Molecular structure of the human desmoplakin I an amino terminus

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Abstract

Desmoplakins (DPs) I and II are closely related proteins found in the innermost region of the desmosomal plaque, which serves as a cell surface attachment site for cytoplasmic intermediate filaments. Overlapping cDNA clones comprising 9.2 kilobases of DP-I, predicted to encode a fulllength 310-kDa polypeptide (2677 amino acid residues), have now been identified. Here we report the predicted protein sequence and structural analysis of the N terminus of DP, extending our previous study of the rod and carboxyl domains. The N terminus contains groups of heptad repeats that are predicted to form at least two major α-helical-rich bundles. Unlike the rod and carboxyl domains, the N terminus did not display a periodic distribution of charged residues. Northern blot mapping and genomic sequence analysis were also undertaken to examine the organization of the DP mRNAs. A I-kilobase intron was located at the 3′ boundary of a DP-I-specific region; however, instead of an intron at the 5′ junction, a possible splice donor site was observed within a potential coding sequence, suggesting alternative RNA splicing from an internal donor site. (.

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Virata, M. L. A., Wagner, R. M., Parry, D. A. D., & Green, K. J. (1992). Molecular structure of the human desmoplakin I an amino terminus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 89(2), 544–548. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.2.544

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