Properties of p19, a novel cAMP-dependent protein kinase substrate protein purified from bovine brain. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • We report the purification from bovine brain and describe some of the properties of a 19-kDa protein, p19, which we have previously shown to undergo hormone-dependent, cAMP-mediated phosphorylation in several peptide hormone-producing tumor cells. The procedure for purifying p19 to apparent homogeneity utilized ammonium sulfate fractionation, sequential chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and phenyl-Sepharose, followed by fast protein liquid chromatography using a Mono Q and, finally, a C8 reverse-phase column. The yield was 0.3-0.5 mg of p19/kg of brain. The molecular weight (Mr = 19,000) and frictional ratio (f/f0 = 1.87) of p19, which were derived from its Stokes radius (33 A) and sedimentation constant (s20,w = 1.4), suggest that the native form of p19 is an asymmetrically shaped monomer. We provide evidence to suggest that p19 is isolated as a mixture of molecular forms consisting of an unphosphorylated form and of three phosphoforms indicative of multisite phosphorylation. These forms cosedimented on sucrose density gradients and coeluted on gel filtration, hydrophobic chromatography, and reverse-phase fast protein liquid chromatography. They were resolved from each other by anion-exchange chromatography. The unphosphorylated form (pI 6.2) was phosphorylated by catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase to a stoichiometry of 0.5 mol of P/mol of p19, thereby giving rise to the three phosphoforms (pI 5.8, pI 5.6, and pI 5.2, respectively). We conclude that p19 is a novel cAMP-dependent protein kinase substrate protein that is present in brain and in peptide hormone-producing tumor cells. Its function remains to be identified.

publication date

  • August 25, 1987

Research

keywords

  • Brain Chemistry
  • Microtubule Proteins
  • Nerve Tissue Proteins
  • Phosphoproteins
  • Protein Kinases

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0023664781

PubMed ID

  • 3624237

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 262

issue

  • 24