase. However, the alkaline phosphatase released from 3H-fatty acid labeled cells by PI-PLC was not radioactive. By contrast, treatment with bromelain removed both the 3H-fatty acid and the [3H]ethanolamine label from the purified alkaline phosphatase. Subtilisin was also able to remove the [3H]ethanolamine-labeled from purified alkaline phosphatase. The 3H radioactivity in alkaline phosphatase purified from [3H]ethanolamine-labeled cells comigrated with authentic [3H]ethanolamine by anion-exchange chromatography after acid hydrolysis. The data suggest that the 3H-fatty acid and [3H]ethanolamine are covalently attached to the carboxyl-terminal segment since bromelain and subtilisin both release alkaline phosphatase from the membrane by cleavage at that end of the polypeptide chain. The data are consistent with findings for other proteins recently shown to be anchored in the membrane through a glycosylphosphatidylinositol structure and indicate that a similar structure contributes to the membrane anchoring of alkaline phosphatase.  相似文献   

5.
The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor of the plasma membrane-associated heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycan was metabolically radiolabeled with [3H]myristic acid, [3H]palmitic acid, [3H]inositol, [3H]ethanolamine, or [32P]phosphate in rat ovarian granulosa cell culture. Cell cultures labeled with [3H]myristic acid or [3H]palmitic acid were extracted with 4 M guanidine HCl buffer containing 2% Triton X-100 and the proteoglycans were purified by ion exchange chromatography after extensive delipidation. Specific incorporation of 3H into GPI-anchor was demonstrated by removing the label with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). Incorporation of 3H activity into glycosaminoglycans and core glycoproteins was also demonstrated. However, the specific activity of 3H in these structures was approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower than that in the GPI-anchor, suggesting that 3H label was the result of the metabolic utilization of catabolic products of the 3H-labeled fatty acids. PI-PLC treatment of cell cultures metabolically labeled with [3H]inositol, [3H]ethanolamine, or [32P]phosphate specifically released radiolabeled cell surface-associated HS proteoglycans indicating the presence of GPI-anchor in these proteoglycans. GPI-anchored HS proteoglycans accounted for 20-30% of the total cell surface-associated HS proteoglycans and virtually all of them were removed by PI-PLC. These results further substantiate the presence of GPI-anchored heparan sulfate proteoglycan in ovarian granulosa cells and its cell surface localization.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied four strains of Tetrahymena thermophila, each of which expresses a different allele of the SerH gene and produces a distinctive surface protein of the immobilization antigen (i-antigen) class. Following exposure of the strains to [3H]ethanolamine or [3H]myristic acid, a protein corresponding in molecular mass to the characteristic i-antigen for that strain became highly labeled, as determined by mobility in sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels. Furthermore, antibodies raised to the i-antigens of the T. thermophila strains selectively immunoprecipitated radioactive proteins having molecular mass identical to that of the i-antigen characteristic for that particular strain. The lipid moieties labeled by [3H]myristate were not susceptible to hydrolysis by exogenous phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from bacteria. However, when protein extraction was carried out in the absence of phospholipase C inhibitors, radioactive fatty acids derived from [3H]myristate were rapidly cleaved from the putative i-antigens. On the basis of available data, it was concluded that T. thermophila i-antigens contain covalently-linked glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchors.  相似文献   

7.
Biosynthetic labelling experiments performed on P primaurelia strain 156, expressing the temperature-specific G surface antigen, 156G SAg, demonstrated that the purified 156G SAg contained the components characteristic of a GPI-anchor. [3H]ethanolamine, [3H]myo-inositol, [32P]phosphoric acid and [3H]myristic acid could all be incorporated into the surface antigen. Myristic acid labelling was lost after treatment in vitro with Bacillus thuringiensis phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). After complete digestion by pronase, a fragment containing the intact GPI-anchor of 156G surface antigen was isolated. This fragment was shown to be hydrophobic and glycosylated and to possess an epitope found specifically in the GPI component of GPI-anchored proteins. The role of the GPI-tail in anchoring the 156G surface antigen into the membrane was assessed by determining that purified 156G molecules with the GPI-anchor could be incorporated into lipid vesicles and red cell ghosts whereas the 156G molecules lacking the GPI-anchor, as result of treatment with B thuringiensis PI-PLC, could not. It has also been shown that the membrane-bound form and the soluble form, obtained after cleavage of the 156G SAg lipid moiety either by an endogenous PI-PLC or by a bacterial PI-PLC, displayed identical circular dichroic spectra.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the effects of platelet-activating factor (PAF-acether) on phospholipase activity in renal epithelial cells. When platelet-activating factor was added to renal cells prelabeled with [3H]arachidonic acid, it induced the rapid hydrolysis of phospholipids. Up to 26% of incorporated [3H]arachidonic acid was released into the medium from renal cells. After the addition of PAF-acether, the degradation of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylethanolamine were observed. The amount of [3H]arachidonic acid released were comparable to the losses of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylethanolamine. In renal cells biosynthetically labeled by incorporation of [3H]choline into cellular phosphatidylcholine, lysophosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin, the range of concentrations of PAF-acether-induced hydrolysis of labeled phosphatidylcholine were approximately equal to the amounts of lysophosphatidylcholine produced. We also observed a transient rise of diacylglycerol after the addition of platelet-activating factor to these cells. To test for action of phospholipase C, the accumulations of [3H]choline, [3H]inositol and [3H]ethanolamine were determined. The radioactivities in choline and ethanolamine showed little or no change. An increase in inositol was detectable within 1 min and it peaked at 3 min. These results indicate that platelet-activating factor stimulates phospholipase A2 and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C activity in renal epithelial cells. These phospholipase activities were Ca2+ dependent. Moreover, PAF-acether enhanced changes in cell-associated Ca2+. These results suggest that the increased Ca2+ permeability of cell membrane stimulates phospholipases A2 and C in renal epithelial cells. Prostaglandin biosynthesis was also enhanced in these cells by platelet-activating factor.  相似文献   

9.
PC12 pheochromocytoma cells and cultures of early postnatal rat cerebellum were labeled with [3H]glucosamine, [3H]fucose, [3H]leucine, [3H]ethanolamine, or sodium [35S]sulfate and treated with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Enzyme treatment of [3H]glucosamine- or [3H]fucose-labeled PC12 cells led to a 15-fold increase in released glycoproteins. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, most of the released material migrated as a broad band with an apparent molecular size of 32,000 daltons (Da), which was specifically immunoprecipitated by a monoclonal antibody to the Thy-1 glycoprotein. A second glycoprotein, with an apparent molecular size of 158,000 Da, was also released. After treatment with endo-beta-galactosidase, 40-45% of the [3H]glucosamine or [3H]fucose radioactivity in the phospholipase-released glycoproteins was converted to products of disaccharide size, and the molecular size of the 158-kDa glycoprotein decreased to 145 kDa, demonstrating that it contains fucosylated poly-(N-acetyllactosaminyl) oligosaccharides. The phospholipase also released labeled Thy-1 and the 158-kDa glycoprotein from PC12 cells cultured in the presence of [3H]ethanolamine, which specifically labels this component of the phosphatidylinositol membrane-anchoring sequence, while in the lipid-free protein residue of cells not treated with phospholipase, Thy-1 and a doublet at 46/48 kDa were the only labeled proteins. At least eight early postnatal rat brain glycoproteins also appear to be anchored to the membrane by phosphatidylinositol. Sulfated glycoproteins of 155, 132/134, 61, and 21 kDa are the predominant species released by phospholipase, which does not affect a major 44-kDa protein seen in [3H]ethanolamine-labeled brain cultures. The 44-48- and 155/158-kDa proteins may be common to both PC12 cells and brain.  相似文献   

10.
G A Morrill  A B Kostellow 《Steroids》1999,64(1-2):157-167
Meiosis in the amphibian oocyte is normally initiated by gonadotropins, which stimulate follicle cells to secret progesterone. The progesterone-induced G2/M transition in the amphibian oocyte was the first well-defined example of a steroid effect at the plasma membrane, since it could be shown that exogenous, but not injected, progesterone induced meiosis and that many of the progesterone-induced changes associated with meiosis occurred in enucleated oocytes. We find that [3H]progesterone binding to isolated plasma membranes of Rana pipiens oocytes is saturable, specific and temperature-dependent. Photoaffinity labeling with the synthetic progestin [3H]R5020 followed by gel electrophoresis demonstrated progestin binding to both 80 and 110 kDa proteins in the oocyte cytosol, whereas only the 110 kDa R5020 binding protein was present in the oocyte plasma membrane. We have shown that progesterone acts at Rana oocyte plasma membrane receptors within seconds to release a cascade of lipid messengers. Membrane-receptor binding causes the successive activation of: 1) N-methyltransferases, which convert phosphatidylethanolamine to phosphatidylcholine (PC); 2) an exchange reaction between PC and ceramide to form sphingomyelin (SM) and 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG); 3) phospholipase D/phosphatidate phosphohydrolase, releasing a second DAG transient; and 4) phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, generating inositol trisphosphate and a third DAG transient. Within minutes, diglyceride kinase converts newly formed DAG species to phosphatidic acid, turning off the successive DAG signals. A transient fall (0-30 s) in intracellular ceramide is followed (within 1-2 min) by a sustained rise in intracellular ceramide lasting 3-4 h. This ceramide may be significant in later cyclin-dependent steps. We conclude that the initial action of progesterone at its plasma membrane receptor triggers a series of enzyme activations that modify the membrane and release multiple DAG species.  相似文献   

11.
The insoluble residue from Tetrahymena mimbres cells that had been preincubated in vivo for 2 h with [3H]myristic acid and then exhaustively delipidated with organic solvents retained radioactivity, principally in material which migrated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent molecular mass of 10-14 kDa. This material was extractable from the delipidated cell residue with organic solvents known to solubilize phosphatidylinositol glycans (PI glycans). The same material could also be labeled with [3H]inositol, [14C]glucosamine, and [3H] ethanolamine. When the delipidated residue of cells labeled for 2 h with [3H]myristate was treated with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C or nitrous acid, much of the associated radioactivity was released. A similar release was obtained using the putative PI glycan fraction extracted from the cell residue. After further purification by thin layer chromatography, this latter material was hydrolyzed with HCl and shown to contain fatty acids, alkylglyceryl ethers, phosphate, inositol, glucosamine, mannose, and ethanolamine. The findings indicate that T. mimbres contains PI glycans resembling in structure those recently characterized in trypanosomes and mammalian cells. As the time of incubation with the radiotracers enumerated above was increased to 6-24 h, increasing amounts of radioactivity appeared in the 22-27-kDa region of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gels. This higher molecular weight material is shown in the companion paper (Pak, Y., Ryals, P.E., and Thompson, G.A., Jr. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 15054-15059) to be released by in vivo phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C treatment. Thus T. mimbres contains a pool of free PI glycans and at least one phosphatidylinositol-anchored protein.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphatidylinositol anchors human placental-type alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) to both syncytiotrophoblast and tumour cell plasma membranes. PLAP activity was released from isolated human placental syncytiotrophoblast plasma membranes and the surface of tumour cells with a phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus. This was a specific event, not the result of proteolysis or membrane perturbation, but the action of a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C in the preparation. Soluble PLAP, released with B. cereus phospholipase C and purified by immunoaffinity chromatography, ran on SDS-PAGE as a 66-kDa band. This corresponded to intact PLAP molecules. The protease bromelain cleaved lower-molecular-mass PLAP (64 kDa) from the membranes. Flow cytometry demonstrated that B. cereus phospholipase C released human tumour cell membrane PLAP in preference to other cell-surface molecules. This was in contrast to the non-specific proteolytic action of bromelain or Clostridium perfringens phospholipase C, which had no effect on membrane PLAP expression. Radiolabelling of tumour cells with fatty acids indicated PLAP to be labelled with both [3H]myristic and [3H]palmitic acid. This fatty-acid--PLAP bond was sensitive to pH 10 hydroxylamine treatment indicating an O-ester linkage.  相似文献   

13.
Membrane-associated decay accelerating factor (DAF) of human erythrocytes (Ehu) was analyzed for a C-terminal glycolipid anchoring structure. Automated amino acid analysis of DAF following reductive radiomethylation revealed ethanolamine and glucosamine residues in proportions identical with those present in the Ehu acetylcholinesterase (AChE) anchor. Cleavage of radiomethylated 70-kilodalton (kDa) DAF with papain released the labeled ethanolamine and glucosamine and generated 61- and 55-kDa DAF products that retained all labeled Lys and labeled N-terminal Asp. Incubation of intact Ehu with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC), which cleaves the anchors in trypanosome membrane form variant surface glycoproteins (mfVSGs) and murine thymocyte Thy-1 antigen, released 15% of the cell-associated DAF antigen. The released 67-kDa PI-PLC DAF derivative retained its ability to decay the classical C3 convertase C4b2a but was unable to membrane-incorporate and displayed physicochemical properties similar to urine DAF, a hydrophilic DAF form that can be isolated from urine. Nitrous acid deamination cleavage of Ehu DAF at glucosamine following labeling with the lipophilic photoreagent 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine ([125I]TID) released the [125I]TID label in a parallel fashion as from [125I]TID-labeled AChE. Biosynthetic labeling of HeLa cells with [3H]ethanolamine resulted in rapid 3H incorporation into both 48-kDa pro-DAF and 72-kDa mature epithelial cell DAF. Our findings indicate that DAF and AChE are anchored in Ehu by the same or a similar glycolipid structure and that, like VSGs, this structure is incorporated into DAF early in DAF biosynthesis prior to processing of pro-DAF in the Golgi.  相似文献   

14.
The identification of free glycoinositol phospholipids (GPIs) following biosynthetic labeling with [3H]glucosamine in cultured cells has been reported by several laboratories. We applied this procedure to two of the cell types used in these studies, H4IIE hepatoma cells and isolated hepatocytes, but were unable to detect a [3H]glucosamine-containing lipid that met any of the criteria for GPIs, including sensitivity to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PIPLC) or GPI-specific phospholipase D. Part of the difficulty in radiolabeling a GPI by this procedure was the rapid metabolic conversion of [3H]glucosamine to galactosamine and neutral or anionic derivatives. A PIPLC-sensitive radiolabeled lipid was detected only after 16 h of labeling. The water-soluble fragments released from this lipid by PIPLC corresponded largely to myo-inositol 1,2-cyclic phosphate and myo-inositol 1-phosphate, products expected from PIPLC cleavage of phosphatidylinositol or lyso-phosphatidylinositol. In an alternative approach that we introduce here, free GPIs in lipid extracts from rat liver plasma membranes were labeled by reductive radiomethylation. This procedure, which radiomethylates primary and secondary amines, has been shown to label a glucosamine residue adjacent to inositol in all GPIs characterized to date. The labeled extracts were fractionated by two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography, and a cluster of polar labeled lipids were assigned as GPIs based upon the following observations. 1) They were cleaved by PIPLC, 2) after hydrolysis in 6 N HCl, both radiomethylated glucosamine and a glucosamine-inositol conjugate were identified by cation exchange chromatography, and 3) hydrolysis in 4 M trifluoroacetic acid generated a fragment consistent with glucosamine-inositol-phosphate. These results illustrate new criteria for the identification of GPIs. The labeled GPIs also contained radiomethylated ethanolamine, another component found in GPI anchors of proteins and in mature lipid precursors of GPI anchors, suggesting that the liver plasma membrane GPIs retained considerable structural homology to GPI anchors.  相似文献   

15.
The presence of a glycoinositol phospholipid anchor in Drosophila acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was shown by several criteria. Chemical analysis of highly purified Drosophila AChE demonstrated approximately one residue of inositol per enzyme subunit. Selective cleavage by Staphylococcus aureus phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) was tested with Drosophila AChE radiolabeled by the photoactivatable affinity probe 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine [( 125I]TID), a reagent that specifically labels the lipid moiety of glycoinositol phospholipid-anchored proteins. Digestion with PI-PLC released 75% of this radiolabel from the protein. Gel electrophoresis of Drosophila AChE in sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated prominent 55- and 16-kDa bands and a faint 70-kDa band. The [125I]TID label was localized on the 55-kDa fragment, suggesting that this fragment is the C-terminal portion of the protein. In support of this conclusion, a sensitive microsequencing procedure that involved manual Edman degradation combined with radiomethylation was used to determine residues 2-5 of the 16-kDa fragment. Comparison with the Drosophila AChE cDNA sequence [Hall, L.M.C., & Spierer, P. (1986) EMBO J. 5, 2949-2954] confirmed that the 16-kDa fragment includes the N-terminus of AChE. Furthermore, the position of the N-terminal amino acid of the mature Drosophila AChE is closely homologous to that of Torpedo AChE. The presence of radiomethylatable ethanolamine in both 16- and 55-kDa fragments was also confirmed. Thus, Drosophila AChE may include a second posttranslational modification involving ethanolamine.  相似文献   

16.
P30, the major surface antigen of the parasitic protozoan Toxoplasma gondii, can be specifically labeled with [3H]palmitic acid and with myo-[2-3H]inositol. The fatty acid label can be released by treatment of P30 with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). Such treatment exposes an immunological "cross-reacting determinant" first described on Trypanosoma brucei variant surface glycoprotein. PI-PLC cleavage of intact parasites metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine results in the release of intact P30 polypeptide in a form which migrates faster in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These results argue that P30 is anchored by a glycolipid. Results from thin layer chromatography analysis of purified [3H] palmitate-labeled P30 treated with PI-PLC, together with susceptibility to mild alkali hydrolysis and to cleavage with phospholipase A2, suggest that the glycolipid anchor of T. gondii P30 includes a 1,2-diacylglycerol moiety.  相似文献   

17.
Biosynthetic incorporation of [3H]ethanolamine into proteins was assessed in the human erythroleukemia cell line K562. A single predominant labeled protein of about 50 kDa was observed following electrophoresis of cell extracts on polyacrylamide gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Subcellular fractionation showed this protein to distribute similarly to a 46-kDa [3H]ethanolamine-labeled protein reported previously (Tisdale, E. J., and Tartakoff, A. M. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8244-8252). In particular, the protein was enriched in cytosolic and microsomal fractions relative to plasma membrane and thus did not appear to correspond to the class of proteins with glycoinositol phospholipid anchors, the only post-translational protein modification involving ethanolamine that had been described previously. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel analysis involving isoelectric focusing followed by electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that the protein was very basic, and nitrocellulose blots of one- and two-dimensional gels subjected to 3H autoradiography and immunostaining with antisera to purified rabbit elongation factor (EF) 1 alpha revealed that the protein was EF-1 alpha. Copurification of rabbit EF-1 alpha and the [3H]ethanolamine-labeled protein from K562 cells further supported this identification. Analysis of tryptic fragments produced from the copurified proteins by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography showed two radiolabeled peptides. Amino acid analysis demonstrated 1 residue of ethanolamine in each peptide, and peptide sequencing revealed that the ethanolamine-containing component(s) was attached to Glu301 and Glu374 in the EF-1 alpha protein sequence deduced from a human EF-1 alpha cDNA. These data confirm a new class of post-translational protein modifications involving ethanolamine.  相似文献   

18.
Three forms of 5'-nucleotidase purified from human placenta (two membrane-bound forms, one sensitive and one resistant to cleavage by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, as well as a soluble form) had the same molecular weight before (73,000 Da) and after (56,000 Da) digestion with N-glycosidase F and showed similar amino acid compositions, N-terminal amino acid sequences, and KMs for IMP (9.6 to 11.9 microM). Thus, these three forms of 5'-nucleotidase appear to have very similar structures. The form sensitive to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C contained nearly 1 mol myo-inositol/mol of protein as determined by mass spectrometry, indicating a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol membrane anchor. Soluble 5'-nucleotidase contained a similar quantity of myo-inositol, suggesting that it was previously membrane-anchored via glycosyl phosphatidylinositol. The form resistant to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C contained less myo-inositol, leaving open the possibility of a third form of 5'-nucleotidase with a conventional transmembrane anchor.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the post-translational modification of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) for membrane-anchoring in QGP-1 cells derived from a human pancreatic carcinoma. Pulse-chase experiments with [3H]leucine demonstrated that CEA was initially synthesized as a precursor form with Mr 150,000 having N-linked high-mannose-type oligosaccharides, which was then converted to a mature form with Mr 200,000 containing the complex type sugar chains. The mature protein thus labeled was found to be released from the cell surface by treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, suggesting that CEA is a phosphatidylinositol-linked membrane protein. This was confirmed by metabolic incorporation into CEA of 3H-labeled compounds such as ethanolamine, myo-inositol, palmitic acid, and stearic acid. The 3H-labeled fatty acids incorporated were specifically removed from the protein by nitrous acid deamination as well as by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C treatment. Since the available cDNA sequence predicts that CEA contains a single methionine residue only in its carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic domain, processing of the carboxyl terminus was examined by pulse-chase experiments with [35S]methionine. It was found that CEA with Mr 150,000 was initially labeled with [35S]methionine but its radioactivity was immediately lost with chase. Taken together, these results suggest that CEA is anchored to the membrane by simultaneously occurring proteolysis of the carboxyl terminus and replacement by the glycophospholipid immediately after the synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Uromodulin, originally identified as an immunosuppressive glycoprotein in the urine of pregnant women, has been previously shown to be identical to human Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein (THP). THP is synthesized by the kidney and localizes to the renal thick ascending limb and early distal tubule. It is released into the urine in large quantities and thus represents a potential candidate for a protein secreted in a polarized fashion from the apical plasma membrane of epithelial cells in vivo. After introduction of the full-length cDNA encoding uromodulin/THP into HeLa, Caco-2, and Madin-Darby canine kidney cells by transfection, however, the expressed glycoprotein was almost exclusively cell-associated, as determined by immunoprecipitation after radioactive labeling of the cells. By immunofluorescence, THP was localized to the plasma membranes of transfected cells. In transfected cell extracts, THP also remained primarily in the detergent phase in a Triton X-114 partitioning assay, indicating that it has a hydrophobic character, in contrast to its behavior after isolation from human urine. Triton X-114 detergent-associated THP was redistributed to the aqueous phase after treatment of cell extracts with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Treatment of intact transfected HeLa cells with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C also resulted in the release of THP into the medium, suggesting that it is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked membrane protein. Similar to other known GPI-linked proteins, uromodulin/THP contains a stretch of 16 hydrophobic amino acids at its extreme carboxyl terminus which could function as a GPI addition signal and was shown to label with [3H]ethanolamine. The results indicate that THP is a member of this class of lipid-linked membrane proteins and is released into the urine after the loss of its hydrophobic anchor, probably by the action of a phospholipase or protease.  相似文献   

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