Literature DB >> 12270917

Association of Lbc Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor with alpha-catenin-related protein, alpha-catulin/CTNNAL1, supports serum response factor activation.

Brian Park1, Nhan T Nguyen, Parmesh Dutt, Keith D Merdek, Mariam Bashar, Paola Sterpetti, Alessandra Tosolini, Joseph R Testa, Deniz Toksoz.   

Abstract

The Rho GTPase signaling pathway is required for actin cytoskeletal organization and serum response factor-dependent gene transcription. Lbc is a Rho-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor that contains a modulatory C-terminal region. To elucidate Lbc regulatory mechanism(s), a yeast two-hybrid screen for proteins that interact with the Lbc C-terminal region was carried out, resulting in multiple isolation of cDNAs encoding the same 734-amino acid Lbc interacting protein. The Lbc interacting protein has homology with the alpha-catenin cell adhesion component and is identical to the alpha-catenin-like alpha-catulin protein of unknown function. The human alpha-catulin gene (CTNNAL1) maps to 9q31-32. Here we identify the predicted endogenous alpha-catulin product, document alpha-catulin and Lbc co-expression in multiple human cell lines, and show alpha-catulin and Lbc subcellular co-fractionation and intracellular localization. The required regions for Lbc and alpha-catulin interaction were mapped, and complex formation between Lbc and alpha-catulin in mammalian cells was detected. Functionally, alpha-catulin co-expression leads to increased Lbc-induced serum response factor activation in vivo as measured by a transcriptional reporter assay. Furthermore, alpha-catulin co-expression enhances Lbc-induced GTP-Rho formation in vivo. These results support the concept that the recently identified alpha-catulin protein may modulate Rho pathway signaling in vivo by providing a scaffold for the Lbc Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12270917     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M202447200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  28 in total

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9.  Fine mapping of the 9q31 Hirschsprung's disease locus.

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10.  Alpha(E)-Catenin induces SRF-dependent transcriptional activity through its C-terminal region and is partly RhoA/ROCK-dependent.

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