Intermediate filament reconstitution in vitro. The role of phosphorylation on the assembly-disassembly of desmin.
1988
Abstract Desmin, the myogenic intermediate filament protein, is a phosphoprotein containing phosphoserine, in vivo. The role of phosphorylation on assembly-disassembly and organization of the desmin filament has remained obscure. We report here on a stable and purified system which enables a biochemical examination of desmin filament assembly and disassembly. Using this in vitro system, we carried out stoichiometrical phosphorylations by purified protein kinases. The extent of polymerization-depolymerization was estimated using procedures related to centrifugation and electron microscopy. The evidence we obtained suggests that disassembly of the desmin filament and inhibition of the NaCl-dependent polymerization of the soluble desmin can reversibly occur with either cAMP-dependent or Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent desmin phosphorylation.
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