Abstract
Binding of the cytoskeletal protein vinculin to talin is one of a number of interactions involved in linking F-actin to cell-matrix junctions. To identify the talin binding domain in vinculin, we expressed the NH2-terminal region of the molecule encoded by two closely similar, but distinct vinculin cDNAs, using an in vitro transcription translation system. The 5' Eco RI-Bam HI fragment of a partial 2.89-kb vinculin cDNA encodes a 45-kD polypeptide containing the first 398 amino acids of the molecule. The equivalent restriction enzyme fragment of a second vinculin cDNA (cVin5) lacks nucleotides 746-867, and encodes a 41-kD polypeptide missing amino acids 167-207. The radiolabeled 45-kD vinculin polypeptide bound to microtiter wells coated with talin, but not BSA, and binding was inhibited by unlabeled vinculin. In contrast, the 41-kD vinculin polypeptide was devoid of talin binding activity. The role of residues 167-207 in talin binding was further analyzed by making a series of deletions spanning this region, each deletion of seven amino acids contiguous with the next. Loss of residues 167-173, 174-180, 181-187, 188-194, or 195-201 resulted in a marked reduction in talin binding activity, although loss of residues 202-208 had much less effect. When the 45-kD vinculin polypeptide was expressed in Cos cells, it localized to cell matrix junctions, whereas the 41-kD polypeptide, lacking residues 167-207, was unable to do so. Interestingly, some deletion mutants with reduced ability to bind talin in vitro, were still able to localize to cell matrix junctions.
Highlights
Binding of the cytoskeletal protein vinculin to talin is one of a number of interactions involved in linking F-actin to cell-matrix junctions
The two chick vinculin cDNAs used in this study were both isolated from a chick embryo fibroblast Lgtll eDNA I~rary, and have been described elsewhere (Price et al, 1987, 1989; Bendori et al, 1987)
Comparison of the restriction map of this clone with that of a 5-kb chick vinculin eDNA isolated by Bendori et al (1987) showed the latter to contain the additional 3' sequence missing from the 2.89-kb eDNA (Fig. 1), allowing us to determine the complete sequence of chick vinculin (Price et al, 1989)
Summary
Binding of the cytoskeletal protein vinculin to talin is one of a number of interactions involved in linking F-actin to cell-matrix junctions. A Bl-subunit with this COOH-terminal region deleted is still able to form a heterodimer with the appropriate o~-subunit, which can still bind to fibronectin, but the receptor fails to localize to adhesion plaques (Solowska et al, 1989). Evidence that this region of the/31-subunit of the receptor binds to the cytoskeletal protein talin has been presented, the interaction in vitro is apparently of low affinity (Horwitz et al, 1986; Buck and Horwitz, 1987b). We report experiments that define a region in chick vinculin that is required for talin binding and for the localization of vinculin to adhesion plaques
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