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Publication : CacyBP/SIP, a calcyclin and Siah-1-interacting protein, binds EF-hand proteins of the S100 family.

First Author  Filipek A Year  2002
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  277
Issue  32 Pages  28848-52
PubMed ID  12042313 Mgi Jnum  J:196123
Mgi Id  MGI:5486571 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M203602200
Citation  Filipek A, et al. (2002) CacyBP/SIP, a calcyclin and Siah-1-interacting protein, binds EF-hand proteins of the S100 family. J Biol Chem 277(32):28848-52
abstractText  Recently, a human ortholog of mouse calcyclin (S100A6)-binding protein (CacyBP) called SIP (Siah-1-interacting protein) was shown to be a component of a novel ubiquitinylation pathway regulating beta-catenin degradation (Matsuzawa, S., and Reed, J. C. (2001) Mol. Cell 7, 915-926). In murine brain, CacyBP/SIP is expressed at a high level, but S100A6 is expressed at a very low level. Consequently we carried out experiments to determine if CacyBP/SIP binds to other S100 proteins in this tissue. Using CacyBP/SIP affinity chromatography, we found that S100B from the brain extract binds to CacyBP/SIP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Using a nitrocellulose overlay assay with 125I-CacyBP/SIP and CacyBP/SIP affinity chromatography, we found that this protein binds purified S100A1, S100A6, S100A12, S100B, and S100P but not S100A4, calbindin D(9k), parvalbumin, and calmodulin. The interaction of S100 proteins with CacyBP/SIP occurs via its C-terminal fragment (residues 155-229). Co-immunoprecipitation of CacyBP/SIP with S100B from brain and with S100A6 from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells suggests that these interactions are physiologically relevant and that the ubiquitinylation complex involving CacyBP/SIP might be regulated by S100 proteins.
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