A 57 kDa protein (p57) was obtained during the study on phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Its cDNA was isolated from calf spleen and human leukemia cell line HL60 libraries and cloned. In the primary structures of p57, they have two unique amino acid sequence motifs, a WD repeat and a leucine zipper motif. Furthermore, p57 shared sequence similarity (40%) with coronin, an actin-binding protein responsible for chemotaxis, cell motility, and cytokinesis of Dictyostelium discoideum, which has only the WD repeat, p57 also showed an actinbinding activity and was mainly expressed in immune tissues. From these results, we conclude that p57 is a coronin-like novel actin-binding protein in mammalian cells but may also have a different function from coronin.
Historically, modulation of transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling has been deemed a rational strategy to treat many disorders, though few successful examples have been reported to date. This difficulty could be partially attributed to the challenges of achieving good specificity over many closely related enzymes that are implicated in distinct phenotypes in organ development and in tissue homeostasis. Recently, fresolimumab and disitertide, two peptidic TGF-β blockers, demonstrated significant therapeutic effects toward human skin fibrosis. Therefore, the selective blockage of TGF-β signaling assures a viable treatment option for fibrotic skin disorders such as systemic sclerosis (SSc). In this report, we disclose selective TGF-β type II receptor (TGF-βRII) inhibitors that exhibited high functional selectivity in cell-based assays. The representative compound 29 attenuated collagen type I alpha 1 chain (COL1A1) expression in a mouse fibrosis model, which suggests that selective inhibition of TGF-βRII-dependent signaling could be a new treatment for fibrotic disorders.
We recently identified a phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC)-stimulating GTP-binding protein (G protein) in calf thymocyte cytosol (Wang, P., Toyoshima, S., & Osawa, T. (1987) J. Biochem. 102, 1275-1287; and (1988) 103, 137-142). In this study we completely purified a G protein whose properties are quite similar to the G protein mentioned above from the calf thymocyte membrane and determined partial amino acid sequences of it. The purification was achieved by first treating the membrane with GTP gamma S, followed by sequential column chromatographies on DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B, Sephacryl S-200, Mono Q, and Mono S. The G protein was purified in a GTP gamma S-binding form and assayed as to the radioactivity of the [35S]GTP gamma S-bound PI-PLC-associated G protein standard obtained from calf thymocyte cytosol. The purified G protein could stimulate the activity of a partially purified PI-PLC for phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate hydrolysis. From approximately 5.6 g of membrane protein we obtained about 5 micrograms of a purified sample. The purified G protein showed a molecular weight of 21 kDa on SDS-PAGE and one of 25 kDa on gel filtration. The partial amino acid sequences were determined by treating the purified sample with lysylendopeptidase, purifying the resultant peptide fragments on a HPLC-reverse phase column and then sequencing the peptide fragments with a sequencer. Comparison of the obtained sequences with those of known lower molecular weight GTP-binding proteins suggested that, although structurally similar to rho gene products, this is a novel G protein.
ADP-ribosyltransferase from Clostridium botulinum type C strain was found to induce an increase of inositol phosphates (IPs) formation in murine thymocytes membranes. Incubation of electropermeabilized murine thymocytes with the enzyme also caused an increase of IPs formation in the cells. This increase of IPs formation in the enzyme-treated membranes and electropermeabilized cells was dependent on the amount of both NAD and the enzyme, suggesting that the stimulation of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PLC) was related to ADP-ribosylation of membrane proteins by the enzyme. On the other hand, in calf and murine thymocytes two proteins with the same molecular weight of 21,000 were found to be ADP-ribosylated by the botulinum ADP-ribosyltransferase. A minor ADP-ribosylation substrate was shown by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be G21k, a low-molecular-weight GTP-binding protein (G protein) suggested previously by us to be involved in PLC regulation [Wang, P. et al. (1987) J. Biochem. 102, 1275-1287; (1988) 103, 137-142; and (1989) 105, 461-466], and the other major ADP-ribosylation substrate was identified as a rho A protein. Under the experimental conditions of the IPs formation study, ADP-ribosylation of both G21k and rho A proteins by botulinum ADP-ribosyltransferase in membranes and permeabilized cells was observed. These results suggest that botulinum ADP-ribosyltransferase-induced PLC stimulation in thymocytes is closely correlated with ADP-ribosylation of the low-molecular-weight G proteins.
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