| Literature DB >> 10212274 |
X Zhou1, J Liao, L Hu, L Feng, M B Omary.
Abstract
Keratin polypeptide 19 (K19) is a type I intermediate filament protein that is expressed in stratified and simple-type epithelia. Little is known regarding K19 regulation or function, and the only other type I keratin that has been studied in terms of regulation is keratin 18 (K18). We characterized K19 phosphorylation as a handle to study its function. In vivo, serine is the major phosphorylated residue, and phosphopeptide mapping of 32PO4-labeled K19 generates one major phosphopeptide. Edman degradation suggested that the radiolabeled phosphopeptide represents K19 Ser-10 and/or Ser-35 phosphorylation. Mutation of Ser-10 or Ser-35 followed by transfection confirmed that Ser-35 is the major K19 phosphorylation site. Transfection of Ser-35 --> Ala K19 showed a filament assembly defect as compared with normal or with Ser-10 --> Ala K19. Comparison of K18 and K19 phosphorylation features in interphase cells showed that both are phosphorylated primarily at a single site, preferentially in the soluble versus the insoluble keratin fractions. K19 has higher basal phosphorylation, whereas K18 phosphorylation is far more sensitive to phosphatase type I and IIA inhibition. Our results demonstrate that Ser-35 is the major K19 interphase phosphorylation site and that it plays a role in keratin filament assembly. K19 and K18 phosphorylations share some features but also have distinct properties that suggest different regulation of type I keratins within the same cells.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10212274 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.274.18.12861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157