|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Evidence for a functional interaction between cingulin and ZO-1 in cultured cells.

First Author  D'Atri F Year  2002
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  277
Issue  31 Pages  27757-64
PubMed ID  12023291 Mgi Jnum  J:159079
Mgi Id  MGI:4441138 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M203717200
Citation  D'Atri F, et al. (2002) Evidence for a functional interaction between cingulin and ZO-1 in cultured cells. J Biol Chem 277(31):27757-64
abstractText  Cingulin, a protein component of the submembrane plaque of tight junctions (TJ), contains globular and coiled-coil domains and interacts in vitro with several TJ and cytoskeletal proteins, including the PDZ protein ZO-1. Overexpression of Xenopus cingulin in transfected Xenopus A6 cells resulted in the disruption of endogenous ZO-1 localization, suggesting that cingulin functionally interacts with ZO-1. Glutathione S-transferase pull-down experiments showed that a conserved ZO-1 interaction motif (ZIM) at the NH(2) terminus of cingulin is required for cingulin-ZO-1 interaction in vitro. An NH(2)-terminal region of cingulin, containing the ZIM, was sufficient, when fused to coiled-coil sequences, to target transfected cingulin to junctions. However, deletion of the ZIM did not abolish junctional localization of transfected cingulin in A6 cells, suggesting that cingulin can be recruited to TJ through multiple protein interactions. Interestingly, the ZIM was required for cingulin recruitment into ZO-1-containing adherens junctions of Rat-1 fibroblasts, indicating that cingulin junctional recruitment does not require the molecular context of TJ. Cingulin coiled-coil sequences enhanced the junctional accumulation of expressed cingulin head region in A6 cells, but purified recombinant cingulin did not form filaments under physiological conditions in vitro, suggesting that the cingulin coiled-coil domain acts primarily by promoting dimerization.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Authors

2 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression