Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A high-molecular-weight squid neurofilament protein contains a lamin-like rod domain and a tail domain with Lys-Ser-Pro repeats.

1992; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 89; Issue: 15 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.89.15.6963

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

James Way, Mark R. Hellmich, Howard Jaffe, Ben G. Szaro, Harish C. Pant, Harold Gainer, James F. Battey,

Tópico(s)

Biochemical and Structural Characterization

Resumo

Previous studies have shown that two low molecular-weight neurofilament (NF) proteins (NF-60 and NF-70) from the squid Loligo pealei are translated from mRNAs that are splice variants of a single squid NF gene. In this study, we report the isolation and characterization of cDNA clones encoding a high-molecular-weight squid NF protein (NF-220), the mRNA of which derives from the same squid NF gene. All three proteins are identical in their amino-terminal and lamin-like rod domains but differ in their carboxyl-terminal tail regions. In contrast to the short tail domains of NF-60 and NF-70, the NF-220 protein has a longer tail domain containing an acidic cluster of amino acids immediately followed by repeated copies of the sequence motif Lys-Ser-Pro. The Lys-Ser-Pro domain is similar to that of mammalian medium NF (NF-M) and high NF (NF-H) proteins, where the serines are highly phosphorylated. Except for these Lys-Ser-Pro motifs, there is surprisingly little structural similarity between the squid NF-220 protein and mammalian NF-M and NF-H proteins. Furthermore, the location of introns in squid NF-220 protein shows that it is more closely related to nuclear lamins and type III intermediate-filament proteins than to vertebrate NF proteins.

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