intermediate filament formation after transfection with modified hamster vimentin and desmin genes
Open Access
- 1 November 1987
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 88 (4) , 475-482
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.88.4.475
Abstract
Previously we cloned and characterized the hamster intermediate filament genes coding for vimentin and desmin. It was demonstrated that the cloned desmin gene was expressed after gene transfer and that the newly synthesized protein assembles into intermediate filaments. Here we present data on the transfection of modified vimentin and desmin genes onto simian virus 40-transformed hamster lens cells and HeLa cells. Modifications included: (1) removal of exons encoding the desmin COOH-terminal domain; (2) exchange of exons encoding the COOH-terminal domain of vimentin and desmin; and (3) deletion of part of exon I of desmin, coding for the NH2-terminal amino acids 4–148. In transient transfection assays it was shown that the modifications in the COOH region had no detectable effects on the filament forming potential of the encoded proteins as demonstrated with desmin antibodies in the indirect immunofluorescence test. On the other hand, deletion of a considerable part of the first exon of the desmin gene results in a lack of bona fide intermediate filament formation. Immunoblotting with desmin antibodies of cell populations enriched for the transfected modified genes showed that the presence of the modified genes results in the synthesis of the corresponding proteins with the expected molecular weights. From our results we conclude that in vivo: (1) the presence of the COOH terminus is not essential for filament formation; (2) that an exchange of COOH-terminal parts of vimentin and desmin does not prevent assembly into intermediate filaments; and (3) that removal of the NH2 terminus of desmin affects intermediate filament formation.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nuclear lamins and cytoplasmic intermediate filament proteins: A growing multigene familyCell, 1987
- Characterization of dimer subunits of intermediate filament proteinsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1986
- Characterization of the hamster desmin gene: Expression and formation of desmin filaments in nonmuscle cells after gene transferCell, 1985
- Intermediate filament forming ability of desmin derivatives lacking either the amino-terminal 67 or the carboxy-terminal 27 residuesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1985
- The molecular biology of intermediate filamentsCell, 1985
- Integration of different keratins into the same filament system after microinjection of mRNA for epidermal keratins into kidney epithelial cellsCell, 1984
- The structure of the vimentin geneCell, 1983
- De novo synthesis and specific assembly of keratin filaments in nonepithelial cells after microinjection of mRNA for epidermal keratinCell, 1983
- Intermediate filaments: Cell-type-specific markers in differentiation and pathologyCell, 1982
- Proteinchemical characterization of three structurally distinct domains along the protofilament unit of desmin 10 nm filamentsCell, 1982