Two phosphorylated HMG-like proteins with M, -10 000 have been isolated from HeLa S3 cells, one being present in metaphase and one in interphase cells. The amino acid compositions of these proteins are very similar but differ from the known HMG proteins. However, they exhibit similarities being rich in proline, basic and acidic amino acids. A possible role in chromatin condensation of the HMG-like protein characteristic for metaphase cells is suggested.High mobility group-like protein Interphase Metaphase Phosphorylation
SummaryNinety-two consecutive patients referred for suspicion of deep venous thrombosis (DVT) were analyzed for D-dimer using ELISA, latex test, and a new immunofiltration method (NycoCard D-Dimer). Contrast venography verified the diagnosis in 40, and excluded the diagnosis in 52 patients. The sensitivity, negative predictive values, specificity and positive predictive values were, for ELISA 98%, 95%, 38% and 54, for NycoCard D-Dimer 100%, 100%, 42% and 57% and for the latex test 73%, 78%, 75%, and 69%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity were inversely related with increasing pathological cutoff value. Comparison of test results by concentration category revealed a good agreement between ELISA and NycoCard D-Dimer, but to less extent between latex and the two other tests. It is concluded that NycoCard D-Dimer and D-dimer ELISA are well-suited as exclusion tests for DVT. A plasma sample is tested with NycoCard D-Dimer in less than 2 min. Thus, this test combines advantageous analytical properties comparable to the ELISA-test, with rapidity and simplicity comparable to the latex test.
This paper shows that the low molecular mass HMG proteins 14 and 17 do not seem to be phosphorylated in Ehrlich ascites cells whereas two other small HMG proteins designated HMG I and Y are. Amino acid analysis and peptide mapping of all four proteins demonstrated that HMG I and Y were not phosphorylated modifications of HMG 14 or 17.
The present work describes a perchloric-acid-soluble high-mobility-group (HMG)-like protein present in HeLa and Ehrlich ascites cells, rat and calf liver. The protein is designated P I and has, depending on the source, a molecular mass 48 -53 kDa and an amino acid composition which, like the HMG proteins, is characterized by a high content of acidic and basic residues and of proline. The protein contains about 10 mol serine/100 mol amino acid residues, is highly phosphorylated and has, in contrast to the known HMG proteins, an acidic isoelectric point of 5.0. An estimate suggests that protein P1 in HeLa interphase cells contains 25-30 residues of phosphate. Like HMG 1 and 2 it is distributed between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. In HeLa metaphase cells P 1 is further modified, resulting in an increase in apparent molecular mass from 53 kDa to 56 kDa.
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