1. Academic Validation
  2. Mammalian cells express two differently localized Bag-1 isoforms generated by alternative translation initiation

Mammalian cells express two differently localized Bag-1 isoforms generated by alternative translation initiation

  • Biochem J. 1997 Dec 15;328 ( Pt 3)(Pt 3):807-13. doi: 10.1042/bj3280807.
G Packham 1 M Brimmell J L Cleveland
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary's, London W2 1PG, U.K.
Abstract

The Bcl-2 oncoprotein is a key regulator of Apoptosis and the Bag-1 protein interacts with Bcl-2 and cooperates with Bcl-2 to suppress Apoptosis. The human Bag-1 cDNA is essentially identical with a previously described cDNA encoding RAP46, which interacts with activated steroid hormone receptors. However, there is considerable confusion over the structure of Bag-1/RAP46 proteins and their relationship to endogenous Bag-1 proteins. Here we have characterized Bag-1 expression in mammalian cells. We demonstrate that, in addition to the previously identified 32 kDa murine and 36 kDa human Bag-1 proteins, cells express a second 50 kDa Bag-1 isoform. In some murine cell lines p50 is expressed at the same level as p32 Bag-1, and p50 and p32 Bag-1 proteins have distinct subcellular localizations, suggesting that they are functionally distinct. The published mouse Bag-1 cDNA is partial, and Sequencing of additional murine Bag-1 RNA 5' sequences demonstrated that human and murine Bag-1 cDNAs contain longer open reading frames than originally suspected. We determined which open reading frames gave rise to the Bag-1 isoforms in human cells. Surprisingly, translation of neither protein initiated at the first in-frame methionine, and cells do not express Bag-1/RAP46 proteins with the previously proposed structures; p50 Bag-1 initiates at an upstream CUG codon, whereas p36 Bag-1 initiates at a downstream AUG codon. Therefore, cells express two differently localized Bag-1 isoforms generated by alternative translation initiation, and Bag-1 proteins may play a dual role in regulating Apoptosis and steroid hormone-dependent transcription.

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