MAP 1B is a microtubule-associated phosphoprotein that is expressed early in neurons and plays a role in axon growth. MAP 1B has two types of phospho-isoforms, one of which is developmentally down-regulated after neuronal maturation and one of which persists into adulthood. Because phosphorylation regulates MAP 1B binding activity, characterisation of the phosphorylation sites and identification of the corresponding kinases/phosphatases are important goals. We have characterised the developmentally down-regulated phosphorylation sites recognised by monoclonal antibody (mAb) SMI-31. We purified MAP 1B from neonatal rat brain and mapped the mAb SMI-31 sites to specific MAP 1B fragments after chemical cleavage. We then developed an in vitro kinase assay by using a high-speed spin supernatant from neonatal rat brain in the presence of ATP and recombinant proteins encoding selective regions of the MAP 1B molecule. Phosphorylation of the recombinant protein was detected on western blots using mAb SMI-31. This analysis showed that mAb SMI-31 recognises two recombinant proteins corresponding to residues 1,109-1,360 and 1,836-2,076 of rat MAP 1B after in vitro phosphorylation. The former phosphorylation site was further defined in the in vitro kinase assay by inhibition with peptides and antibodies from candidate regions of the MAP 1B sequence. This approach identified a region of 20 amino acids, from 1,244 to 1,264, characterised by a high concentration of serines immediately upstream of prolines, indicating that the kinase responsible is a proline-directed serine kinase.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.1997.69041417.x | DOI Listing |
J Neurochem
October 1997
Developmental Biology Research Centre, King's College London, England.
MAP 1B is a microtubule-associated phosphoprotein that is expressed early in neurons and plays a role in axon growth. MAP 1B has two types of phospho-isoforms, one of which is developmentally down-regulated after neuronal maturation and one of which persists into adulthood. Because phosphorylation regulates MAP 1B binding activity, characterisation of the phosphorylation sites and identification of the corresponding kinases/phosphatases are important goals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Neuropathol
August 1995
Department of Pathology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School 77030, USA.
We report for the first time localization of tau immunoreactivity with neuronal nuclei in an autopsy case of a 64-year-old white male with a 10-year history of presenile dementia with motor neuron disease. The anti-tau mAbs Tau-1, Tau-2, Tau-5 and PHF-1 and the anti-phosphoneurofilament mAb SMI-31, which crossreacts with tau, stained neuronal nuclei in neocortical pyramidal layer V or in layer III of primary motor cortex, in the periamygdaloid and entorhinal cortices, in pons and in a few paramedian neurons in dorsal medulla. The staining was excluded from nucleoli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurocytol
November 1994
Developmental Biology Research Centre, Randall Institute, King's College, London, UK.
The distribution and expression of developmentally regulated phosphorylation epitopes on the microtubule-associated protein 1B and on neurofilament proteins recognized by monoclonal antibody (mAb) 150 and mAb SMI-31 was investigated in the developing rat spinal cord. In the embryonic day 11 spinal cord, mAb 150 stained the first axons to appear, whereas mAb SMI-31 staining did not appear until embryonic day 12. At the start of axonogenesis, mAb 150 stained neuronal cell bodies and axons whereas at later times only the distal axon was stained, this is the first demonstration in vivo of a mAb 150 axonal gradient similar to that seen previously in vitro (Mansfield et al.
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