Abstract:The tail domain of the midsize chicken neurofilament polypeptide (NF-M) contains several different types of Ser-Pro and Thr-Pro putative phosphorylation sites. We determined which of these sites are actually phosphorylated in vivo. Chick sensory neuron cultures were incubated in [ 32P]phosphate, and the cytoskeletal fraction was mixed with a neurofilament fraction prepared from adult chicken brain. NF-M was purified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and digested with chymotrypsin, and two large fragments were isolated. These were individually cleaved with trypsin, endoprotease Lys-C, or endoprotease GIu-C, and peptides separated by two-dimensional high-voltage electrophoresis and thin-layer chromatography. 32P-labeled phosphopeptides were eluted from the cellulose plates and subjected to microsequencing and mass spectometry. We found that of 21 potential Ser-Pro and Thr-Pro phosphoacceptor sites, at least 20 are phosphorylated in vivo: all four Lys-Ser-Pro sites and at least 16 of the 17 Lys-Xaa-Xaa-Ser/Thr-Pro repeats. In addition, a novel Ser-Pro site in the extreme carboxy terminus is phosphorylated. This site, which has no proximal Lys residue, is also found in mammalian NF-M, but has not been reported to be phosphorylated. Together with three casein kinase I sites we have found recently in the acidic amino-terminal segment of the tail, a total of 24 or 25 Ser and Thr phosphoacceptor sites have now been located in the chicken NF-M tail.
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