Anti-Mup44 autoantibodies, which are targeted to cN1A, represent the first serological biomarker for sIBM and may facilitate the diagnosis of this type of myositis.
Despite years of investigation, the molecular mechanism responsible for regulation of the c-Abl tyrosine kinase has remained elusive. We now report inhibition of the catalytic activity of purified c-Abl in vitro, demonstrating that regulation is an intrinsic property of the molecule. We show that the interaction of the N-terminal 80 residues with the rest of the protein mediates autoregulation. This N-terminal "cap" is required to achieve and maintain inhibition, and its loss turns c-Abl into an oncogenic protein and contributes to deregulation of BCR-Abl.
Structural features of neurons create challenges for effective production and distribution of essential metabolic energy. We investigated how metabolic energy is distributed between cellular compartments in photoreceptors. In avascular retinas, aerobic production of energy occurs only in mitochondria that are located centrally within the photoreceptor. Our findings indicate that metabolic energy flows from these central mitochondria as phosphocreatine toward the photoreceptor's synaptic terminal in darkness. In light, it flows in the opposite direction as ATP toward the outer segment. Consistent with this model, inhibition of creatine kinase in avascular retinas blocks synaptic transmission without influencing outer segment activity. Our findings also reveal how vascularization of neuronal tissue can influence the strategies neurons use for energy management. In vascularized retinas, mitochondria in the synaptic terminals of photoreceptors make neurotransmission less dependent on creatine kinase. Thus, vasculature of the tissue and the intracellular distribution of mitochondria can play key roles in setting the strategy for energy distribution in neurons.energy metabolism | phototransduction A significant energy distribution problem can arise from the relative locations of mitochondria, ion pumps, and synapses in neurons. In photoreceptors, ion pumps occupy the intervening space between the centrally located mitochondria and the synaptic terminal. Ion pumping in dark-adapted photoreceptors consumes ∼20× more energy than neurotransmission (1). Therefore, the pumps could intercept all the metabolic energy made by the mitochondria before it can reach the synaptic terminal. In the vascularized retinas of mice, rats, and humans (2-4) this problem is solved by the presence of additional mitochondria in the terminal. However, in the avascular retinas of zebrafish, salamanders, rabbits, and guinea pigs there are no mitochondria in the terminals (2, 4, 5), which creates a need to partition some of the energy made by the central mitochondria into a protected form that can bypass the ion pumps to support the essential energy demands of the synaptic terminal.Energy consumption within retinal photoreceptors is compartmentalized and light-dependent. During illumination, phototransduction and light adaptation consume energy in the outer segment (OS). In darkness, energy is consumed by ion pumps in the inner segment and by glutamate release at the synaptic terminal (1). Energy demands and O 2 consumption are far greater in darkness than in light (1, 6-8).Metabolic energy is distributed in most cells as either ATP or phosphocreatine (PCr). There are 2 isoforms of creatine kinase (CK) in neurons, ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase (uMtCK), and brain-type cytoplasmic creatine kinase (CK-B). uMtCK creates PCr from ATP at mitochondria (9), and CK-B can recreate ATP from PCr at sites of energy demand. In this way uMtCK and CK-B can collaborate to transfer metabolic energy between neuronal compartments (10, 11). This paper descr...
The eukaryotic endonucleases RNase P and RNase MRP require both RNA and protein subunits for function. Even though the human RNase P and MRP RNAs were previously characterized, the protein composition of the particles remains unknown. We have identified a human a Caenorhabditis elegans sequence showing homology to yPop1, a protein subunit of the yeast RNase P and MRP particles. A cDNA containing the complete coding sequence for the human protein, hPop1, was cloned. Sequence analysis identifies three novel sequence motifs, conserved between the human, C. elegans and yeast proteins. Affinity‐purified anti‐hPop1 antibodies recognize a single 115 kDa protein in HeLa cell nuclear extracts. Immunoprecipitations with different anti‐hPop1 antibodies demonstrate an association of hPop1 with the vast majority of the RNase P and MRP RNAs in HeLa cell nuclear extracts. Additionally, anti‐hPop1 immunoprecipitates possess RNase P enzymatic activity. These results establish hPop1 as the first identified RNase P and MRP protein subunit from humans. Anti‐hPop1 antibodies generate a strong nucleolar and a weaker homogeneous nuclear staining in HeLa cells. A certain class of autoimmune patient serum precipitates in vitro‐translated hPop1. hPop1 is therefore an autoantigen in patients suffering from connective tissue diseases.
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