共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
M. Gimona J. V. Small M. Moeremans J. van Damme M. Puype J. Vandekerckhove 《Protoplasma》1988,145(2-3):133-140
Summary Metavinculin is a higher molecular weight variant of vinculin expressed only in cardiac and smooth muscle. Using microsequencing methods on the intact molecules and their proteolytic subfragments we have been able to map the common and different parts of these closely related proteins. Both vinculin and metavinculin, from mammals and birds exhibit a relatively protease resistant 90 kD core fragment. N-terminal sequencing analysis of the avian and mammalian core fragments as well as of major core subfragments obtained by extended proteolysis placed the core domain at the N-terminus of the intact molecules and revealed identity between metavinculin and vinculin as well as between species. Limited chymotryptic digestion of porcine vinculin and metavinculin yielded a common 16 kD fragment which could be placed at the C-terminus of the cDNA sequence derived from chick fibroblast vinculin (G. J.Price, P.Jones, M. D.Davison, R.Bendori, S.Griffiths, B.Patel, B.Geiger and D. R.Critchley 1988, in press). From additional sequence data the metavinculin specific fragment could be placed at the metavinculin C-terminus. Using a polyclonal antibody specific for porcine metavinculin a peptide unique to metavinculin could be identified. Direct sequencing of this, as well as of related, overlapping fragments, purified by reversed phase HPLC revealed a 68 amino acid insert in procine metavinculin, between the core fragment and the C-terminal piece, common to vinculin and metavinculin. The domain organizazions of vinculin and metavinculin and their possible functional implications are discussed.Abbreviations SDS
sodium dodecyl sulfate
- EDTA
ethylendinitrilotetra acetic acid
- HPLC
high pressure liquid chromatography 相似文献
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Synemin is a very large, unique member of the IF (intermediate filament) protein superfamily. Association of synemin with the major IF proteins, desmin and/or vimentin, within muscle cells forms heteropolymeric IFs. We have previously identified interactions of avian synemin with alpha-actinin and vinculin. Avian synemin, however, is expressed as only one form, whereas human synemin is expressed as two major splice variants, namely alpha- and beta-synemins. The larger alpha-synemin contains an additional 312-amino-acid insert (termed SNTIII) located near the end of the long C-terminal tail domain. Whether alpha- and beta-synemins have different cellular functions is unclear. In the present study we show, by in vitro protein-protein interaction assays, that SNTIII interacts directly with both vinculin and metavinculin. Furthermore, SNTIII interacts with vinculin in vivo, and this association is promoted by PtdIns(4,5)P(2). SNTIII also specifically co-localizes with vinculin within focal adhesions when transiently expressed in mammalian cells. In contrast, other regions of synemin show distinct localization patterns in comparison with those of SNTIII, without labelling focal adhesions. Our results indicate that alpha-synemin, but not beta-synemin, interacts with both vinculin and metavinculin, thereby linking the heteropolymeric IFs to adhesion-type junctions, such as the costameres located within human striated muscle cells. 相似文献
4.
Activation of a vinculin-binding site in the talin rod involves rearrangement of a five-helix bundle 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Papagrigoriou E Gingras AR Barsukov IL Bate N Fillingham IJ Patel B Frank R Ziegler WH Roberts GC Critchley DR Emsley J 《The EMBO journal》2004,23(15):2942-2951
The interaction between the cytoskeletal proteins talin and vinculin plays a key role in integrin-mediated cell adhesion and migration. We have determined the crystal structures of two domains from the talin rod spanning residues 482–789. Talin 482–655, which contains a vinculin-binding site (VBS), folds into a five-helix bundle whereas talin 656–789 is a four-helix bundle. We show that the VBS is composed of a hydrophobic surface spanning five turns of helix 4. All the key side chains from the VBS are buried and contribute to the hydrophobic core of the talin 482–655 fold. We demonstrate that the talin 482–655 five-helix bundle represents an inactive conformation, and mutations that disrupt the hydrophobic core or deletion of helix 5 are required to induce an active conformation in which the VBS is exposed. We also report the crystal structure of the N-terminal vinculin head domain in complex with an activated form of talin. Activation of the VBS in talin and the recruitment of vinculin may support the maturation of small integrin/talin complexes into more stable adhesions. 相似文献
5.
V.E. Koteliansky G.N. Gneushev M.A. Glukhova S.Y. Venyaminov L. Muszbek 《FEBS letters》1984,165(1):26-30
A vinculin-like protein was identified in chicken as well as in bovine platelets by ELISA competitive binding assay using antibodies against vinculin from chicken gizzard. By a modified procedure (J. Biol. Chem. (1980) 255, 1194–1199) we succeeded in isolating bovine platelet vinculin to apparent homogeneity. The structural identity of platelet and chicken gizzard vinculin was demonstrated by circular dichroism analysis. It was also shown that platelet vinculin induces a significant decrease in the low shear viscosity of F-actin. Vinculin, in all probability, plays an important role in the organization of actin filaments in platelets, especially in the linkages of microfilaments to the membrane. 相似文献
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Role of vinculin in the maintenance of cell-cell contacts in kidney epithelial MDBK cells 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Microinjection of fluorophore-tagged cytoskeletal proteins has been a useful tool in studies of formation of focal adhesions (FA). We used this method to study the maintenance of adherens junctions (AJ) and tight junctions (TJ) of epithelial Madin-Darby bovine kidney cells. We chose alpha-actinin and vinculin as markers, because they are present both at adherens junctions and focal adhesions and their binding partners have been well characterized. Isolated FITC-labelled chicken alpha-actinin and vinculin were injected into confluent cells where they were rapidly incorporated both in FAs and AJs. The FAs remained unchanged, whereas cell-cell contacts began to fade within an hour after injection and the cells were joined to polykaryons having 5 to 13 nuclei. Short fragments of cell membranes containing injected proteins, actin, beta-catenin, cadherin, claudin, occludin and ZO-1 were visible inside the polykaryons indicating that both AJs and TJs were disintegrated as a single complex. Microinjected FITC-labelled vinculin head domain was also incorporated to both AJs and FAs, but instead of fusions it rapidly induced the detachment of the cells from the substratum probably due to high affinity of vinculin head to talin. Vinculin tail domain had no apparent effect on the cell morphology. Since small GTPases are involved in the building up of AJs, we injected active and inactive forms of cdc42 and rac proteins together with vinculin to see their effect. Active forms reduced the formation of polykaryons presumably by strengthening AJs, whereas inactive forms had no apparent effect. We suggest that excess alpha-actinin and vinculin uncouple the cell-cell adhesion junctions from the intracellular cytoskeleton which leads to fragmentation of junctional complexes and subsequent cell fusion. The results show that cell-cell adhesion sites are more dynamic and more sensitive than FAs to an imbalance in the amount of free alpha-actinin and intact vinculin. 相似文献
9.
The cytoskeleton-associated protein vinculin is composed of a globular head and an elongated tail domain. The protein can be cleaved by V8 protease treatment into two fragments with apparent molecular masses of 90 and 29/27 kDa, respectively. So far, no high-resolution data on the tertiary structure of the N-terminal 90-kDa fragment are available. We analyzed the 90-kDa fragment in detail, using electron spectroscopic imaging in conjunction with modelling experiments. The front view projection of this fragment appears roughly rhomboidal, with 4 intensity maxima arranged at the vertices and a stain-filled region in the center. Based on a detailed examination of different particle projections, a 3-dimensional model was constructed which appears as a flattened tetrahedron. A comparison of the 90-kDa fragment with the intact protein allows for a correlation between the subdomain organization of the vinculin head and the biochemically defined V8 protease cleavage sites (aa 851 and 857). 相似文献
10.
Plasmodium falciparum P2 (PfP2) is a ribosomal stalk protein. It also performs extra ribosomal novel functions that seem to be associated with homo oligomerization . Previous in vitro studies have demonstrated that the protein has a high tendency to self-associate predominantly into an 8-mer. In vitro Heteronuclear Single Quantum Coherence (HSQC) of the pure recombinant protein (rPfP2) and its in-cell (Escherichia coli) HSQC spectrum has very similar features, indicating that the protein intrinsically, both inside the cell and under in vitro conditions, has similar aggregation tendencies. In view of this, we have characterized here the folding and concomitant self-association of rPfP2, using an in vitro dissociation–association strategy. We observed that the residue stretch, (Met31-Leu44) of the rPfP2, mapping to Met1-Leu14 of PfP2 protein acts as a nucleation site for helix formation and subsequent self-association. Further association appears to be driven by hydrophobic and complimentary electrostatic charge interactions on the surfaces formed. One stretch of rPfP2, (Ile97-Ala116), always remains floppy, and this may serve as “hinge” for protein segmental motions. Based on these, we have proposed a possible model for rPfP2 self-association into an 8-mer. 相似文献
11.
The acrylamide quenching of the intrinsic tryptophanyl fluorescence of normal and sickle apohemoglobins has been studied in 0.05 M potassium phosphate buffer,pH 7.5, at 5°C over a protein concentration range from 1 to 50M. Analysis of quenching dynamics revealed a strong dependence on acrylamide concentration for the intrinsic fluorescence of both normal and sickle apohemoglobins, suggesting that one tryptophanyl residue [presumably that at position 37(C3)], was more accessible to collisional quencher than the other tryptophanyl residue [15(A12)]. Additional studies, which altered viscosity and subunit assembly experimental parameters, supported the assignment of residue 37 as the more dynamically accessible residue. Finally, the quenching data were also found to be dependent on protein concentration, implying that this difference in the mobility between the two residues is a sensitive probe of self-aggregation. Extrapolated dynamic quenching constants at low concentration of acrylamide were used to estimate the dimer-monomer equilibrium dissociation constants of normal and sickle apohemoglobins, and were found to be 5.6 and 2.4M, respectively, thus demonstrating distinct self-association properties of
A and
S apohemoglobins. 相似文献
12.
Vinculin is a cytoskeletal protein believed to be involved in linking microfilaments to the cell membrane. It is a substrate for the Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase C. We show here that when human platelets attach and spread on a solid surface, the alpha isoforms of vinculin become phosphorylated at serine and/or threonine residues. Phosphorylation is dependent on adhesion to a surface, since suspended, unattached platelets can produce filopodia but no phosphorylation of vinculin. Phosphorylation is also dependent on actin polymerization, as it does not occur when platelets had been pretreated with cytochalasin B. Most likely, protein kinase C is responsible for the phosphorylation of vinculin, since phosphorylation also occurs when platelets are treated with a phorbol ester, which activates protein kinase C, and is blocked by treatment with a staurosporine derivative which inhibits this enzyme. These results suggest that phosphorylation plays a role in anchoring vinculin at sites of microfilament-membrane interaction. 相似文献
13.
Iodinated vinculin, metavinculin and α-actinin were used to probe the interaction of these proteins with electrophoretically separated cytoskeletal proteins. Using the gel overlay technique, we detected strong binding of 125I-vinculin and 125I-metavinculin to α-actinin, 175 kDa polypeptide, talin, vinculin and metavinculin themselves, and moderate binding to actin.125I-α-actinin was capable of interacting with vinculin and metavinculin. The specific binding of 125-I-α-actinin to vinculin and metavinculin immobilized on a polysterene surface was also demonstrated. We suggest that the ability of vinculin and α-actinin to form a complex may be realized in microfilament-membrane linkages. 相似文献
14.
Harry G. Brittain 《Chirality》1994,6(8):665-669
Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy has been used to evaluate the ability of 21 different solvents to influence the aggregation state of amphotericin B. Using the relative donor/acceptor tendencies known for each solvent system, it was possible to deduce information as to the factors which goven the self-association of amphotericin B. It was concluded that in the absence of strong solvent interaction, amphotericin B prefers to self-associate into oligomeric species. This intrinsic driving force can be overcome through the use of solvents which function as strong electron pair donors, probably forming specific solvent—solute species. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc. 相似文献
15.
David W. Dumbauld Kristin E. Michael Steven K. Hanks Andrés J. García 《Biology of the cell / under the auspices of the European Cell Biology Organization》2010,102(4):203-213
Background information. FAK (focal adhesion kinase), an essential non‐receptor tyrosine kinase, plays pivotal roles in migratory responses, adhesive signalling and mechanotransduction. FAK‐dependent regulation of cell migration involves focal adhesion turnover dynamics as well as actin cytoskeleton polymerization and lamellipodia protrusion. Whereas roles for FAK in migratory and mechanosensing responses have been established, the contribution of FAK to the generation of adhesive forces is not well understood. Results. Using FAK‐null cells expressing wild‐type and mutant FAK under an inducible tetracycline promoter, we analysed the role of FAK in the generation of steady‐state adhesive forces using micropatterned substrates and a hydrodynamic adhesion assay. FAK expression reduced steady‐state strength by 30% compared with FAK‐null cells. FAK expression reduced VCL (vinculin) localization to focal adhesions by 35% independently of changes in integrin binding and localization of talin and paxillin. RNAi (RNA interference) knock‐down of VCL abrogated the FAK‐dependent differences in adhesive forces. FAK‐dependent changes in VCL localization and adhesive forces were confirmed in human primary fibroblasts with FAK knocked down by RNAi. The autophosphorylation Tyr‐397 and kinase domain Tyr‐576/Tyr‐577 sites were differentially required for FAK‐mediated adhesive responses. Conclusions. We demonstrate that FAK reduces steady‐state adhesion strength by modulating VCL recruitment to focal adhesions. These findings provide insights into the role of FAK in mechanical interactions between a cell and the extracellular matrix. 相似文献
16.
K. A. Koehler M. K. Jain D. A. Gabriel H. -Y. C. Chang O. P. Malhotra 《Journal of Protein Chemistry》1995,14(7):537-548
The interaction of bovine prothrombin with Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions was investigated by following H+ release as a function of metal ion concentration at pH 6 and pH 7.4 at high and low ionic strength. Prothrombin Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding is characterized by high- and low-affinity sites. M2+ binding at these sites is associated with intramolecular conformational changes and also with intermolecular self-association. The pH dependence of H+ release by M2+ is bell shaped and consistent with controlling pKa values of 4.8 and 6.5. At pH 6 and low ionic strength, both Ca2+ and Mg2+ titrations following H+ release clearly show independent low- and high-affinity binding sites. Laser light scattering reveals that at pH 7.4 and low ionic strength, and at pH 6.0 and high ionic strength, the prothrombin molecular weight is between 73 and 98 kD. At pH 7.4 and high ionic strength, prothrombin is monomeric in the absence of metal ions, but appears to dimerize in the presence of M2+. At pH 6.0 and low ionic strength prothrombin exists as a dimer in the absence of metal ions and is tetrameric in the presence of Ca2+ and remains dimeric in the presence of Mg2+. These results and those for metal ion-dependent H+ release indicate that H+ release occurs concomitantly with association processes involving prothrombin.Abbreviations GLA
-carboxyglutamic acid; fragment 1. amino terminal residues 1–156 of bovine prothrombin
- MES
2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid
- MOPS
3-(N-morpholino) propanesulfonic acid
- PS/PC
phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles
-
ionic strength 相似文献
17.
Analytical affinity chromatography (AAC) was used to detect and quantitate the self-association of p24gag, the major structural capsid protein of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). p24gag was immobilized on a hydrophilic polymer (methacrylate) chromatographic support. The resulting affinity column was able to interact with soluble p24, as judged by the chromatographic retardation of the soluble protein upon isocratic elution under nonchaotropic binding conditions. The variation of elution volume with soluble protein concentration fit to a monomer-dimer model for self-association. The soluble p24-immobilized p24 association process was observed using both frontal and zonal elution AAC at varying pH values; the dissociation constant was 3-4 x 10(-5) M at pH 7. That p24 monomer associates to dimers was determined in solution using analytical ultracentrifugation. The solution Kd was 1.3 x 10(-5) M at pH 7. AAC in the zonal elution mode provides a simple and rapid means to screen for other HIV-1 macromolecules that may interact with p24 as well as for modulators, including antagonists, of HIV p24 protein assembly. 相似文献
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Goldmann WH 《Cell biology international》2002,26(3):279-286
It is well established that mechanical forces can regulate cell growth and guide tissue remodeling, yet little is known about how mechanical signals act at the cell surface membrane to produce biochemical changes in the cell. To explore this question, I used a mouse embryonic F9 vinculin-deficient cell line (gamma229), which, unlike wild-type cells, shows no fibronectin-dependent cell spreading. The wild-type cell line exhibited a twofold increase in area over four hours. I observed (i) an earlier rise in intracellular free calcium from approximately 0.2 to approximately 3 microm in wild-type compared with gamma229 cells, thus similar calcium levels after 4 h; (ii) an initial higher ratio of p-MAP/MAP-Kinase for gamma229, but similar FA-Kinase activation; and (iii) a marginal change in intracellular pH [pH](i) in both F9 cell lines. When I applied controlled local stresses directly to integrin receptors using RGD-coated magnetic beads, they displaced to a lesser extent in wild-type than in gamma229 cells. Both F9 cell lines showed a small stress-dependent rise in [Ca2+]i levels and similar PKA-c activity. In summary, the mechanical linkage of integrin-vinculin-cytoskeleton seemed not to be essential for chemical signal transduction. 相似文献
20.
Vinculin helps cells regulate and respond to mechanical forces. It is a scaffolding protein that tightly regulates its interactions with potential binding partners within adhesive structures—including focal adhesions that link the cell to the extracellular matrix and adherens junctions that link cells to each other—that physically connect the force-generating actin cytoskeleton (CSK) with the extracellular environment. This tight control of binding partner interaction—mediated by vinculin''s autoinhibitory head–tail interaction—allows vinculin to rapidly interact and detach in response to changes in the dynamic forces applied through the cell. In doing so, vinculin modulates the structural composition of focal adhesions and the cell''s ability to generate traction forces and adhesion strength. Recent evidence suggests that vinculin plays a similar role in regulating the fate and function of cell–cell junctions, further underscoring the importance of this protein. Using our lab''s recent work as a starting point, this commentary explores several outstanding questions regarding the nature of vinculin activation and its function within focal adhesions and adherens junctions. 相似文献