| Literature DB >> 3965465 |
Abstract
The nuclear lamina is a polymeric protein assembly that is proposed to function as an architectural framework for the nuclear envelope. Previous work suggested that phosphorylation of the major polypeptides of the lamina (the "lamins") may induce disassembly of this structure during mitosis. To further investigate the possible involvement of phosphorylation in regulation of lamina structure, we characterized lamin phosphorylation occurring in mammalian tissue culture cells during interphase and mitosis. Phosphorylation occurs continuously throughout all interphase periods (coordinately with nuclear envelope growth), and takes place mainly on the assembled lamina. When the lamina is disassembled during cell division, the lamins are modified with approximately 1-2 molecules of associated phosphate. This level of mitotic phosphorylation is 4-7-fold higher than the average interphase level. Lamin phosphate occurs predominantly as phosphoserine, and is distributed over numerous tryptic peptides, many of which are modified during both interphase and mitotic periods. Significantly, phosphorylation is the only detectable charge-altering postsynthetic modification of the lamins that occurs specifically during mitosis. The results of this study support the notion that phosphorylation is important for regulation of interphase and mitotic lamina structure.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 3965465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157