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The hY RNAs are a group of four small cytoplasmic RNAs of unknown function that are stably associated with at least two proteins, Ro60 and La, to form Ro ribonucleoprotein complexes. Here we show that the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNP) I and K are able to associate with a subset of hY RNAs in vitro and demonstrate these interactions to occur also in vivo in a yeast three-hybrid system. Experiments performed in vitro and in vivo with deletion mutants of hY1 RNA revealed its pyrimidine-rich central loop to be involved in interactions with both hnRNP I and K and clearly showed their binding sites to be different from the Ro60 binding site. Both hY1 and hY3 RNAs coprecipitated with hnRNP I in immunoprecipitation experiments performed with HeLa S100 extracts and cell extracts from COS-1 cells transiently transfected with VSV-G-tagged hnRNP-I, respectively. Furthermore, both anti-Ro60 and anti-La antibodies coprecipitated hnRNP I, whereas coprecipitation of hnRNP K was not observed. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that hnRNP I is a stable component of a subpopulation of Ro RNPs, whereas hnRNP K may be transiently bound or interact only with (rare) Y RNAs that are devoid of Ro60 and La. Given that functions related to translation regulation have been assigned to both proteins and also to La, our findings may provide novel clues toward understanding the role of Y RNAs and their respective RNP complexes.  相似文献   
13.
Core alpha1,6-fucosylation is a conserved feature of animal N-linked oligosaccharides being present in both invertebrates and vertebrates. To prove that the enzymatic basis for this modification is also evolutionarily conserved, cDNAs encoding the catalytic regions of the predicted Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster homologs of vertebrate alpha1,6-fucosyltransferases (E.C. 2.4.1.68) were engineered for expression in the yeast Pichia pastoris. Recombinant forms of both enzymes were found to display core fucosyltransferase activity as shown by a variety of methods. Unsubstituted nonreducing terminal GlcNAc residues appeared to be an obligatory feature of the substrate for the recombinant Caenorhabditis and Drosophila alpha1,6-fucosyltransferases, as well as for native Caenorhabditis and Schistosoma mansoni core alpha1,6-fucosyltransferases. On the other hand, these alpha1,6-fucosyltransferases could not act on N-glycopeptides already carrying core alpha1,3-fucose residues, whereas recombinant Drosophila and native Schistosoma core alpha1,3-fucosyltransferases were able to use core alpha1,6-fucosylated glycans as substrates. Lewis-type fucosylation was observed with native Schistosoma extracts and could take place after core alpha1,3-fucosylation, whereas prior Lewis-type fucosylation precluded the action of the Schistosoma core alpha1,3-fucosyltransferase. Overall, we conclude that the strict order of fucosylation events, previously determined for fucosyltransferases in crude extracts from insect cell lines (core alpha1,6 before core alpha1,3), also applies for recombinant Drosophila core alpha1,3- and alpha1,6-fucosyltransferases as well as for core fucosyltransferases in schistosomal egg extracts.  相似文献   
14.
The genome of Drosophila melanogaster encodes several proteins that are predicted to contain Ca(2+)-dependent, C-type carbohydrate-recognition domains. The CG2958 gene encodes a protein containing 359 amino acid residues. Analysis of the CG2958 sequence suggests that it consists of an N-terminal domain found in other Drosophila proteins, a middle segment that is unique, and a C-terminal C-type carbohydrate-recognition domain. Expression studies show that the full-length protein is a tetramer formed by noncovalent association of disulfide-linked dimers that are linked through cysteine residues in the N-terminal domain. The expressed protein binds to immobilized yeast invertase through the C-terminal carbohydrate-recognition domain. Competition binding studies using monosaccharides demonstrate that CG2958 interacts specifically with fucose and mannose. Fucose binds approximately 5-fold better than mannose. Blotting studies reveal that the best glycoprotein ligands are those that contain N-linked glycans bearing alpha1,3-linked fucose residues. Binding is enhanced by the additional presence of alpha1,6-linked fucose. It has previously been proposed that labeling of the Drosophila neural system by anti-horseradish peroxidase antibodies is a result of the presence of difucosylated N-linked glycans. CG2958 is a potential endogenous receptor for such neural-specific carbohydrate epitopes.  相似文献   
15.
An important group of splicing factors involved in constitutive and alternative splicing contain an arginine/serine (RS)-rich domain. We have previously demonstrated the existence of such factors in plants and report now on a new family of splicing factors (termed the RSZ family) from Arabidopsis thaliana which additionally harbor a Zn knuckle motif similar to the human splicing factor 9G8. Although only around 20 kDa in size, members of this family possess a multi-domain structure. In addition to the N-terminal RNA recognition motif (RRM), a Zn finger motif of the CCHC-type is inserted in an RGG-rich region; all three motifs are known to contribute to RNA binding. The C-terminal domain has a characteristic repeated structure which is very arginine-rich and centered around an SP dipeptide. One member of this family, atRSZp22, has been shown to be a phosphoprotein with properties similar to SR proteins. Furthermore, atRSZp22 was able to complement efficiently splicing deficient mammalian S100 as well as h9G8-depleted extracts. RNA binding assays to selected RNA sequences indicate an RNA binding specificity similar to the human splicing factors 9G8 and SRp20. Taken together, these result show that atRSZp22 is a true plant splicing factor which combines structural and functional features of both h9G8 and hSRp20.  相似文献   
16.
For many years, polyclonal antibodies raised against the plant glycoprotein horseradish peroxidase have been used to specifically stain the neural and male reproductive tissue of Drosophila melanogaster. This epitope is considered to be of carbohydrate origin, but no glycan structure from Drosophila has yet been isolated that could account for this cross-reactivity. Here we report that N-glycan core alpha1,3-linked fucose is, as judged by preabsorption experiments, indispensable for recognition of Drosophila embryonic nervous system by anti-horseradish peroxidase antibody. Further, we describe the identification by matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry and high performance liquid chromatography of two Drosophila N-glycans that, as already detected in other insects, carry both alpha1,3- and alpha1,6-linked fucose residues on the proximal core GlcNAc. Moreover, we have isolated three cDNAs encoding alpha1,3-fucosyltransferase homologues from Drosophila. One of the cDNAs, when transformed into Pichia pastoris, was found to direct expression of core alpha1,3-fucosyltransferase activity. This recombinant enzyme preferred as substrate a biantennary core alpha1,6-fucosylated N-glycan carrying two non-reducing N-acetylglucosamine residues (GnGnF6; Km 11 microm) over the same structure lacking a core fucose residue (GnGn; Km 46 microm). The Drosophila core alpha1,3-fucosyltransferase enzyme was also shown to be able to fucosylate N-glycan structures of human transferrin in vitro, this modification correlating with the acquisition of binding to anti-horseradish peroxidase antibody.  相似文献   
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