Cloning and sequence analysis of desmosomal glycoproteins 2 and 3 (desmocollins): Cadherin-like desmosomal adhesion molecules with heterogeneous cytoplasmic domains

175Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Desmosomal glycoproteins 2 and 3 (dg2 and 3) or desmocollins have been implicated in desmosome adhesion. We have obtained a 5.0-kb-long clone for dg3 from a bovine nasal epidermal λgt11 cDNA library. Sequence analysis of this clone reveals an open reading frame of 2,517 bases encoding a polypeptide of 839 amino acids. The sequence consists of a signal peptide of 28 amino acids, a precursor sequence of 104 amino acids, and a mature protein of 707 amino acids. The latter has the characteristics of a transmembrane glycoprotein with an extracellular domain of 550 amino acids and a cytoplasmic domain of 122 amino acids. The sequence of a partial clone from the same library shows that dg2 has an alternative COOH terminus that is extended by 54 amino acids. Genomic DNA sequence data show that this arises by splicing out of a 46-bp exon that encodes the COOH-terminal 11 amino acids of dg3 and contains an in-frame stop codon. The extracellular domain of dg3 shows 39.4% protein sequence identity with bovine N-cadherin and 28.4% identity with the other major desmosomal glycoprotein, dgl, or desmoglein. The cytoplasmic domain of dg3 and the partial cytoplasmic domain of dg2 show 23 and 24% identity with bovine N-cadherin, respectively. The results support our previous model for the transmembrane organization of dg2 and 3 (Parrish, E. P., J. E. Marston, D. L. Mattey, H. R. Measures, R. Yenning, and D. R. Garrod. 1990. J. Cell Sci. 96:239-248; Holton, J. L., T. P. Kenny, P. K. Legan, J. E. Collins, J. N. Keen, R. Sharma, and D. R. Garrod. 1990. J. Cell Sci. 97:239-246). They suggest that these glycoproteins are specialized for calcium-dependent adhesion in their extracellular domains and, cytoplasmically, for the molecular interactions involved in desmosome plaque formation. Moreover this represents the first example of alternative splicing within the cadherin family of cell adhesion molecules.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Collins, J. E., Legan, P. K., Kenny, T. P., MacGarvie, J., Holton, J. L., & Garrod, D. R. (1991). Cloning and sequence analysis of desmosomal glycoproteins 2 and 3 (desmocollins): Cadherin-like desmosomal adhesion molecules with heterogeneous cytoplasmic domains. Journal of Cell Biology, 113(2), 381–391. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.113.2.381

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free