Identification of protein phosphatase-1-binding proteins by microcystin- biotin affinity chromatography

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Abstract

Biotinylated microcystin was used to affinity purify over avidin- Sepharose the entire cellular content of active forms of protein phosphatase (PP) 1 and 2A holoenzymes present in three subcellular fractions of skeletal muscle. Biotinylated microcystin displayed IC50 values in the nM range against PP-1C (1.58 ± 0.6 nM S.E., n = 3), PP-2AC (0.63 ± 0.2 nM S.E., n = 3) and SMPP-1M (5.9 ± 1.3 S.E., n = 3). Subsequent anion-exchange chromatography and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the microcystin- biotin eluates of the three fractions revealed a complex pattern of proteins associated with PP-1C and PP-2AC. Far Western analysis and the rebinding interaction with recombinant PP-1C distinguished proteins in the eluates that bound PP-1C from those that bound PP-2AC. In Far Western analysis, 29 distinct proteins were identified to bind PP-1C. Significantly, these same proteins, plus seven others, were also recovered from the isothiocyanate eluates from microcystin-Sepharose by a rebinding interaction with PP-1C- microcystin-biotin. The number of proteins and range of novel molecular masses (18-125 kDa) identified to interact with PP-1C by these two techniques cannot be accounted for by the previously characterized subunits of PP-1. Our findings further support the concept that PP-1C is regulated in vivo by multiple and distinct substrate-targeting subunits.

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Campos, M., Fadden, P., Alms, G., Qian, Z., & Haystead, T. A. J. (1996). Identification of protein phosphatase-1-binding proteins by microcystin- biotin affinity chromatography. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271(45), 28478–28484. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.45.28478

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