Publication | Open Access
A Nuclear Envelope-associated Kinase Phosphorylates Arginine-Serine Motifs and Modulates Interactions between the Lamin B Receptor and Other Nuclear Proteins
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Citations
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References
1996
Year
Protein AssemblyStructural BioinformaticsMolecular BiologyOther Nuclear ProteinsViral Structural ProteinSignaling PathwayLbr ComplexLbr KinaseProteomicsCell SignalingLamin B ReceptorProtein FunctionBiochemistryReceptor (Biochemistry)Cell BiologyNuclear Envelope ProteinsSignal TransductionNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryMedicineModulates Interactions
Previous studies have identified a subassembly of nuclear envelope proteins, termed "the LBR complex." This complex includes the lamin B receptor protein (LBR or p58), a kinase which phosphorylates LBR in a constitutive fashion (LBR kinase), the nuclear lamins A and B, an 18-kDa polypeptide (p18), and a 34-kDa protein (p34/p32). The latter polypeptide has been shown to interact with the HIV-1 proteins Rev and Tat and with the splicing factor 2 (SF2). Using recombinant proteins produced in bacteria and synthetic peptides representing different regions of LBR, we now show that the LBR kinase modifies specifically arginine-serine (RS) dipeptide motifs located at the nucleoplasmic, NH2-terminal domain of LBR and in members of the SR family of splicing factors. Furthermore, we show that the NH2-terminal domain of LBR binds to p34/p32, whereas a mutated domain lacking the RS region does not. Phosphorylation of LBR by the RS kinase completely abolishes binding of p34/p32, suggesting that this enzyme regulates interactions among the components of the LBR complex.
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