Heterogeneous distribution of the cAMP receptor protein RII in the nervous system: evidence for its intracellular accumulation on microtubules, microtubule-organizing centers, and in the area of the Golgi complex.
Open Access
- 1 July 1986
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 103 (1) , 189-203
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.103.1.189
Abstract
The cellular and subcellular distribution of the regulatory subunit RII of cAMP-dependent protein kinase was studied by light and electron microscopy immunocytochemistry in tissue sections from rat brain and in primary cultures of brain cells. RII immunoreactivity was present in most neurons, although at variable concentration. In addition, RII was also detectable in other cell types including glia, neuroepithelial cells, and cells of mesenchymal origin. In the cell cytoplasm, RII immunoreactivity was concentrated at certain sites. An accumulation of RII immunoreactivity was found in all RII-positive cells at the Golgi area, precisely at a region directly adjacent to one of the two major faces of the Golgi complex. RII was also highly concentrated in some microtubule-rich cell processes such as cilia and neuronal dendrites, but was below detectability in most axons. In neurons, its concentration in dendrites is consistent with the previously demonstrated high affinity interaction between RII and the dendritic microtubule-associated protein 2. In addition, RII was accumulated at basal bodies of cilia and at centrosomes, i.e., sites known to act as microtubule organizers. RII-labeled centrosomes, however, were visible only in cells where the Golgi complex had a pericentrosomal organization, and not in cells where the Golgi complex was perinuclear such as in neurons and glia in situ. We hypothesize that centrosomal RII is bound to the pericentriolar microtubule-organizing material and that this material remains associated with the trans region of the Golgi complex when the latter is no longer associated with the centrosome. Our results suggest a key but not obligatory role of cAMP in the Golgi-centrosomal area, the headquarters of cell polarity, mobility and intracellular traffic, and in the function of a subpopulation of microtubules.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Golgi apparatus remains associated with microtubule organizing centers during myogenesis.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- Regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibits phosphoprotein phosphataseBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1985
- Cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase type II is associated with the Golgi complex and with centrosomesCell, 1985
- Neuronal Phosphoproteins: Physiological and Clinical ImplicationsScience, 1984
- Calmodulin-microtubule association in cultured mammalian cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Lectin-binding sites as markers of Golgi subcompartments: proximal-to-distal maturation of oligosaccharides.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Reduced temperature prevents transfer of a membrane glycoprotein to the cell surface but does not prevent terminal glycosylationPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Arrangement of proteins in the mitochondrial inner membraneBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Biomembranes, 1982
- Induction of dark-adaptive retinomotor movement (cell elongation) in teleost retinal cones by cyclic adenosine 3','5-monophosphate.The Journal of general physiology, 1982
- Identification of the Ca2+‐dependent modulator protein as the fourth subunit of rabbit skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinaseFEBS Letters, 1978