Intermediate filaments (IF) isolated from a variety of cultured cells, conventionally described as fibroblasts, are composed predominantely of proteins of molecular weights of 54,000 and/or 55,000. Less than 15% of the protein found in native IF preparations from these cells is composed of three to four polypeptides of molecular weights 60,000-70,000. We have investigated some biochemical and immunological properties of these proteins isolated from BHK-21 and mouse 3T3 cells. They are capable of forming paracrystals that exhibit a light/dark banding pattern when negatively stained with uranyl acetate. The dark bands are composed of longitudinally aligned approximately 2-nm-diam filaments. The center-to-center spacing between either dark or light bands is 37-40 nm. These dimensions are consistent with the secondary structure of IF polypeptides and suggest that the dark bands represent lateral alignment of alpha-helical coiled-coil domains. Immunoblotting, secondary structure, as well as amino acid composition data indicate that the 60,000-70,000-mol-wt paracrystal polypeptides are similar to keratin. Thus, polypeptides with biochemical and immunological properties of epidermal keratin are present in cells normally considered to be fibroblasts.
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1 April 1984
Article|
April 01 1984
Isolation and characterization of keratin-like proteins from cultured cells with fibroblastic morphology.
R V Zackroff
A E Goldman
J C Jones
P M Steinert
R D Goldman
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
J Cell Biol (1984) 98 (4): 1231–1237.
Citation
R V Zackroff, A E Goldman, J C Jones, P M Steinert, R D Goldman; Isolation and characterization of keratin-like proteins from cultured cells with fibroblastic morphology.. J Cell Biol 1 April 1984; 98 (4): 1231–1237. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.98.4.1231
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