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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Smg GDS is a regulator having two activities on a group of small G proteins including the Rho and Rap1 family members and Ki-Ras; one is to stimulate their GDP/GTP exchange reactions, and the other is to inhibit their interactions with membranes. Structurally, it has 11 Arm repeats, a protein interaction motif, found in the Drosophila Armadillo protein, a homolog of mammalian
beta-catenin
. We have isolated here an Smg GDS-interacting protein from a human brain cDNA library by use of the yeast two-hybrid method and named it SMAP (Smg GDS-associated protein). SMAP was a protein with a Mr of 91,189 and 792 amino acids. SMAP had 9 Arm repeats. Recombinant SMAP interacted with recombinant Smg GDS but did not affect the two activities of Smg GDS on RhoA. SMAP was tyrosine phosphorylated by v-Src, and this phosphorylation reduced the affinity of SMAP for Smg GDS. Tissue and subcellular distribution analyses indicated that SMAP was ubiquitously expressed and highly concentrated at the endoplasmic reticulum area. Searches for sequence homology to SMAP revealed that SMAP was significantly homologous to sea urchin SpKAP115, suggesting that SMAP is a mammalian counterpart of SpKAP115 or its related protein. SpKAP115 is an accessory subunit of sea urchin kinesin II, an
ATPase
motor that transports vesicles along microtubules. These results suggest that SMAP serves as an adaptor for both Smg GDS and kinesin II or its related protein and links them with both the Smg GDS-regulated small G protein and Src tyrosine kinase signalings.
...
PMID:SMAP, an Smg GDS-associating protein having arm repeats and phosphorylated by Src tyrosine kinase. 890 Jan 89
For most epithelial cells, the adherens junction protein E-cadherin is an epithelial morphogen, inducing the development of an epithelial phenotype in vitro after cell contact at confluency. Here retinal pigment epithelial cells (RPE), which lack E-cadherin but express a cadherin that is also found in many non-epithelial cells (N-cadherin), were examined for the ability to produce an epithelial phenotype in vitro. Subpopulations of grossly epithelioid or fusiform cells were selected for analysis from RPE cultures derived from adult human donors. After confluency, epithelioid RPE cells were observed to undergo time-dependent changes that were similar to those previously found in epithelial cells expressing E-cadherin: the cadherin gradually developed a zonular distribution of detergent-resistant protein that co-localized with forming circumferential actin bundles; Na/K
ATPase
accumulated at cell contact sites, then polarized to its tissue-specific domain (the apical membrane for RPE); the cells formed elevated domes on the impermeant culture substrate. In contrast to cells expressing E-cadherin, these events in RPE required weeks rater than days at confluency. Additional proteins were examined in epithelioid RPE cells revealing that cytokeratins reorganized after confluency producing a zonular array, and several other adhesion proteins (alpha5beta1 integrin, ICAM-1, PECAM-1, NCAM) became enriched at cell-cell contact sites, each developing a distinct pattern at a distinct postconfluency interval. In contrast to epithelioid RPE, in fusiform RPE the adhesion molecules did not develop discrete distribution patterns after confluency, although the same complement of adhesion proteins was expressed. In cells expressing E-cadherin, the absence of epithelial properties is often due to underexpression of the cadherin or of the catenins, adherens junction proteins that link the cadherin to actin. Fusiform RPE, however, were not deficient in these proteins, expressing amounts of N-cadherin, alpha-catenin,
beta-catenin
, plakoglobin, p120, alpha-actinin and vinculin that were equivalent to epithelioid cells. It appears, therefore, that a subset of epithelial cells that express N-cadherin can produce a highly-developed epithelial phenotype in vitro through a slow morphogenetic process. However, the expression alone of adhesion molecules, including those with a morphoregulatory function in other cells, is insufficient to produce an epithelial phenotype in all cells derived from the pigment epithelium.
...
PMID:Cell-cell adhesion molecules and the development of an epithelial phenotype in cultured human retinal pigment epithelial cells. 936 46
Cytoskeletal proteins associate with specific cell adhesion complexes and membrane proteins and influence the structural and functional organization of polarized epithelial cells in the kidney. Among such proteins that have been studied in cultured cell lines and in animals are the tight junction complex (ZO-1 and occludin), the adherens cell-cell adhesion complex (alpha-,
beta-catenin
and plakoglobin), and Na+,K+-
ATPase
, with its associated membrane skeleton proteins ankyrin and fodrin. Although abnormal distribution of these proteins has been implicated in the pathogenesis of various renal diseases, the relevance of these findings to corresponding disease of the human kidney remains to be established. As a first step towards elucidating a role for such proteins in human kidney disease, we undertook a histochemical analysis of the distribution of these proteins in biopsy specimens of human kidney taken from healthy kidney transplant donors. We found each protein to have a characteristic subcellular localization and an intensity of staining that varied among different segments of the nephron in a manner that is consistent with discrete, segmental nephron function.
...
PMID:Distribution of cell membrane-associated proteins along the human nephron. 981 84
Blastocytst formation is dependent on the differentiation of a transporting epithelium, the trophectoderm, which is coordinated by the embryonic expression and cell adhesive properties of E-cadherin. The trophectoderm shares differentiative characteristics with all epithelial tissues, including E-cadherin-mediated cell adhesion, tight junction formation, and polarized distribution of intramembrane proteins, including the Na-K
ATPase
. The present study was conducted to characterize the mRNA expression and distribution of polypeptides encoding E-cadherin,
beta-catenin
, and the tight junction associated protein, zonula occludens protein 1, in pre-attachment bovine embryos, in vitro. Immunocytochemistry and gene specific reverse transcription--polymerase chain reaction methods were used. Transcripts for E-cadherin and
beta-catenin
were detected in embryos of all stages throughout pre-attachment development. Immunocytochemistry revealed E-cadherin and
beta-catenin
polypeptides evenly distributed around the cell margins of one-cell zygotes and cleavage stage embryos. In the morula, detection of these proteins diminished in the free apical surface of outer blastomeres. E-cadherin and
beta-catenin
became restricted to the basolateral membranes of trophectoderm cells of the blastocyst, while maintaining apolar distributions in the inner cell mass. Zonula occludens protein 1 immunoreactivity was undetectable until the morula stage and first appeared as punctate points between the outer cells. In the blastocyst, zonula occludens protein 1 was localized as a continuous ring at the apical points of trophectoderm cell contact and was undetectable in the inner cell mass. These results illustrate that the gene products encoding E-cadherin,
beta-catenin
and zonula occludens protein 1 are expressed and maintain cellular distribution patterns consistent with their predicted roles in mediating trophectoderm differentiation in in vitro produced bovine embryos.
...
PMID:Trophectoderm differentiation in the bovine embryo: characterization of a polarized epithelium. 1007 Mar 62
beta-catenin
mutations have been found not only in melanoma and prostatic carcinoma but also in hepatocellular carcinomas in human, c-myc, H-ras genes transgenic mice and chemically-induced models. We investigated
beta-catenin
mutations in human hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs), Hep G2 cell line and HCCs in
SV40 T-antigen
transgenic mice, in order to examine whether
beta-catenin
mutations are frequently observed in HCC in general. We found a point mutation of
beta-catenin
in one of nine HCCs in human and a deletion of it in Hep G2 cell line. However, we found no mutation in HCC in SV40 TG mice liver.
...
PMID:beta-catenin mutations are absent in hepatocellular carcinomas of SV40 T-antigen transgenic mice. 1081 85
Organ size is precisely regulated during development, but the control mechanisms remain obscure. We have isolated a mutation in zebrafish, liebeskummer (lik), which causes development of hyperplastic embryonic hearts. lik encodes Reptin, a component of a DNA-stimulated
ATPase
complex. The mutation activates
ATPase
activity of Reptin complexes and causes a cell-autonomous proliferation of cardiomyocytes to begin well after progenitors have fashioned the primitive heart tube. With regard to heart growth,
beta-catenin
and Pontin, a DNA-stimulated
ATPase
that is often part of complexes with Reptin, are in the same genetic pathways. Pontin reduction phenocopies the cardiac hyperplasia of the lik mutation. Thus, the Reptin/Pontin ratio serves to regulate heart growth during development, at least in part via the
beta-catenin
pathway.
...
PMID:Reptin and pontin antagonistically regulate heart growth in zebrafish embryos. 1246 78
Proximal tubules (PT) in 7-10-day old chick mesonephros were examined histochemically to evaluate their structural and functional properties related to the absorption capacity of the epithelium and its possible alterations leading to cystically dilated tubules (CDT). Alkaline phosphatase activity at the apical cell membrane was demonstrated in varying intensities in large PT. A similar heterogeneity was also detected in the expression of proteoglycans (Lewis(x) antigen) localized in the apical part of the epithelial cell membrane but not in the basolateral membrane parts (
beta-catenin
, Na(+),K(+)-
ATPase
). In analogy, the ability to accumulate trypan blue was found in the same cell population. We hypothesize that epithelial cells in proximal tubules of nephrons with a defective apical cell membrane cause reduced fluid absorption and subsequent overfilling and dilation of the tubules.
...
PMID:Histochemical demonstration of the heterogeneity of the epithelium of proximal tubules in the chick mesonephros. 1255 13
Regulation and assembly of the epithelial cell junctional complex involve multiple signaling mechanisms, including heterotrimeric G proteins. Recently, we demonstrated that Galpha12 binds to the tight junction scaffolding protein ZO-1 through the SH3 domain and that activated Galpha12 increases paracellular permeability in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells (Meyer et al. J Biol Chem 277: 24855-24858, 2002). In the present studies, we explore the effects of Galpha12 expression on tight and adherens junction proteins and examine downstream signaling pathways. By confocal microscopy, we detect disrupted tight and adherens junction proteins with increased actin stress fibers in constitutively active Galpha12 (QLalpha12)-expressing MDCK cells. The normal distribution of ZO-1 and Na-K-
ATPase
was altered in QLalpha12-expressing MDCK cells, consistent with loss of polarity. We found that the tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein and the Src-specific inhibitor PP-2 reversibly abrogated the QLalpha12 phenotype on the junctional complex. Junctional protein localization was preserved in PP-2- or genistein-treated QLalpha12-expressing cells, and the increase in paracellular permeability as measured by transepithelial resistance and [3H]mannitol flux was prevented by the inhibitors. Src activity was increased in QLalpha12-expressing MDCK cells as assessed by Src autophosphorylation, and
beta-catenin
tyrosine phosphorylation was also increased, although there was no detectable increase in Rho activity. Taken together, these results indicate that Galpha12 regulates MDCK cell junctions, in part through Src tyrosine kinase pathways.
...
PMID:Galpha12 regulates epithelial cell junctions through Src tyrosine kinases. 1289 Jun 51
Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is a life-threatening autoimmune disease of skin adhesion associated with IgG autoantibodies against keratinocytes (KC). Treatment of PV with systemic corticosteroids is life-saving, but the mechanism of the therapeutic action has not been fully understood. We have developed an animal model that demonstrates that methylprednisolone (MP) can block PV IgG-induced acantholysis, decreasing the extent of keratinocyte detachment in the epidermis of 3-5-day-old nude mice from 77.5 +/- 0.6 to 24.1 +/- 1.5% (p < 0.05). We hypothesized that in addition to immunosuppression, MP may exhibit direct anti-acantholytic effects in epidermis, and we compared the effects of PV IgG and MP on KC. The use of DNA microarray showed that PV IgG down-regulated and MP up-regulated expression of the genes encoding keratinocyte adhesion molecules, antigen-processing proteins, regulators of cell cycle and apoptosis, differentiation markers, Na+,K+-
ATPase
, protein kinases and phosphatases, and serine proteases and their inhibitors. Overall, PV IgG decreased transcription of 198 genes and increased transcription of 31 genes. MP decreased transcription of 14 genes and increased transcription of 818 genes. Specific effects of PV IgG and MP on keratinocyte adhesion molecules were further investigated by Western blot and immunofluorescence assays. By immunoblotting, MP increased the protein levels of E-cadherin and desmogleins 1 and 3 by 300, 180, and 40%, respectively. Specific staining of KC for E-cadherin and desmogleins 1 and 3 increased by 235, 228, and 148%, respectively. In addition, PV IgG increased the level of phosphorylation of E-cadherin by 42%,
beta-catenin
by 37%, gamma-catenin by 136%, and desmoglein 3 by 300%, whereas pretreatment with 0.25 mm MP abolished phosphorylation of these adhesion molecules. These results suggested that therapeutic effects of MP in PV include both the up-regulated synthesis and post-translational modification of the keratinocyte adhesion molecules.
...
PMID:Pemphigus vulgaris IgG and methylprednisolone exhibit reciprocal effects on keratinocytes. 1460 Jan 50
Beta-catenin
has a key role in Wnt signaling via effects on T-cell factor (TCF)-mediated transcription. Mutational defects in
beta-catenin
regulation are seen in many cancers, leading to elevated
beta-catenin
levels, enhanced binding of
beta-catenin
to TCFs, and increased expression of TCF-regulated genes. Factors cooperating with
beta-catenin
in transcription of TCF-regulated genes are not well defined. TIP49, an
ATPase
previously implicated as a cofactor for oncogenic transformation by c-Myc, has been shown to bind to
beta-catenin
. We found that expression of an
ATPase
-deficient mutant form of TIP49 (TIP49D302N) substantially inhibited
beta-catenin
-mediated neoplastic transformation of immortalized rat epithelial cells and anchorage-independent growth of human colon cancer cells with deregulated
beta-catenin
. The TIP49D302N mutant inhibited
beta-catenin
-mediated activation of TCF-dependent cellular genes. Similar inhibition of the expression of
beta-catenin
/TCF-dependent genes was seen with small interfering RNA approaches against endogenous TIP49. TIP49 was found in complexes with chromatin remodeling and histone-modifying factors and cofactors, including the TIP60 histone acetylase-associated proteins transactivation/transformation-domain associated protein (TRRAP) and BAF53. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation methods, the TIP49, TIP60, and TRRAP proteins were found to interact with sequences in the regulatory region of the gene for ITF-2, a TCF-dependent cellular gene. The ability of TIP49D302N to inhibit ITF-2 gene expression was linked to decreased acetylation of histones in the vicinity of the TCF-binding sites in the ITF-2 promoter region. We suggest that TIP49 is an important cofactor in
beta-catenin
/TCF gene regulation in normal and neoplastic cells, likely functioning in chromatin remodeling.
...
PMID:TIP49 regulates beta-catenin-mediated neoplastic transformation and T-cell factor target gene induction via effects on chromatin remodeling. 1469 87
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