1. Academic Validation
  2. The newly identified human nuclear protein NXP-2 possesses three distinct domains, the nuclear matrix-binding, RNA-binding, and coiled-coil domains

The newly identified human nuclear protein NXP-2 possesses three distinct domains, the nuclear matrix-binding, RNA-binding, and coiled-coil domains

  • J Biol Chem. 2002 Jun 7;277(23):20611-7. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M201440200.
Yukio Kimura 1 Fumie Sakai Osami Nakano Osamu Kisaki Hiroaki Sugimoto Takashi Sawamura Hiroyuki Sadano Takashi Osumi
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Life Science, Graduate School and Faculty of Science, Himeji Institute of Technology, Kamigori, Hyogo 678-1201, Japan.
Abstract

Using a monoclonal antibody that recognizes a nuclear matrix protein, we selected a cDNA clone from a lambdagt11 human placenta cDNA library. This cDNA encoded a 939-amino acid protein designated nuclear matrix protein NXP-2. Northern blot analysis indicated that NXP-2 was expressed in various tissues at different levels. Forcibly expressed green fluorescent protein-tagged NXP-2 as well as endogenous NXP-2 was localized in the nucleus and distributed to the nuclear matrix. NXP-2 was released from the nuclear matrix when RNase A was included in the buffer for nuclear matrix preparation. Mapping of functional domains was carried out using green fluorescent protein-tagged truncated mutants of NXP-2. The region of Amino acids 326-353 was responsible for nuclear matrix binding and contained a cluster of hydrophobic Amino acids that was similar to the nuclear matrix targeting signal of acute myeloleukemia protein. The central region (Amino acids 500-591) was demonstrated to be required for RNA binding by Northwestern analysis, although NXP-2 lacked a known RNA binding motif. The region of amino acid residues 682-876 was predicted to have a coiled-coil structure. The RNA-binding, nuclear matrix-binding, and coiled-coil domains are structurally separated, suggesting that NXP-2 plays important roles in diverse nuclear functions, including RNA metabolism and maintenance of nuclear architecture.

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