Proteolysis of nuclear proteins by mu-calpain and m-calpain. |
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Authors: | R L Mellgren |
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Institution: | Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo 43699. |
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Abstract: | Purified calpains are capable of proteolyzing several high Mr nuclear proteins and solubilizing a histone H1 kinase activity from rat liver nuclei upon exposure to 10(-6) - 10(-5) M Ca2+. Major nuclear substrates displayed apparent molecular masses of 200, 130, 120, and 60 kDa on Coomassie Blue-stained SDS-PAGE gels. The nuclear proteins and the H1 kinase were released from Triton-treated nuclei following incubation with buffer containing 0.5 M NaCl. They therefore appeared to be internal nuclear matrix proteins. The nuclear H1 kinase activity solubilized by incubation with m-calpain was eluted in the void volume of a Bio-Gel A-1.5m column, indicating an apparent mass greater than 1,500 kDa. Treatment of the calpain-solubilized kinase with 0.5 M NaCl dissociated it to a form having an apparent mass of 300 kDa (Stokes radius = 5.6 nm), suggesting that the 300-kDa (Stokes radius = 5.6 nm), nuclei by calpain treatment as a large complex containing other internal matrix proteins. Purified human erythrocyte mu-calpain was capable of proteolyzing the nuclear matrix proteins at 10(-6) M Ca2+. In contrast, human erythrocyte multicatalytic protease complex produced little cleavage of the nuclear proteins. Proteolysis of nuclear proteins by either mu-calpain or m-calpain was inhibited by calpastatin. These experiments suggest a physiologic role for the calpains in the turnover of nuclear proteins. |
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