Research on the structure of the nuclear lamina and the nuclear matrix of cells devoid of lamins A and C has been hampered by the fact that intact residual nuclear structures are difficult to isolate from such cells. In this paper, we show that some extraction parameters, such as buffer composition and the nature of the detergent used to remove nuclear membranes, are critical for achieving isolation of whole nuclear residual structures from the lymphoblastic cell line Raji, used as a model for cells without lamins A and C. Electron microscopic analysis shows that the nuclear lamina of Raji cells is formed by a network of intermediate-size filaments interrupted with circular discontinuities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTRiC is a cytoplasmic chaperonin involved in actin and tubulin folding. It is formed by six to nine different but related proteins of 52 to 65 kDa arranged in two hetero-oligomeric rings. We have cloned the gene coding for the mouse TRiC-P5 subunit (also called CCT gamma) using a XbaI-DraIII fragment of the mTRiC5 cDNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
November 1995
The cytosolic chaperonin TRiC is a large protein complex involved in the folding of newly synthesized actin and tubulin. The fertilization of the mouse oocyte is followed by a remodelling of the actin and tubulin filaments. The TRiC subunit TCP1 is expressed only from the 4-cell stage on, even though actin and tubulin are synthesized in the previous stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree reporter genes, the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT), the lacZ, and the intronless NF-L DNA, were used to test the activity of the proximal promoter region (-292 bp) of the human neurofilament light (hNF-L) gene in transgenic mice. Surprisingly, the hNF-L/CAT construct was highly sensitive to position effect, and its expression was found at low levels in several tissues of adult transgenic mice (Beaudet, L., Charron, G.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have recently reported the cloning of a novel protein, TRiC-P5, with significant homology with protein 1 of the t-complex (TCP1). In the present study, the cellular localization of TRiC-P5 in Raji cells has been determined using an antiserum raised against a 18.5 kDa fusion protein.
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