Abstract
Sucrose-density flotation analysis of Triton-insoluble membrane domains isolated from highly purified sheep ventricular sarcolemma revealed the presence of two major 120- and 100-kDa proteins. Both species migrated in two-dimensional isoelectric focussing/SDS gels with an apparent pI of ~4.3, suggesting that they might be related. Microsequence analysis of peptides derived from the 100-kDa protein yielded amino acid sequences with high homology to T-cadherin, a truncated cadherin lacking a cytoplasmic domain. The similarity was confirmed using antibodies to chicken T-cadherin that reacted with both proteins on immunoblots. T-cadherin was released from the detergent-insoluble sarcolemmal fraction by phospholipase C treatment indicating that it is linked to the membrane by a glycophosphoinositol anchor. T-cadherin could be ADP-ribosylated by a transferase that was also present in the caveolin-enriched Triton-insoluble fraction. T-cadherin- containing membrane fragments cofractionated on sucrose gradients with caveolin-3, a marker protein for myocyte caveolae. However, immunopurified caveolin-3-containing membranes contained no associated T-cadherin. Immunocytochemical analysis of cultured rat atrial myocytes revealed that T- cadherin and caveolin have related but nonoverlapping staining patterns. These results suggest that T-cadherin is a major glycophosphoinositol-linked protein in cardiac myocytes and that it may be located in plasma membrane 'rafts' distinct from but possibly adjacent to caveolae.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Doyle, D. D., Goings, G. E., Upshaw-Earley, J., Page, E., Ranscht, B., & Palfrey, H. C. (1998). T-cadherin is a major glycophosphoinositol-anchored protein associated with noncaveolar detergent-insoluble domains of the cardiac sarcolemma. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(12), 6937–6943. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.12.6937
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.