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1.
Nuclear and cytoplasmic intermediate filament (IF) proteins segregate into two independent cellular networks by mechanisms that are poorly understood. We examined the role of a 42 amino acid (aa) insert unique to vertebrate lamin rod domains in the coassembly of nuclear and cytoplasmic IF proteins by overexpressing chimeric IF proteins in human SW13+ and SW13- cells, which contain and lack endogenous cytoplasmic IF proteins, respectively. The chimeric IF proteins consisted of the rod domain of human nuclear lamin A/C protein fused to the amino and carboxyl-terminal domains of the mouse neurofilament light subunit (NF-L), which contained or lacked the 42 aa insert. Immunofluorescence microscopy was used to follow assembly and targeting of the proteins in cells. Chimeric proteins that lacked the 42 aa insert colocalized with vimentin, whereas those that contained the 42 aa insert did not. When overexpressed in SW13- cells, chimeric proteins containing the 42 aa formed very short or broken cytoplasmic filaments, whereas chimeric proteins that lacked the insert assembled efficiently into long, stable cytoplasmic filaments. To examine the roles of other structural motifs in intracellular targeting, we added two additional sequences to the chimera, a nuclear localization signal (NLS) and a CAAX motif, which are found in nuclear IF proteins. Addition of an NLS alone or an NLS in combination with the CAAX motif to the chimera with the 42 aa insert resulted in cagelike filament that assembled close to the nuclear envelope and nuclear lamina-like targeting, respectively. Our results suggest that the rod domains of eukaryotic nuclear and cytoplasmic IF proteins, which are related to each other, are still compatible upon deletion of the 42 aa insert of coassembly. In addition, NF-L end domains can substitute for the corresponding lamin domains in nuclear lamina targeting.  相似文献   

2.
The factors and mechanisms regulating assembly of intermediate filament (IF) proteins to produce filaments with their characteristic 10 nm diameter are not fully understood. All IF proteins contain a central rod domain flanked by variable head and tail domains. To elucidate the role that different domains of IF proteins play in filament assembly, we used negative staining and electron microscopy (EM) to study the in vitro assembly properties of purified bacterially expressed IF proteins, in which specific domains of the proteins were either mutated or swapped between a cytoplasmic (mouse neurofilament-light (NF-L) subunit) and nuclear intermediate filament protein (human lamin A). Our results indicate that filament formation is profoundly influenced by the composition of the assembly buffer. Wild type (wt) mouse NF-L formed 10 nm filaments in assembly buffer containing 175 mM NaCl, whereas a mutant deleted of 18 NH2-terminal amino acids failed to assemble under similar conditions. Instead, the mutant assembled efficiently in buffers containing CaCl2 > or = 6 mM forming filaments that were 10 times longer than those formed by wt NF-L, although their diameter was significantly smaller (6-7 nm). These results suggest that the 18 NH2-terminal sequence of NF-L might serve two functions, to inhibit filament elongation and to promote lateral association of NF-L subunits. We also demonstrate that lengthening of the NF-L rod domain, by inserting a 42 aa sequence unique to nuclear IF proteins, does not compromise filament assembly in any noticeable way. Our results suggests that the known inability of nuclear lamin proteins to assemble into 10 nm filaments in vitro cannot derive solely from their longer rod domain. Finally, we demonstrate that the head domain of lamin A can substitute for that of NF-L in filament assembly, whereas substitution of both the head and tail domains of lamins for those of NF-L compromises assembly. Therefore, the effect of lamin A "tail" domain alone, or the synergistic effect of lamin "head" and the "tail" domains together, interferes with assembly into 10-nm filaments.  相似文献   

3.
Nuclear lamins like cytoplasmic intermediate filament proteins exhibit a characteristic tripartite domain structure with a segmented alpha-helical rod domain flanked by an N-terminal head and a C-terminal tail domain. To examine the influence of the head and tail domains on the structure and assembly properties of nuclear lamins, we have engineered "headless," "tailless," and "rod" chicken lamin B2 cDNAs and expressed them in Escherichia coli. A full-length chicken lamin A cDNA was also expressed in E. coli, and the recombinant protein compared with the structure and assembly properties of full-length chicken lamin B2 (E. Heitlinger et al. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 113, 485-495). As with lamin B2, at their first level of structural organization, lamin A and the headless lamin B2 formed myosin-like dimers consisting of a 51- to 52-nm-long tail flanked by two globular heads at one end. Similarly, the tailless and rod lamin B2 fragments formed tropomyosin-like dimers consisting of a 51 to 52-nm-long rod. In contrast to the lateral mode of association of cytoplasmic IF dimers into four-chain tetramers, at their second level of structural organization, lamin A dimers, just as lamin B2 dimers (E. Heitlinger et al. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 113, 485-495), associated longitudinally to form polar head-to-tail polymers. Whereas dimers made of the truncated B2 headless and rod lamins had lost their propensity to associate head-to-tail, tailless lamin B2 dimers revealed an enhanced head-to-tail association. Finally, at their third level of structural organization, rather than assembling into stable 10-nm filaments, both lamin A and the three truncated B2 lamins formed paracrystalline arrays exhibiting distinct transverse banding patterns with axial repeats of either 24 or 48-49 nm depending on the species.  相似文献   

4.
V Dring  R Stick 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(12):4073-4081
The lamin LIII gene of Xenopus laevis has been characterized. The gene is duplicated in the Xenopus genome. The transcribed region spreads over 22 kb of genomic DNA encoding 12 exons. Two alternatively spliced mRNAs are observed which encode LIII isoforms that differ only by the 12 C-terminal amino acids which, however, both contain the CaaX motif known to be the target of post-translational modifications. The intron pattern of the lamin LIII gene is strikingly similar to that of an invertebrate intermediate filament (IF) gene over the entire protein coding sequence. The similarity in gene structure is restricted to the rod domain when compared with vertebrate types I-III IF genes. Our data suggest a model of how IF proteins evolved from a lamin-like ancestor by deletion of two signal sequences; the nuclear localization signal and the C-terminal ras-related CaaX motif. The data rule out the previously proposed hypothesis that IF proteins evolved from an intronless ancestor with an early divergence of neuronal and non-neuronal IF proteins. Together with the data presented in the accompanying paper by Dodemond et al. it can be concluded that the tail domains of lamins and invertebrate IF proteins, but not those of vertebrate IF proteins, are homologous. Thus, the different vertebrate IF proteins probably evolved by combination of the central rod domain with different tail domains by exon shuffling.  相似文献   

5.
Clarke T  Bouquet JM  Fu X  Kallesøe T  Schmid M  Thompson EM 《Gene》2007,396(1):159-169
Metazoan lamins are implicated in the organization of numerous critical nuclear processes. Among chordates, the appendicularian, Oikopleura dioica, has an unusually short life cycle involving rapid growth through extensive recourse to endoreduplication, a characteristic more associated with some invertebrates. In some tissues, this is accompanied by the formation of elaborate, bilaterally symmetric nuclear morphologies associated with specific gene expression patterns. Lamin composition can mediate nuclear shape in spermiogenesis as well as during pathological and normal aging and we have analyzed the O. dioica lamin and intermediate filament (IF) complement, comparing it to that present in other deuterostomes. O. dioica has one lamin gene coding two splice variants. Both variants share with the sister class ascidians a highly reduced C-terminal tail region lacking the immunoglobulin fold, indicating this derivation occurred at the base of the urochordate lineage. The OdLamin2 variant has a unique insertion of 63 amino acids in the normally short N-terminal region and has a developmental expression profile corresponding to the occurrence of endocycling. O. dioica has 4 cytoplasmic IF proteins, IF-A, C, Dalpha, and Dbeta. No homologues to the ascidian IF-B or F proteins were identified, reinforcing the suggestion that these proteins are unique to ascidians. The degree of sequence evolution in the rod domains of O. dioica cytoplasmic IF proteins and their closest ascidian and vertebrate homologues was similar. In contrast, whereas the rate of lamin B rod domain sequence evolution has also been similar in vertebrates, cephalochordates and the sea urchin, faster rates have occurred among the urochordates, with the O. dioica lamin displaying a far greater rate than any other lamin.  相似文献   

6.
Khanamiryan L  Li Z  Paulin D  Xue Z 《Biochemistry》2008,47(36):9531-9539
The mechanisms regulating the intermediate filament (IF) protein assembly are complex and not yet fully understood. All vertebrate cytoplasmic IF proteins have a central alpha-helical rod domain flanked by variable head and tail domains. The IF protein synemin cannot homopolymerize to form filament networks; it needs an appropriate copolymerization partner. To elucidate the roles of the vimentin head domain, the TAAL motif in the 2A region, and the TYRKLLEGEE motif in the 2B region of the rod domain in synemin filament formation, we have prepared a series of synemin constructs by site-directed mutagenesis and chimeric synemins having the vimentin head domain. The assembly properties of synemin constructs were assessed by the immunofluorescence of transient transfection into cultured SW13 cells without endogenous IFs. Our data showed that the formation of a filamentous network required at least the vimentin-like head domain and both the 2A and 2B regions of the rod domain.  相似文献   

7.
We examined regions of human lamins A and C involved in binding to surfaces of mitotic chromosomes. An Escherichia coli expression system was used to produce full-length lamin A and lamin C, and truncated lamins retaining the central alpha-helical rod domain (residues 34-388) but lacking various amounts of the amino-terminal 'head' and carboxy-terminal 'tail' domains. We found that lamin A, lamin C and lamin fragments lacking the head domain and tail sequences distal to residue 431 efficiently assembled into paracrystals and strongly associated with mitotic chromosomes. Furthermore, the lamin rod domain also associated with chromosomes, although efficient chromosome coating required the pH 5-6 conditions needed to assemble the rod into higher order structures. Biochemical assays showed that chromosomes substantially reduced the critical concentration for assembly of lamin polypeptides into pelletable structures. Association of the lamin rod with chromosomes was abolished by pretrypsinization of chromosomes, and was not seen for vimentin (which possesses a similar rod domain). These data demonstrate that the alpha-helical rod of lamins A and C contains a specific chromosome binding site. Hence, the central rod domain of intermediate filament proteins can be involved in interactions with other cellular structures as well as in filament assembly.  相似文献   

8.
Nuclear lamins are a type of intermediate filament (IF) proteins. They have a characteristic tripartite domain structure with a alpha-helical rod domain flanked by non-alpha-helical N-terminal head and C-terminal tail domains. While the head domain has been shown to be important for the formation of head-to-tail polymers that are critical assembly intermediates for lamin IFs, essential structural elements in this domain have remained obscure. As a first step to remedy this, a series of mouse lamin A mutants in which the head domain (30 amino acid residues) was deleted stepwise from the N-terminus at intervals of 10 residues were bacterially expressed. The assembly properties in vitro of the purified recombinant proteins were explored by electron microscopy. We observed that while a lamin A mutant lacking N-terminal 10 residues formed head-to-tail polymers, a mutant lacking N-terminal 20 residues or the whole head domain (30 residues) showed significantly decreased potency to form head-to-tail polymers. These results suggest that the last 20 residues (from Arg-11 to Gln-30) of the head domain of mouse lamin A contain essential structures for the formation of head-to-tail polymers. The last 20 residues of the head domain include several conserved residues between A- and B-type lamins and also the phosphorylation site for cdc2 kinase, which affects lamin IF organization in vivo and in vitro. Our results provide clues to the molecular mechanism by which the head domain plays a crucial role in lamin polymerization.  相似文献   

9.
H Dodemont  D Riemer    K Weber 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(12):4083-4094
The structure of the single gene encoding the cytoplasmic intermediate filament (IF) proteins in non-neuronal cells of the gastropod Helix aspersa is described. Genomic and cDNA sequences show that the gene is composed of 10 introns and 11 exons, spanning greater than 60 kb of DNA. Alternative RNA processing accounts for two mRNA families which encode two IF proteins differing only in their C-terminal sequence. The intron/exon organization of the Helix rod domain is identical to that of the vertebrate type III IF genes in spite of low overall protein sequence homology and the presence of an additional 42 residues in coil 1b of the invertebrate sequence. Intron position homology extends to the entire coding sequence comprising both the rod and tail domains when the invertebrate IF gene is compared with the nuclear lamin LIII gene of Xenopus laevis presented in the accompanying report of Döring and Stick. In contrast the intron patterns of the tail domains of the invertebrate IF and the lamin genes differ from those of the vertebrate type III genes. The combined data are in line with an evolutionary descent of cytoplasmic IF proteins from a nuclear lamin-like progenitor and suggest a mechanism for this derivation. The unique position of intron 7 in the Helix IF gene indicates that the archetype IF gene arose by the elimination of the nuclear localization sequence due to the recruitment of a novel splice site. The presumptive structural organization of the archetype IF gene allows predictions with respect to the later diversification of metazoan IF genes. Whereas models proposing a direct derivation of neurofilament genes seem unlikely, the earlier speculation of an mRNA transposition mechanism is compatible with current results.  相似文献   

10.
Lamins are karyoskeletal proteins associated with the nuclear envelope which can be divided into two groups, i.e. the type A lamins of near neutral pI and the more acidic lamins, including mammalian lamin B. We have isolated cDNA clones encoding a representative of the type B subfamily from Xenopus laevis, and have deduced its amino acid sequence from the coding portion of the approximately 2.9 kb mRNA. The polypeptide (mol. wt 66,433) is identified as a typical lamin by its homology to Xenopus human type A lamins, but detailed sequence comparison shows that LI is less related to Xenopus lamin A than the latter is to human lamin A. The conformation predicted for LI conforms to the general model of lamins and intermediate filament proteins and is characterized by an extended central alpha-helical coiled coil domain, flanked by non-alpha-helical domains, i.e. a relatively short N-terminal head and a long C-terminal tail. As in lamins A and C, the head of lamin LI is positively charged and the tail presents a similar C-terminal pentapeptide, a putative nuclear accumulation signal, a very negatively charged region and a number of short regions that are highly homologous in all lamins. However, LI differs from the type A lamins by the absence of the oligo-histidine stretch and a di-proline motif in the tail region and by a significantly lower number of identical amino acid positions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Nuclear lamins are a type of intermediate filament (IF) proteins. They have a characteristic tripartite domain structure with a α-helical rod domain flanked by non-α-helical N-terminal head and C-terminal tail domains. While the head domain has been shown to be important for the formation of head-to-tail polymers that are critical assembly intermediates for lamin IFs, essential structural elements in this domain have remained obscure. As a first step to remedy this, a series of mouse lamin A mutants in which the head domain (30 amino acid residues) was deleted stepwise from the N-terminus at intervals of 10 residues were bacterially expressed. The assembly properties in vitro of the purified recombinant proteins were explored by electron microscopy. We observed that while a lamin A mutant lacking N-terminal 10 residues formed head-to-tail polymers, a mutant lacking N-terminal 20 residues or the whole head domain (30 residues) showed significantly decreased potency to form head-to-tail polymers. These results suggest that the last 20 residues (from Arg-11 to Gln-30) of the head domain of mouse lamin A contain essential structures for the formation of head-to-tail polymers. The last 20 residues of the head domain include several conserved residues between A- and B-type lamins and also the phosphorylation site for cdc2 kinase, which affects lamin IF organization in vivo and in vitro. Our results provide clues to the molecular mechanism by which the head domain plays a crucial role in lamin polymerization.  相似文献   

12.
Nuclear intermediate filament proteins, called lamins, form a meshwork that lines the inner surface of the nuclear envelope. Lamins contain three domains: an N-terminal head, a central rod and a C-terminal tail domain possessing an Ig-fold structural motif. Lamins are classified as either A- or B-type based on structure and expression pattern. The Drosophila genome possesses two genes encoding lamins, Lamin C and lamin Dm0, which have been designated A- and B-type, respectively, based on their expression profile and structural features. In humans, mutations in the gene encoding A-type lamins are associated with a spectrum of predominantly tissue-specific diseases known as laminopathies. Linking the disease phenotypes to cellular functions of lamins has been a major challenge. Drosophila is being used as a model system to identify the roles of lamins in development. Towards this end, we performed a comparative study of Drosophila and human A-type lamins. Analysis of transgenic flies showed that human lamins localize predictably within the Drosophila nucleus. Consistent with this finding, yeast two-hybrid data demonstrated conservation of partner-protein interactions. Drosophila lacking A-type lamin show nuclear envelope defects similar to those observed with human laminopathies. Expression of mutant forms of the A-type Drosophila lamin modeled after human disease-causing amino acid substitutions revealed an essential role for the N-terminal head and the Ig-fold in larval muscle tissue. This tissue-restricted sensitivity suggests a conserved role for lamins in muscle biology. In conclusion, we show that (1) localization of A-type lamins and protein-partner interactions are conserved between Drosophila and humans, (2) loss of the Drosophila A-type lamin causes nuclear defects and (3) muscle tissue is sensitive to the expression of mutant forms of A-type lamin modeled after those causing disease in humans. These studies provide new insights on the role of lamins in nuclear biology and support Drosophila as a model for studies of human laminopathies involving muscle dysfunction.  相似文献   

13.
The murine monoclonal antibody IFA isolated by Pruss et al. (Cell 27 (1981) 419) reacts with all major proteins of the cytoplasmic intermediate filament family (IF) albeit with different affinities but leaves the nucleus undecorated in standard immunofluorescence microscopy. Here we show that IFA reacts with all three nuclear lamins from rat and man in immunoblotting. This is most easily demonstrated in a cell line in which most cells lack cytoplasmic IFs. Thus the rather minor but ubiquitous 66 kD polypeptides identified by Pruss et al. as IF-associated proteins reflect the lamin triplet. While surprising at first, these results are in agreement with the approximate location of the IFA epitope on IF molecules and the recently discovered sequence homology along the rod domain between lamins A and C and IF proteins. Our results extend this relation to lamin B in spite of its unique behaviour during mitosis.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The nuclear lamina is the karyoskeletal structure, intimately associated with the nuclear envelope, that is widespread among the diverse types of eukaryotic cells. A family of proteins, termed lamins, has been shown to be a prominent component of this lamina, and various members of this family are differentially expressed in different cell types. In mammals, three major lamins (A, B, C) have been identified, and in all cells so far examined lamin B is constitutively expressed while lamins A and C are not, suggesting that lamin B is sufficient to form a functional lamina. Because of this key importance of lamin B, cDNA clones encoding mammalian lamin B were isolated by screening murine cDNA libraries, representing F9 teratocarcinoma cells and fetal liver, with the corresponding cDNA probe of lamin LI of Xenopus laevis. The nucleotide sequence of the murine lamin B mRNA (approximately 2.9 kb) was determined. The deduced amino acid sequence of the encoded polypeptide (587 amino acids; mol. wt. 66760) is highly homologous to X. laevis lamin LI (72.9% identical residues) but displays lower similarity to A-type lamins (53.8% identical amino acid residues with human lamin A). Lamin B also conforms to the general molecular organization principle of the members of the intermediate filament (IF) protein family, i.e., an extended alpha-helical rod domain that is interrupted by two non alpha-helical linkers and flanked by non-alpha-helical head (amino-terminal) and tail (carboxy-terminal) domains. The tail domain, which does not reveal a hydrophobic region of considerable length, contains a typical karyophilic signal sequence and an uninterrupted stretch of eight negatively charged amino acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
K Weber  U Plessmann    W Ulrich 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(11):3221-3227
The giant body muscle cells of the nematode Ascaris lumbricoides show a complex three dimensional array of intermediate filaments (IFs). They contain two proteins, A (71 kd) and B (63 kd), which we now show are able to form homopolymeric filaments in vitro. The complete amino acid sequence of B and 80% of A have been determined. A and B are two homologous proteins with a 55% sequence identity over the rod and tail domains. Sequence comparisons with the only other invertebrate IF protein currently known (Helix pomatia) and with vertebrate IF proteins show that along the coiled-coil rod domain, sequence principles rather than actual sequences are conserved in evolution. Noticeable exceptions are the consensus sequences at the ends of the rod, which probably play a direct role in IF assembly. Like the Helix IF protein the nematode proteins have six extra heptads in the coil 1b segment. These are characteristic of nuclear lamins from vertebrates and invertebrates and are not found in vertebrate IF proteins. Unexpectedly the enhanced homology between lamins and invertebrate IF proteins continues in the tail domains, which in vertebrate IF proteins totally diverge. The sequence alignment necessitates the introduction of a 15 residue deletion in the tail domain of all three invertebrate IF proteins. Its location coincides with the position of the karyophilic signal sequence, which dictates nuclear entry of the lamins. The results provide the first molecular support for the speculation that nuclear lamins and cytoplasmic IF proteins arose in eukaryotic evolution from a common lamin-like predecessor.  相似文献   

17.
A comparative study of the susceptibility of vimentin and nuclear lamins from cultured Ehrlich ascites tumor (EAT) cells to degradation by Ca2+ -activated neutral thiol proteinase (calpain) has been undertaken. While pure vimentin was degraded very quickly at physiological ionic strength by purified calpain, isolated lamin B was digested comparatively slowly and purified lamins A/C were fairly resistant to proteolytic degradation. Similar digestion patterns were obtained from vimentin and lamin B with intermediary breakdown products close in size to the corresponding alpha-helical rod domains. To exclude the possibility that the low susceptibility of isolated lamins to Ca2+-dependent proteolytic degradation was due to irreversible denaturation during their isolation and purification, Triton cytoskeletons were prepared and their nuclear lamina as well as vimentin filaments were exposed to relatively large quantities of purified calpain. Under these conditions, not only vimentin filaments but also lamins A and B were digested while lamin C remained intact to a high degree. The major breakdown products of vimentin and lamins were identified as polypeptides which were 35 to 45 amino acids longer than the corresponding alpha-helical rod domains. Most of the vimentin-derived material and all high molecular weight polypeptides originating from lamins remained associated with the Triton cytoskeletons as demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in conjunction with immunoblotting. Indirect immunofluorescence and electron microscope analysis of the calpain-digested Triton cytoskeletons revealed that they still contained a laminalike structure around the nuclear chromatin and numerous structurally altered intermediate filaments in the cytoplasmic remnant, although all vimentin had been degraded with the formation of 40/41 kDa polypeptides as major digestion products. In untreated Triton cytoskeletons, the vimentin filaments seemed to be in direct physical contact with the nuclear lamina, whereas in digested Triton cytoskeletons there was a distinct gap between structurally altered filaments and the nuclear surface. This shows that vimentin filaments and the nuclear lamina are differentially susceptible to degradation by calpain under certain ionic conditions and suggests that both filamentous structures are intimately associated with each other.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies have shown that nuclear lamin B binds specifically to the C-terminal domains of type III intermediate filament (IF) proteins under in vitro conditions. To further explore such site-specific interactions, we have used a two-step anti-idiotypic antibody approach. First, a monoclonal antibody disrupting the cytoplasmic IF network organization of living cells (mAb7A3) (Matteoni, R., and Kreis, T. E. (1987) J. Cell Biol. 105, 1253-1265) was characterized. Epitope mapping demonstrated that this antibody recognized a site located in the C-terminal domains of vimentin and peripherin (type III IF proteins). mAb7A3 was able to inhibit more than 80% of the in vitro binding of nuclear lamin B to PI, a synthetic peptide modeled after the C-terminal domain of peripherin that comprises a lamin B-binding site (Djabali, K., Portier, M. M., Gros, F., Blobel, G., and Georgatos, S. D. (1991) Cell 64, 109-121). In a second step, animals were immunized with mAb7A3 and the resulting anti-idiotypic sera were screened. Two of these antisera reacted specifically with nuclear lamin B but not with type A lamins or cytoplasmic IF proteins. The anti-lamin B activity of one of the antisera was isolated by affinity chromatography using a lamin B-agarose matrix. The reaction of these affinity-purified antibodies with lamin B was inhibited by mAb7A3. Furthermore, the anti-lamin B antibodies reacted with Fab fragments of mAb7A3 and abolished binding of lamin B to PI. From these data we conclude that anti-idiotypic antibodies against the paratope of mAb7A3 recognize specific epitopes of the lamin B molecule that have shapes complementary to the one of the C-terminal domain of type III IF proteins. We speculate that these (regional) conformations, which we term the "lamin B-fold," may also occur in non-lamin proteins that mediate the anchorage of IFs to various membranous organelles.  相似文献   

19.
To investigate the functional role of the nonhelical domains of the intermediate filament (IF) protein vimentin, we carried out transient transfection of constructs encoding fusion proteins of these domains with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). Expression of these fusion proteins did not have any effect on the endogenous IF networks of transfected cells. However, the head domain-EGFP fusion protein localized almost exclusively to the nucleus. This localization could be disrupted in a reversible fashion by chilling cells. Furthermore, the head domain was capable of targeting to the nucleus a strictly cytoplasmic protein, pyruvate kinase. Thus, the vimentin head domain contains information that specifically directs proteins into the nucleus. In contrast, the nonhelical tail domain of vimentin, when expressed as a fusion protein with EGFP, was retained in the cytoplasm. Cytoplasmic retention of tail domain-containing fusion proteins appeared to be dependent on the integrity of the microtubule network. Our results are consistent with a proposal that the nonhelical end domains of vimentin are involved in maintaining an extended IF network by exerting oppositely directed forces along the filaments. The head domains exert a nuclear-directed force while the tail domains extend the IF network toward the cell periphery via a microtubule-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Very little data have been reported that describe the structure of the tail domain of any cytoplasmic intermediate filament (IF) protein. We report here the results of studies using site directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance (SDSL‐EPR) to explore the structure and dynamics of the tail domain of human vimentin in tetramers (protofilaments) and filaments. The data demonstrate that in contrast to the vimentin head and rod domains, the tail domains are not closely apposed in protofilaments. However, upon assembly into intact IFs, several sites, including positions 445, 446, 451, and 452, the conserved “beta‐site,” become closely apposed, indicating dynamic changes in tail domain structure that accompany filament elongation. No evidence is seen for coiled‐coil structure within the region studied, in either protofilaments or assembled filaments. EPR analysis also establishes that more than half of the tail domain is very flexible in both the assembly intermediate and the intact IF. However, by positioning the spin label at distinct sites, EPR is able to identify both the rod proximal region and sites flanking the beta‐site motif as rigid locations within the tail. The rod proximal region is well assembled at the tetramer stage with only slight changes occurring during filament elongation. In contrast, at the beta site, the polypeptide backbone transitions from flexible in the assembly intermediate to much more rigid in the intact IF. These data support a model in which the distal tail domain structure undergoes significant conformational change during filament elongation and final assembly.  相似文献   

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