Literature DB >> 1532247

The physical interactions between p37env-mos and tubulin structures.

W Bai1, B Singh, Y Yang, L S Ramagli, M Nash, N K Herzog, R B Arlinghaus.   

Abstract

The c-mos protein has been reported to be complexed with tubulin and to co-localize with microtubules in unfertilized Xenopus eggs as well as in NIH3T3 cells transformed by the Xenopus c-mos gene. We performed experiments to determine whether the viral mos protein, p37v-mos, also associates with tubulin. Both mouse c-mos and v-mos proteins synthesized in vitro co-polymerized with tubulin. Upon incubation at 37 degrees C, essentially all of the mos protein (both viral and cellular) co-polymerized with tubulin, while more than 50% of the tubulin remained in the depolymerized state. The mos-tubulin interaction was specific, as indicated by the insolubility of the v-mos protein following a second cycle of temperature-dependent depolymerization/polymerization. Beta-tubulin was shown to co-precipitate with p37v-mos and to be phosphorylated by the mos kinase in vitro. Although both v-mos and c-mos proteins co-polymerize with tubulin, p37v-mos behaved differently from p39c-mos on gel filtration columns under conditions that favor disassembly of microtubules. Like Xenopus c-mos, the bulk of the mouse c-mos protein synthesized in vitro appeared in structures that fractionate at about 500 kDa. In contrast to c-mos, the majority of the v-mos protein, either isolated from stably transformed NIH3T3 cells or synthesized in vitro, eluted in the 100 kDa fraction, co-fractionating with tubulin dimers. Therefore, the v-mos protein appears to have a higher affinity for unpolymerized tubulin than c-mos, under conditions that favor disassembly of microtubules.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1532247

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncogene        ISSN: 0950-9232            Impact factor:   9.867


  5 in total

1.  Inhibition of v-Mos kinase activity by protein kinase A.

Authors:  Y Yang; C H Herrmann; R B Arlinghaus; B Singh
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 4.272

2.  Mos activates myogenic differentiation by promoting heterodimerization of MyoD and E12 proteins.

Authors:  J L Lenormand; B Benayoun; M Guillier; M Vandromme; M P Leibovitch; S A Leibovitch
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 4.272

3.  Mos overexpression in Swiss 3T3 cells induces meiotic-like alterations of the mitotic spindle.

Authors:  K Fukasawa; G F Vande Woude
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1995-04-11       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Evidence of an interaction between Mos and Hsp70: a role of the Mos residue serine 3 in mediating Hsp70 association.

Authors:  H Liu; V B Vuyyuru; C D Pham; Y Yang; B Singh
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  1999-06-10       Impact factor: 9.867

5.  Mos in the oocyte: how to use MAPK independently of growth factors and transcription to control meiotic divisions.

Authors:  Aude Dupré; Olivier Haccard; Catherine Jessus
Journal:  J Signal Transduct       Date:  2010-12-19
  5 in total

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