Specificity of dimer formation in tropomyosins: influence of alternatively spliced exons on homodimer and heterodimer assembly.
Tropomyosins consist of nearly 100% alpha-helix and assemble into parallel and in-register coiled-coil dimers. In vitro it has been established that nonmuscle as well as native muscle tropomyosins can form homodimers. However, a mixture of muscle alpha and beta tropomyosin subunits results in the formation of the thermodynamically more stable ... alpha/beta heterodimer. Although the assembly preference of the muscle tropomyosin heterodimer can be understood thermodynamically, the presence of multiple tropomyosin isoforms expressed in nonmuscle cells points toward a more complex principle for determining dimer formation. We have investigated the dimerization of rat tropomyosins in living cells by the use of epitope tagging with a 16-aa sequence of the influenza hemagglutinin. Employing transfection and immunoprecipitation techniques, we have analyzed the dimers formed by muscle and nonmuscle tropomyosins in rat fibroblasts. We demonstrate that the information for homo- versus heterodimerization is contained within the tropomyosin molecule itself and that the information for the selectivity is conferred by the alternatively spliced exons. These results have important implications for models of the regulation of cytoskeletal dynamics.
Mesh Terms:
Alternative Splicing, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Cytoskeleton, Epitopes, Fibroblasts, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Molecular Sequence Data, Muscle, Skeletal, Muscle, Smooth, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Rats, Recombinant Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship, Tropomyosin
Alternative Splicing, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Cytoskeleton, Epitopes, Fibroblasts, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Molecular Sequence Data, Muscle, Skeletal, Muscle, Smooth, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Rats, Recombinant Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship, Tropomyosin
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
Date: Oct. 10, 1995
PubMed ID: 7568216
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