Abstract
In interphase cells, α-casein kinase I (α-CKI) is found associated with cytosolic vesicular structures, the centrosome, and within the nucleus. To identify the specific vesicular structures with which α-CKI is associated, established cell lines and primary rat neurons were immunofluorescently labeled with an antibody raised to α-CKI. In nonneuronal cells, α-CKI colocalizes with vesicular structures which align with microtubules and are partially coincident with both Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum markers. In neurons, α-CKI colocalizes with synaptic vesicle markers. When synaptic vesicles were purified from rat brain, they were highly enriched in a CKI, based on activity and immunoreactivity. The synaptic vesicle-associated CKI is an extrinsic kinase and was eluted from synaptic vesicles and purified. This purified CKI has properties most similar to α-CKI. When the activities of casein kinase I or II were specifically inhibited on isolated synaptic vesicles, CKI was shown to phosphorylate a specific subset of vesicle proteins, one of which was identified as the synaptic vesicle-specific protein SV2. As with α-CKI, the synaptic vesicle CKI is inhibited by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). However, synthesis of PIP2 was detected only in plasma membrane-containing fractions. Therefore, PIP2 may spatially regulate CKI. Since PIP2 synthesis is required for secretion, this inhibition of CKI may be important for the regulation of secretion.
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CITATION STYLE
Gross, S. D., Hoffman, D. P., Fisette, P. L., Baas, P., & Anderson, R. A. (1995). A phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate-sensitive casein kinase Iα associates with synaptic vesicles and phosphorylates a subset of vesicle proteins. Journal of Cell Biology, 130(3), 711–724. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.130.3.711
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