Control of Cajal body number is mediated by the coilin C-terminus
doi: 10.1242/jcs.00211
pmid: 12482916
Control of Cajal body number is mediated by the coilin C-terminus
Cajal bodies (CBs) are nuclear suborganelles implicated in the post-transcriptional maturation of small nuclear and small nucleolar RNAs. The number of CBs displayed by various cell lines and tissues varies, and factors that control CB numbers within a given cell have yet to be described. In this report, we show that specific regions within the C-terminus of coilin, the CB marker protein, are responsible for regulating the number of nuclear foci. Despite the fact that the coilin N-terminal domain is responsible for its self-oligomerization activity, truncation or mutation of predicted sites of phosphorylation in the conserved C-terminal region leads to a striking alteration in the number of nuclear bodies. Similarly, coilin constructs from various species display differential propensities to form nuclear foci when expressed in heterologous backgrounds. We mapped the domain responsible for this variability to the coilin C-terminus utilizing chimeric proteins. Furthermore, the activities responsible for regulating coilin self-association must reside in the nucleus, as constructs lacking critical nuclear localization sequences fail to form foci in the cytoplasm. Factors controlling the putative signal transduction cascade that phosphorylates coilin are also discussed. The results point to a model whereby phosphorylation of the coilin C-terminus regulates the availability of the N-terminal self-interaction domain.
- Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning United States
- University of Mississippi Medical Center United States
- University Hospitals of Cleveland United States
- Case Western Reserve University United States
Cell Nucleus, Cytoplasm, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Molecular Sequence Data, Nuclear Proteins, Coiled Bodies, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Mice, Eukaryotic Cells, RNA, Small Nuclear, Genes, Regulator, Mutation, Serine, Animals, Humans, RNA, Small Nucleolar, Phosphorylation, HeLa Cells, Signal Transduction
Cell Nucleus, Cytoplasm, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Molecular Sequence Data, Nuclear Proteins, Coiled Bodies, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Mice, Eukaryotic Cells, RNA, Small Nuclear, Genes, Regulator, Mutation, Serine, Animals, Humans, RNA, Small Nucleolar, Phosphorylation, HeLa Cells, Signal Transduction
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