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Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division

Structural protein 4.1, first identified as a crucial 80-kD protein in the mature red cell membrane skeleton, is now known to be a diverse family of protein isoforms generated by complex alternative mRNA splicing, variable usage of translation initiation sites, and posttranslational modification. Pr...

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Autores principales: Krauss, Sharon Wald, Larabell, Carolyn A., Lockett, Stephen, Gascard, Philippe, Penman, Sheldon, Mohandas, Narla, Chasis, Joel Anne
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139783/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9128242
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author Krauss, Sharon Wald
Larabell, Carolyn A.
Lockett, Stephen
Gascard, Philippe
Penman, Sheldon
Mohandas, Narla
Chasis, Joel Anne
author_facet Krauss, Sharon Wald
Larabell, Carolyn A.
Lockett, Stephen
Gascard, Philippe
Penman, Sheldon
Mohandas, Narla
Chasis, Joel Anne
author_sort Krauss, Sharon Wald
collection PubMed
description Structural protein 4.1, first identified as a crucial 80-kD protein in the mature red cell membrane skeleton, is now known to be a diverse family of protein isoforms generated by complex alternative mRNA splicing, variable usage of translation initiation sites, and posttranslational modification. Protein 4.1 epitopes are detected at multiple intracellular sites in nucleated mammalian cells. We report here investigations of protein 4.1 in the nucleus. Reconstructions of optical sections of human diploid fibroblast nuclei using antibodies specific for 80-kD red cell 4.1 and for 4.1 peptides showed 4.1 immunofluorescent signals were intranuclear and distributed throughout the volume of the nucleus. After sequential extractions of cells in situ, 4.1 epitopes were detected in nuclear matrix both by immunofluorescence light microscopy and resinless section immunoelectron microscopy. Western blot analysis of fibroblast nuclear matrix protein fractions, isolated under identical extraction conditions as those for microscopy, revealed several polypeptide bands reactive to multiple 4.1 antibodies against different domains. Epitope-tagged protein 4.1 was detected in fibroblast nuclei after transient transfections using a construct encoding red cell 80-kD 4.1 fused to an epitope tag. Endogenous protein 4.1 epitopes were detected throughout the cell cycle but underwent dynamic spatial rearrangements during cell division. Protein 4.1 was observed in nucleoplasm and centrosomes at interphase, in the mitotic spindle during mitosis, in perichromatin during telophase, as well as in the midbody during cytokinesis. These results suggest that multiple protein 4.1 isoforms may contribute significantly to nuclear architecture and ultimately to nuclear function.
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spelling pubmed-21397832008-05-01 Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division Krauss, Sharon Wald Larabell, Carolyn A. Lockett, Stephen Gascard, Philippe Penman, Sheldon Mohandas, Narla Chasis, Joel Anne J Cell Biol Article Structural protein 4.1, first identified as a crucial 80-kD protein in the mature red cell membrane skeleton, is now known to be a diverse family of protein isoforms generated by complex alternative mRNA splicing, variable usage of translation initiation sites, and posttranslational modification. Protein 4.1 epitopes are detected at multiple intracellular sites in nucleated mammalian cells. We report here investigations of protein 4.1 in the nucleus. Reconstructions of optical sections of human diploid fibroblast nuclei using antibodies specific for 80-kD red cell 4.1 and for 4.1 peptides showed 4.1 immunofluorescent signals were intranuclear and distributed throughout the volume of the nucleus. After sequential extractions of cells in situ, 4.1 epitopes were detected in nuclear matrix both by immunofluorescence light microscopy and resinless section immunoelectron microscopy. Western blot analysis of fibroblast nuclear matrix protein fractions, isolated under identical extraction conditions as those for microscopy, revealed several polypeptide bands reactive to multiple 4.1 antibodies against different domains. Epitope-tagged protein 4.1 was detected in fibroblast nuclei after transient transfections using a construct encoding red cell 80-kD 4.1 fused to an epitope tag. Endogenous protein 4.1 epitopes were detected throughout the cell cycle but underwent dynamic spatial rearrangements during cell division. Protein 4.1 was observed in nucleoplasm and centrosomes at interphase, in the mitotic spindle during mitosis, in perichromatin during telophase, as well as in the midbody during cytokinesis. These results suggest that multiple protein 4.1 isoforms may contribute significantly to nuclear architecture and ultimately to nuclear function. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC2139783/ /pubmed/9128242 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Krauss, Sharon Wald
Larabell, Carolyn A.
Lockett, Stephen
Gascard, Philippe
Penman, Sheldon
Mohandas, Narla
Chasis, Joel Anne
Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title_full Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title_fullStr Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title_full_unstemmed Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title_short Structural Protein 4.1 in the Nucleus of Human Cells: Dynamic Rearrangements during Cell Division
title_sort structural protein 4.1 in the nucleus of human cells: dynamic rearrangements during cell division
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139783/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9128242
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