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Publication : Acetylcholinesterase associates differently with its anchoring proteins ColQ and PRiMA.

First Author  Noureddine H Year  2008
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  283
Issue  30 Pages  20722-32
PubMed ID  18511416 Mgi Jnum  J:137967
Mgi Id  MGI:3803503 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M801364200
Citation  Noureddine H, et al. (2008) Acetylcholinesterase associates differently with its anchoring proteins ColQ and PRiMA. J Biol Chem 283(30):20722-32
abstractText  Acetylcholinesterase tetramers are inserted in the basal lamina of neuromuscular junctions or anchored in cell membranes through the interaction of four C-terminal t peptides with proline-rich attachment domains (PRADs) of cholinesterase-associated collagen Q (ColQ) or of the transmembrane protein PRiMA (proline-rich membrane anchor). ColQ and PRiMA differ in the length of their proline-rich motifs (10 and 15 residues, respectively). ColQ has two cysteines upstream of the PRAD, which are disulfide-linked to two AChE(T) subunits ('heavy' dimer), and the other two subunits are disulfide-linked together ('light' dimer). In contrast, PRiMA has four cysteines upstream of the PRAD. We examined whether these cysteines could be linked to AChE(T) subunits in complexes formed with PRiMA in transfected COS cells and in the mammalian brain. For comparison, we studied complexes formed with N-terminal fragments of ColQ, N-terminal fragments of PRiMA, and chimeras in which the upstream regions containing the cysteines were exchanged. We also compared the effect of mutations in the t peptides on their association with the two PRADs. We report that the two PRADs differ in their interaction with AChE(T) subunits; in complexes formed with the PRAD of PRiMA, we observed light dimers, but very few heavy dimers, even though such dimers were formed with the PQ chimera in which the N-terminal region of PRiMA was associated with the PRAD of ColQ. Complexes with PQ or with PRiMA contained heavy components, which migrated abnormally in SDS-PAGE but probably resulted from disulfide bonding of four AChE(T) subunits with the four upstream cysteines of the associated protein.
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