Intracellular Localisation of the Ro 52 kD Auto-Antigen in HeLa Cells Visualised with Green Fluorescent Protein Chimeras

Autoantibodies to the Ro/SSA and La/SSB antigens are found in patients with Sjögren's syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosus. The Ro/SSA autoantigen consists of a 52 kD and a 60 kD protein, complexed with one of four small RNA molecules. The La protein can associate with the complex. The Ro/...

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Veröffentlicht in:Autoimmunity (Chur, Switzerland) Switzerland), 1998-01, Vol.28 (4), p.225-233
Hauptverfasser: Pourmand, N., Blange, I., Ringertz, N., Pettersson, I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Autoantibodies to the Ro/SSA and La/SSB antigens are found in patients with Sjögren's syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosus. The Ro/SSA autoantigen consists of a 52 kD and a 60 kD protein, complexed with one of four small RNA molecules. The La protein can associate with the complex. The Ro/SSA autoantigens are present in all mammalian cells, but their intracellular location is subject of controversy and their function remains unclear. To study the intracellular sorting and targeting of Ro 52 kD we have constructed expression plasmids encoding fusion proteins between the full-length Ro 52 kD protein as well as Ro 52 kD fragments and the green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the jelly fish, Aequorea Victoria. The subcellular distribution of the GFP-Ro 52 kD fusion proteins was investigated in transient expression experiments using transfected HeLa cells. The GFP-full-length Ro 52 kD fusion protein was accumulated in the cytoplasm and excluded from the nucleus. When GFP was fused with the La protein, the fluorescence was located in the nucleus. Clones coding for Ro 52 kD fragments containing the hydrophilic central part of the Ro 52 kD protein gave the same intracellular location and type of cytoplasmic speckles as the full-length Ro 52 kD protein. In contrast, both amino terminal and carboxy terminal fragments were uniformly distributed throughout the cell just like the GFP protein itself. These observations indicated a cytoplasmic location of the Ro 52 kD protein and demonstrated the crucial role of the hydrophilic domain in restricting the Ro 52 kD protein to this intracellular compartment.
ISSN:0891-6934
1607-842X
DOI:10.3109/08916939808995370