Searched for: in-biosketch:yes
person:cowinp01
Desmoglein shows extensive homology to the cadherin family of cell adhesion molecules
Goodwin L; Hill JE; Raynor K; Raszi L; Manabe M; Cowin P
Desmoglein is a major adhesive component of the desmosome. It is also at least one of the antigenic targets of pathogenic antibodies circulating in the sera of patients with the blistering disease Pemphigus foliaceus. To examine the molecular basis of desmosomal adhesion and to further our understanding of its disruption in various bullous disorders we have cloned cDNAs encoding four of the extracellular domains of desmoglein. The predicted amino acid sequence of these clones shows extensive homology with the cadherin class of calcium-dependent cell adhesion molecules. Desmoglein represents a novel subtype of this family
PMID: 1702628
ISSN: 0006-291x
CID: 14242
MOLECULAR-CLONING OF DESMOGLEIN [Meeting Abstract]
Razsi, L; Raynor, K; Aharon, Y; Manabe, M; Cowin, P
ISI:A1990CZ24402211
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 31980
MOLECULAR-CLONING OF DESMOGLEIN [Meeting Abstract]
Razsi, L; Raynor, K; Aharon, Y; Manabe, M; Cowin, P
ISI:A1990CW00400436
ISSN: 0022-202x
CID: 32002
Molecular cloning and amino acid sequence of human plakoglobin, the common junctional plaque protein
Franke WW; Goldschmidt MD; Zimbelmann R; Mueller HM; Schiller DL; Cowin P
Plakoglobin is a major cytoplasmic protein that occurs in a soluble and a membrane-associated form and is the only known constituent common to the submembranous plaques of both kinds of adhering junctions, the desmosomes and the intermediate junctions. Using a partial cDNA clone for bovine plakoglobin, we isolated cDNAs encoding human plakoglobin, determined its nucleotide sequence, and deduced the complete amino acid sequence. The polypeptide encoded by the cDNA was synthesized by in vitro transcription and translation and identified by its comigration with authentic plakoglobin in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The identity was further confirmed by comparison of the deduced sequence with the directly determined amino acid sequence of two fragments from bovine plakoglobin. Analysis of the plakoglobin sequence showed the protein (744 amino acids; 81,750 Da) to be unrelated to any other known proteins, highly conserved between human and bovine tissues, and characterized by numerous changes between hydrophilic and hydrophobic sections. Only one kind of plakoglobin mRNA (3.4 kilobases) was found in most tissues, but an additional mRNA (3.7 kilobases) was detected in certain human tumor cell lines. This longer mRNA may be represented by a second type of plakoglobin cDNA, which contains an insertion of 297 nucleotides in the 3' non-coding region
PMCID:287381
PMID: 2726765
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 16334
Biochemical characterization of the soluble form of the junctional plaque protein, plakoglobin, from different cell types
Kapprell HP; Cowin P; Franke WW
A polypeptide of identical molecular mass (Mr 83,000) and charge to desmosomal plakoglobin from bovine snout epidermis was identified in soluble and pelletable fractions from diverse tissues and cells of different mammalian species, including cells and tissues devoid of desmosomes (e.g. endothelial, retinal, lenticular cells, fibroblasts). The protein, however, was not detected in erythrocytes and platelets and in myeloma cells, nor in smooth muscle tissue. In all cells examined, the plakoglobin soluble upon cell lysis in buffers of near-physiological pH and ionic strength (21-31% of the total plakoglobin in the different cell types) was found to exist in a distinct molecular form. On sucrose gradient centrifugation it appeared at about 7 S and gel filtration chromatography revealed a Stokes radius of about 5.0 nm, from which an Mr of about 170,000 was estimated. By using isoelectric focusing under non-denaturing conditions, soluble approximately equal to 7-S plakoglobin had an isoelectric point at about pH 5.3. The plaque-bound and the soluble form of plakoglobin were indistinguishable by electrical charge and molecular mass, regardless of the source, indicating molecular identity. Cross-linking of soluble proteins with cupric 1,10-phenanthroline resulted in the formaton of a cross-linked product of plakoglobin with similar physical properties as the native approximately equal to 7-S particle, which is compatible with the interpretation that the soluble plakoglobin particle is a dimer. While a major proportion of the plakoglobin in the desmosomal plaque was resistant to various extraction procedures, plakoglobin present in the plaques of non-desmosome-containing cells and tissues was readily extractable under low and high salt conditions. This indicates that differences exist in the binding of plakoglobin to desmosomal plaques and the plaques of non-demosomal junctions
PMID: 3609023
ISSN: 0014-2956
CID: 16335
Plakoglobin is a component of the filamentous subplasmalemmal coat of lens cells
Franke WW; Kapprell HP; Cowin P
The plasma membranes of the cells of the superficial layer of the eye lens and the lens fibres are in close intercellular contact, leaving an intermembrane space of approximately 20 nm or less throughout their entire length. This plasma membrane is underlaid by a filamentous, cytoplasmic web containing actin, proteins of the spectrin and band 4.1 families, alpha-actinin and vinculin. Using immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoblotting of gel electrophoretically separated proteins, we show that plakoglobin, the plaque protein common to desmosomal and nondesmosomal adhering junctions, is present in lens cells and is also a component of the subplasmalemmal coat of these cells. Plakoglobin also exists in the extended regions of intercellular contacts between cultured lenticular cells where it often colocalizes with vinculin but does not occur in other vinculin-rich plasma membrane regions such as the focal adhesions at the ventral cell surface. Plakoglobin associated with plasma membrane regions can also be identified in various other adhesive cultured cells, but it is not detected in cells and tissues that do not establish firm intercellular junctions such as erythrocytes, platelets, cultured myeloma cells and smooth muscle tissue. We conclude that plakoglobin occurs, at least in lens cells, throughout the entire subplasmalemmal coat, coexisting in this situation not only with vinculin but also with spectrin and 4.1 protein(s). This colocalization infers the presence of a distinct, complex type of membrane-skeleton assembly involving the actin filament-associated junctional plaque elements plakoglobin and vinculin together with actin-associated proteins of the spectrin and band 4.1 protein families
PMID: 3305017
ISSN: 0171-9335
CID: 16336
Immunolocalization of plakoglobin in endothelial junctions: identification as a special type of Zonulae adhaerentes
Franke WW; Kapprell HP; Cowin P
We have characterized the junctions between endothelial cells of diverse blood vessels at the light and electron microscopic level using various antibodies to plakoglobin (polypeptide Mr 83,000) and vinculin. Endothelial cells from fenestrated and non-fenestrated capillaries to large arteries are connected to each other by extended junctions that are coated on their cytoplasmic face by plaques of loosely matted filamentous material that form a continuous belt system along the cell circumference. These plaques are devoid of desmosome-specific proteins such as desmoplakin(s) and desmoglein, but contain plakoglobin. Immunofluorescence microscopic reactions of these regions with vinculin antibodies have also been observed, although they are much weaker and less consistent. This composition, together with their association with actin microfilaments, classifies this extended plaque system as Zonulae adhaerentes. Our results also show that such endothelia may be distinguished from truly epithelial cells by the absence of desmosomes and intermediate filaments of the cytokeratin type. The relationship of the various kinds of adhering junctions and the physiological importance of these junctions are discussed
PMID: 2955839
ISSN: 0248-4900
CID: 16338
The desmosomal plaque and the cytoskeleton
Franke WW; Cowin P; Schmelz M; Kapprell HP
Two major plasma membrane domains are involved in the architectural organization of the cytoskeleton. Both are junctions of the adherens category characterized by the presence of dense plaques associated with the cytoplasmic surface of their membranes. The plaques serve as specific anchorage structures for two different types of cytoplasmic filaments. Intermediate-sized filaments (IF) of several types, i.e. cytokeratin IF in epithelial cells, desmin IF in cardiac myocytes and vimentin IF in arachnoidal cells of meninges, meningiomas and several other cells, attach to the desmosomal plaques, whereas actin-containing microfilaments associate with non-desmosomal adhering junctions such as the zonula adherens, fascia adherens and punctum adherens. The plaques of both kinds of adhering junctions contain a common acidic polypeptide of Mr 83,000 identical to 'band 5 protein' of bovine snout epidermal desmosomes. However, other plaque components are mutually exclusive to one of the two subclasses of adhering junctions. The desmosomal plaque structure, which does not contain vinculin and alpha-actinin, comprises representatives of cytoplasmic, non-membrane-integrated proteins such as desmoplakin(s) and the cytoplasmic portions of transmembrane glycoproteins such as 'band 3 glycoprotein'. The analysis of both categories of junction-associated plaques should provide a basis for understanding the establishment and the dynamics of junction-cytoskeleton interaction
PMID: 3103993
ISSN: 0300-5208
CID: 16337
A constitutive transmembrane glycoprotein of Mr 165,000 (desmoglein) in epidermal and non-epidermal desmosomes. I. Biochemical identification of the polypeptide
Schmelz M; Duden R; Cowin P; Franke WW
Two murine monoclonal antibodies (DG 3.4 and DG 3.10) raised against a major glycoprotein ('band 3 component') from desmosomes of bovine muzzle epidermis were used in immunoblot experiments following SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis or two-dimensional gel electrophoresis to identify this or immunologically related proteins in other bovine tissues and cultured cell lines. In all desmosome-bearing cells, i.e. cells also expressing desmoplakins, including representative of stratified, transitional and simple epithelia as well as myocardium, only a single distinct polypeptide of identical Mr value (165,000) and electrical charge was detected. These findings, together with the immunolocalization results reported in the companion paper indicate that this glycoprotein (desmoglein) is a general constituent protein of desmosomes, providing a case of an integral membrane protein co-expressed with non-membranous desmosomal proteins such as the plaque component, desmoplakin I. Our results further suggest that, contrary to previous suggestions, desmoglein is very similar, if not identical in different cells of the same species and does not display significant cell type diversity
PMID: 3545835
ISSN: 0171-9335
CID: 16339
A constitutive transmembrane glycoprotein of Mr 165,000 (desmoglein) in epidermal and non-epidermal desmosomes. II. Immunolocalization and microinjection studies
Schmelz M; Duden R; Cowin P; Franke WW
Using two monoclonal antibodies described in the preceding paper we determined by immunofluorescence microscopy the distribution of an integral membrane protein of the desmosomal domain, the major glycopolypeptide of Mr 165,000 (bovine muzzle epidermal desmosome band 3; desmoglein) in various normal tissues, tumors and cultured cell lines from several mammalian species. This protein was detected in dotted or streak-like arrays along cell boundary structures which were known to contain non-membrane-integrated desmosomal plaque proteins such as desmoplakins. This is true for epithelial, i.e. cytokeratin-expressing cell types, for the desmin-producing myocardiac and Purkinje fiber cells of the heart, and for certain vimentin-containing cells such as arachnoidal and meningiomal cells and dendritic follicular cells of lymph nodes. However, on the basis of both immunoblot and immunocytochemical reactions, the protein is absent from non-desmosomal adhering junctions, including those devoid of desmoplakin but containing another plaque protein, plakoglobin ('band 5 protein'). We have used these antibodies to localize their epitopes with respect to the cell membrane. By immunoelectron microscopy we found that both epitopes are located in the desmosomal plaques, and this was confirmed by microinjection of purified antibodies into living cultured cells which resulted in labelling of the plaques. From these findings, taken together with previous analyses and localizations of the carbohydrate moieties of this glycoprotein, we conclude that desmoglein is a transmembrane glycoprotein which projects into--and contributes to--the desmosomal plaque structure. This glycoprotein represents a general component of true desmosomes and it is coexpressed with obligatory desmosome-specific plaque proteins such as desmoplakin I. The potential value of this glycoprotein as a desmosomal and cell type marker in histology and tumor diagnosis is discussed
PMID: 2434328
ISSN: 0171-9335
CID: 16340