Literature DB >> 15511225

Mimicking phosphorylation of the small heat-shock protein alphaB-crystallin recruits the F-box protein FBX4 to nuclear SC35 speckles.

John den Engelsman1, Erik J Bennink, Linda Doerwald, Carla Onnekink, Lisa Wunderink, Usha P Andley, Kanefusa Kato, Wilfried W de Jong, Wilbert C Boelens.   

Abstract

The mammalian small heat shock protein alphaB-crystallin can be phosphorylated at three different sites, Ser19, Ser45 and Ser59. We compared the intracellular distribution of wild-type, nonphosphorylatable and all possible pseudophosphorylation mutants of alphaB-crystallin by immunoblot and immunocytochemical analyses of stable and transiently transfected cells. We observed that pseudophosphorylation at two (especially S19D/S45D) or all three (S19D/S45D/S59D) sites induced the partial translocation of alphaB-crystallin from the detergent-soluble to the detergent-insoluble fraction. Double immunofluorescence studies showed that the pseudophosphorylation mutants localized in nuclear speckles containing the splicing factor SC35. The alphaB-crystallin mutants in these speckles were resistant to mild detergent treatment, and also to DNase I or RNase A digestion, indicating a stable interaction with one or more speckle proteins, not dependent on intact DNA or RNA. We further found that FBX4, an adaptor protein of the ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase SKP1/CUL1/F-box known to interact with pseudophosphorylated alphaB-crystallin, was also recruited to SC35 speckles when cotransfected with the pseudophosphorylation mutants. Because SC35 speckles also react with an antibody against alphaB-crystallin endogenously phosphorylated at Ser45, our findings suggest that alphaB-crystallin has a phosphorylation-dependent role in the ubiquitination of a component of SC35 speckles.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15511225     DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.2004.04359.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Biochem        ISSN: 0014-2956


  24 in total

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9.  Small heat-shock proteins select deltaF508-CFTR for endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation.

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Review 10.  Neuromuscular Diseases Due to Chaperone Mutations: A Review and Some New Results.

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