Characterization of a 5.4 kb cDNA fragment from the Z-line region of rabbit cardiac titin reveals phosphorylation sites for proline-directed kinases

MG Sebestyén, JA Wolff… - Journal of cell …, 1995 - journals.biologists.com
MG Sebestyén, JA Wolff, ML Greaser
Journal of cell science, 1995journals.biologists.com
Titin is an approximately 3 MDa protein that spans from the M-to the Z-line in the sarcomeres
of vertebrate striated muscle. The protein is presumably encoded by unusually large mRNAs
of 70-80 kb. Although titin has been studied by several laboratories, barely more than half of
the cDNA sequence (≈ 45 kb) has been published, most of it obtained from the A-band and
M-line region (corresponding to the C-terminal half of the molecule). A special cDNA library
was constructed using size selected total RNA from adult rabbit cardiac muscle in order to …
Abstract
Titin is an approximately 3 MDa protein that spans from the M- to the Z-line in the sarcomeres of vertebrate striated muscle. The protein is presumably encoded by unusually large mRNAs of 70-80 kb. Although titin has been studied by several laboratories, barely more than half of the cDNA sequence (≈45 kb) has been published, most of it obtained from the A-band and M-line region (corresponding to the C-terminal half of the molecule). A special cDNA library was constructed using size selected total RNA from adult rabbit cardiac muscle in order to obtain sequence data from titin’s unknown N-terminal region. A monoclonal antibody (T12), which binds to an epitope close to the Z-line, was used to identify initial cDNA clones. Additional overlapping clones were isolated and sequenced yielding a 5.4 kb contig. The encoded polypeptide contains 16 Type-II domains and four unique intervening segments. Poly-clonal sera, raised against an expressed protein fragment encoded by the 5′ end of the contig, strongly stained the Z-line of myofibrils of different species. However, the sequence of this fragment is 83% identical at the amino acid level with the previously reported C-terminal (i.e. M-line) end of chicken embryonic skeletal muscle titin. The expressed protein fragment could be phosphorylated in vitro by embryonic skeletal muscle extract and by the purified proline-directed kinase ERK1, presumably at the xSPxR recognition sites located in the first interdomain segment.
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