Nuclear translocation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase

1981 
Abstract A study was made of nuclear translocation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and its subunits, as well as of the binding of these proteins to metaphase chromosomes. The CHO cell cultures were treated with 3 H-labelled protein kinase and its subunits. The results indicate that cAMP-dependent protein kinase became translocated into the nucleus in a dissociated state and that the subunits have specific binding sites on chromatin. Transformation of normal mouse fibroblasts by virus SV40 interferes with the nuclear translocation of the regulatory subunit. The process is restored when the level of cAMP in the system is increased. Binding of the regulatory subunit to metaphase chromosomes of cells transformed by virus SV40 does not change. In the case of spontaneous cancer (KB cells) translocation of the regulatory subunit remains unaffected, whereas acceptance of the protein by the metaphase chromosomes is impeded. The results of this work suggest that compartmentalization of cAMP-dependent protein kinase—and particularly of its regulatory subunit—in the cell is highly significant for cellular processes. Disorders arising as a result of neoplastic transformation involve changes in nuclear translocation of the regulatory subunit and in its binding to the structural elements of the genome.
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