DNA cloning and amino acid sequence determination of a major constituent protein of mammalian nucleoli
- 1 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Chromosoma
- Vol. 96 (6) , 417-426
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00303035
Abstract
Using a cDNA probe encoding the nucleolar protein N038 of Xenopus laevis, we have isolated clones that code for the corresponding mammalian protein from cDNA libraries of mouse embryonal carcinoma and fetal liver cells. The murine cDNA-derived amino acid sequence defines a polypeptide of 292 amino acids (including the initial methionine) of a total molecular weight of 32560 and identifies a single ∼1.5 kb mRNA on Northern blot hybridization. This polypeptide, which is highly homologous to the Xenopus protein N038, displays an organization in three major domains: (1) an aminoterminal portion of 119 amino acids, which shows a striking homology to nucleoplasmin of Xenopus; (2) a central portion of 68 amino acids that contains two extended acidic domains, a shorter of 13 residues and a longer of 29 residues, separated by an interval enriched in positively charged amino acids; (3) a carboxyterminal portion of 105 amino acids, which is almost identical to the reported partial amino acid sequence of human and rat nucleolar protein termed B23. The sequence comparisons show that the murine protein is the mammalian counterpart to the nucleolar protein N038 of Xenopus and is compatible with the idea that both proteins N038 represent the amphibian and murine equivalents to the human and rat nucleolar phosphoprotein B23. Special sequence features and predicted conformations of this protein are discussed in relation to the specific localization and the possible functions of this major nucleolar protein.This publication has 133 references indexed in Scilit:
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