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Query: EC:3.4.11.18 (
MAP
)
7,412
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
(1) RNase Ms was inactivated by iodoacetate. The inactivation was most rapid at pH 6.0, and was inhibited in the presence of a denaturant such as 8 m urea or 6 m guanidine-HCL. (2) Competitive inhibitors protected RNase Ms from inactivation by iodoacetate; the effect was in the order 2',(3')-
GTP
greater than 2',(3')-AMP, 2',(3')-UMP greater than or equal to 2',(3')-CMP. The order is not consistent with that of the binding constants of the 4 nucleotides towards RNase Ms (A is greater than C greater than G greater than U). (3) RNase Ms was inactivated with the concomitant incorporation of one molar equivalent of carboxymethly group. The following evidence indicated that the carboxymethyl group was incorporated into the carboxyl group of an aspartic acid or glutamic acid residue. (i) The carboxymethyl group incorporated into RNase Ms was liberated by treatment with 0.1 n NaOH or 1 m hydroxylamine. (ii) The amino acid composition of carboxymethylated RNase Ms (CM RNase Ms) after acid hydrolysis is similar to that of RNase Ms. (4) 14C-Labeled CM RNase Ms was digested successively with alkaline protease and amino-
peptidase M
. The radioactive amino acid released was eluted just before aspartate on an amino acid analyzer. After hydrolysis with 6 n HCL, glutamic acid was produced exclusively from the radioactive amino acid. The specific radioactivity of this amino acid calculated from the radioactivity and glutamic acid formed was practctically the same as that of CM RNase Ms. Thus, it was concluded that a carboxymethyl group was incorporated at the carboxyl group of a glutamic acid residue of RNnase Ms. (5) CM RNase Ms bound with 2'-AMP to the same extent as native RNase Ms, but bound to a lesser extent with 2',(3')-GMP. (6) Although the conformation of CM RNase Ms as judged from the CD spectrum was practically the same as that of native RNase Ms, the reactivity of CM RNase Ms towards dinitrofluorobenzene was different from that of native RNase Ms, indicating some difference in the conformation. (7) These results indicate that one glutamic acid residue is involved in the active of RNase Ms.
...
PMID:Carboxymethylation of a minor ribonuclease from Aspergillus saitoi. 47 29
Insulin-induced differentiation of 3T3 L1 cells to adipocytes can be mimicked by the expression of transfected ras oncogenes but not of the tyrosine-kinase oncogenes src and trk. Expression of two different transfected, dominant inhibitory ras mutants resulted in significant inhibition of insulin-induced differentiation, suggesting that endogenous Ras proteins are mediators of insulin signaling in these cells. Exposure of untransfected 3T3 L1 cells to insulin resulted in significant formation of the active Ras.
GTP
complex, at levels comparable with those resulting from exposure to platelet-derived growth factor. However, whereas exposure of the same cells to platelet-derived growth factor resulted in significant tyrosine phosphorylation of the p21ras GTPase-activating protein (GAP), insulin-treated cells did not show any detectable levels of de novo GAP tyrosine phosphorylation. Interestingly, insulin caused tyrosine phosphorylation of the p62 polypeptide coprecipitated with GAP by anti-GAP antibodies. Insulin-induced activation of cytosolic MAP kinase activity in untransfected 3T3 L1 cells was also mimicked by Ras expression (in the absence of insulin) in the same cells transfected with an inducible ras construct. These results confirm that Ras proteins participate in insulin signaling pathways in these mammalian cells and indicate that activation of cytosolic
MAP
kinases is an early event occurring downstream from Ras activation. However, tyrosine phosphorylation of GAP appears not to be a significant upstream regulatory event in the activation of Ras by insulin.
...
PMID:Activation of Ras by insulin in 3T3 L1 cells does not involve GTPase-activating protein phosphorylation. 132 23
Many growth factors upon stimulation of their receptors induce the activity of extracellular signal-regulated kinases, ERKs, also known as
MAP
kinases. Several of these growth factors also activate the ras proto-oncogene product, p21ras (Ras), by stimulating the conversion of the inactive GDP-bound form of Ras to the active
GTP
-bound form. We have shown that direct introduction of p21ras oncoprotein into cells in the absence of growth factors activates ERKs within five minutes, which indicates that normal p21ras may be involved in the activation of ERKs by growth factors. Here we use a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing an interfering mutant of p21ras, RasAsn17, to investigate this question. In NIH3T3 cells that overexpress the insulin receptor, this recombinant virus inhibits insulin-induced activation of ERK2 completely, but there is no inhibition of insulin-induced activation of phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase. In rat-1 cells the recombinant virus inhibited ERK2 activity induced by platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) but not by phorbol ester. We conclude that p21ras mediates insulin- and PDGF-induced activation of ERK2.
...
PMID:Involvement of p21ras in activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2. 144 47
A monoclonal antibody raised against mitotic spindles isolated from CHO cells ([CHO1], Sellitto, C., and R. Kuriyama. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106:431-439) identifies an epitope that resides on polypeptides of 95 and 105 kD and is localized in the spindles of diverse organisms. The antigen is distributed throughout the spindle at metaphase but becomes concentrated in a progressively narrower zone on either side of the spindle midplane as anaphase progresses. Microinjection of CHO1, either as an ascites fluid or as purified IgM, results in mitotic inhibition in a stage-specific and dose-dependent manner. Parallel control injections with nonimmune IgMs do not yield significant mitotic inhibition. Immunofluorescence analysis of injected cells reveals that those which complete mitosis display normal localization of CHO1, whereas arrested cells show no specific localization of the CHO1 antigen within the spindle. Immunoelectron microscopic images of such arrested cells indicate aberrant microtubule organization. The CHO1 antigen in HeLa cell extracts copurifies with taxol-stabilized microtubules. Neither of the polypeptides bearing the antigen is extracted from microtubules by ATP or
GTP
, but both are approximately 60% extracted with 0.5 M NaCl. Sucrose gradient analysis reveals that the antigens sediment at approximately 11S. The CHO 1 antigen appears to be a novel mitotic
MAP
whose proper distribution within the spindle is required for mitosis. The properties of the antigen(s) suggest that the corresponding protein(s) are part of the mechanism that holds the antiparallel microtubules of the two interdigitating half spindles together during anaphase.
...
PMID:A monoclonal antibody to a mitotic microtubule-associated protein blocks mitotic progression. 219 59
Kinesin from porcine brain was prepared by a procedure based on the strong binding of the protein to microtubules in the presence of sodium fluoride and ATP. The protocol reduces the requirement for taxol and AMP-PNP. The kinesin is active in terms of its ability to move microtubules on glass slides and its ATPase. The ATPase of this kinesin is about 8 nmol/min/mg; it is activated to 19 nmol/min/mg in the presence of microtubules. The relationship between gliding velocity and ATP concentration follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Using the motility assay, the maximal velocity is 0.78 micron/sec, and the Km value is 150 microM for ATP. For
GTP
the corresponding values are 0.38 micron/sec and 1.7 mM. ADP is a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.29 mM). Crude preparations of kinesin do not support motility on glass slides, whereas gel-filtered kinesin does. A search for potential inhibitory factors showed that one of them is MAP2; however, its inhibitory effect becomes visible only in certain conditions. MAP2 bound to microtubules does not inhibit kinesin-induced motility. However, when MAP2 and kinesin are preadsorbed to the glass surface independently of microtubules, MAP2 prevents the interaction of kinesin with microtubules, as if it formed a "lawn" that acted as a spacer and thus repelled the
MAP
-free microtubules or crosslinked the
MAP
-containing ones. The repelling effect of MAP2 domains (projection or assembly fragments obtained by chymotryptic cleavage) added separately is less pronounced and can be overcome by kinesin. These results reinforce the view of MAP2 as a spacer molecule.
...
PMID:Interaction between kinesin, microtubules, and microtubule-associated protein 2. 253 84
The kinetic pathway of microtubule depolymerization at 0 degrees C has been examined. Microtubules made of
MAP
-containing and
MAP
-free tubulins were depolymerized at 0 degree C in the presence of [3H]GDP or [3H]
GTP
or of trace amounts of 125I dimeric tubulin. The products of depolymerization were separated on a column, their structures were identified by electron microscopy, and the time course of incorporation of 3H or 125I labels in the different components of the system was determined. Two predominant assembly states of tubulin found in the nonmicrotubule state were alpha-beta dimers and double rings. Kinetic data indicate that ring formation from disassembling microtubules does not occur by direct coiling of protofilaments as previously thought, but disassembling GDP subunits are in very rapid equilibrium with curved oligomers that are kinetic intermediates in the isodesmic assembly of GDP-tubulin. The formation of oligomers and rings from dimers, at concentrations as low as 10 microM, is much faster than nucleotide exchange on alpha-beta-tubulin. Disassembly of double rings, in contrast, is slower than nucleotide exchange on alpha-beta-tubulin, by 1 order of magnitude in the absence of MAPs and 2 orders of magnitude in the presence of MAPs. These results support the model proposed previously to explain spontaneous oscillations in microtubule assembly. They are consistent with the existence of an equilibrium between two conformations of tubulin, "straight", i.e., microtubule forming, and "curved", i.e., ring forming, under the allosteric control of bound nucleotide. The straight conformation requires the presence of two ionizable hydroxyls on the gamma-phosphate in
GTP
or GDP-Pi.
...
PMID:Cold depolymerization of microtubules to double rings: geometric stabilization of assemblies. 260 48
We recently found that the brain cytosolic microtubule-associated protein 1C (
MAP
1C) is a microtubule-activated ATPase, capable of translocating microtubules in vitro in the direction corresponding to retrograde transport. (Paschal, B. M., H. S. Shpetner, and R. B. Vallee. 1987b. J. Cell Biol. 105:1273-1282; Paschal, B. M., and R. B. Vallee. 1987. Nature [Lond.]. 330:181-183.). Biochemical analysis of this protein (op. cit.) as well as scanning transmission electron microscopy revealed that
MAP
1C is a brain cytoplasmic form of the ciliary and flagellar ATPase dynein (Vallee, R. B., J. S. Wall, B. M. Paschal, and H. S. Shpetner. 1988. Nature [Lond.]. 332:561-563). We have now characterized the ATPase activity of the brain enzyme in detail. We found that microtubule activation required polymeric tubulin and saturated with increasing tubulin concentration. The maximum activity at saturating tubulin (Vmax) varied from 186 to 239 nmol/min per mg. At low ionic strength, the Km for microtubules was 0.16 mg/ml tubulin, substantially lower than that previously reported for axonemal dynein. The microtubule-stimulated activity was extremely sensitive to changes in ionic strength and sulfhydryl oxidation state, both of which primarily affected the microtubule concentrations required for half-maximal activation. In a number of respects the brain dynein was enzymatically similar to both axonemal and egg dyneins. Thus, the ATPase required divalent cations, calcium stimulating activity less effectively than magnesium. The MgATPase was inhibited by metavandate (Ki = 5-10 microM for the microtubule-stimulated activity), 1 mM NEM, and 1 mM EHNA. In contrast to other dyneins, the brain enzyme hydrolyzed CTP, TTP, and
GTP
at higher rates than ATP. Thus, the enzymological properties of the brain cytoplasmic dynein are clearly related to those of other dyneins, though the brain enzyme is unique in its substrate specificity and in its high sensitivity to stimulation by microtubules.
...
PMID:Characterization of the microtubule-activated ATPase of brain cytoplasmic dynein (MAP 1C). 297 Oct 69
The removal of tightly bound GDP from the exchangeable nucleotide-binding site of tubulin has been performed with alkaline phosphatase under conditions which essentially retain the assembly properties of the protein. When microtubule protein is treated with alkaline phosphatase, nucleotide is selectively removed from tubulin dimer rather than from
MAP
(microtubule-associated protein)-containing oligomeric species. Tubulin devoid of E-site (the exchangeable nucleotide-binding site of the tubulin dimer) nucleotide shows enhanced proteolytic susceptibility of the beta-subunit to thermolysin and decreased protein stability, consistent with nucleotide removal causing changes in protein tertiary structure. Pyrophosphate ion (3 mM) is able to promote formation of normal microtubules in the complete absence of
GTP
by incubation at 37 degrees C either with nucleotide-depleted microtubule protein or with nucleotide-depleted tubulin dimer to which MAPs have been added. The resulting microtubules contain up to 80% of tubulin lacking E-site nucleotide. In addition to its effects on nucleation, pyrophosphate competes weakly with GDP bound at the E-site. It is deduced that binding of pyrophosphate at a vacant E-site can promote microtubule assembly. The minimum structural requirement for ligands to induce tubulin assembly apparently involves charge neutralization at the E-site by bidentate ligation, which stabilizes protein domains in a favourable orientation for promoting the supramolecular protein-protein interactions involved in microtubule formation.
...
PMID:Tubulin-nucleotide interactions. Effects of removal of exchangeable guanine nucleotide on protein conformation and microtubule assembly. 303 51
GDP reduces both the rate and amplitude of
GTP
-induced assembly of microtubules from tubulin dimer or from microtubule protein, and promotes disassembly from microtubules at the steady state. One interpretation postulates that added GDP modifies microtubule ENDS so that tubulin-
GTP
, the species involved in steady state elongation of microtubules, cannot bind to a microtubule END containing tubulin-GDP. This concept has been used in subsequent models of assembly which treat the 'dynamic instability' of microtubules. We question this interpretation on the basis of the published experimental data and the results reported here. Using a relatively simple model for microtubule assembly, we show by numerical simulation that the quantitative effects of GDP on the rate and amplitude of microtubule assembly and inhibition of steady state GTPase activity are well accounted for by the nucleotide exchange equilibrium of tubulin-GDP and tubulin-
GTP
. We therefore conclude that the effect of added GDP on elongation of
MAP
-containing microtubules and on steady state GTPase activity does not indicate modification of the activity of microtubule ENDs but depends on the tubulin-
GTP
/tubulin-GDP equilibrium. Additional evidence argues that microtubule ENDS containing GDP can indeed accept elongation by tubulin-
GTP
.
...
PMID:Inhibition of microtubule elongation by GDP. 371 9
A central feature of signal transduction downstream of both receptor and oncogenic tyrosine kinases is the Ras-dependent activation of a protein kinase cascade consisting of Raf-1, Mek (MAP kinase kinase) and ERKs (
MAP
kinases). To study the role of tyrosine kinase activity in the activation of Raf-1, we have examined the properties of p74Raf-1 and oncogenic Src that are necessary for activation of p74Raf-1. We show that in mammalian cells activation of p74Raf-1 by oncogenic Src requires pp60Src to be myristoylated and the ability of p74Raf-1 to interact with p21Ras-
GTP
. The Ras/Raf interaction is required for p21Ras-
GTP
to bring p74Raf-1 to the plasma membrane for phosphorylation at tyrosine 340 or 341, probably by membrane-bound pp60Src. When oncogenic Src is expressed with Raf-1, p74Raf-1 is activated 5-fold; however, when co-expressed with oncogenic Ras and Src, Raf-1 is activated 25-fold and this is associated with a further 3-fold increase in tyrosine phosphorylation. Thus, p21Ras-
GTP
is the limiting component in bringing p74Raf-1 to the plasma membrane for tyrosine phosphorylation. Using mutants of Raf-1 at Tyr340/341, we show that in addition to tyrosine phosphorylation at these sites, there is an additional activation step resulting from p21Ras-
GTP
recruiting p74Raf-1 to the plasma membrane. Thus, the role of Ras in Raf-1 activation is to bring p74Raf-1 to the plasma membrane for at least two different activation steps.
...
PMID:Ras recruits Raf-1 to the plasma membrane for activation by tyrosine phosphorylation. 754 86
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