Multiple forms of dynamin are encoded by shibire, a Drosophila gene involved in endocytosis

Dynamin was discovered in bovine brain tissue as a nucleotide-sensitive microtubule-binding protein of relative molecular mass 100,000. It was found to cross-link microtubules into highly ordered bundles, and appeared to have a role in intermicrotubule sliding in vitro. Cloning and sequencing of rat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 1991-06, Vol.351 (6327), p.583-588
Hauptverfasser: Chen, M.S, Obar, R.A, Schroeder, C.C, Austin, T.W, Poodry, C.A, Wadsworth, S.C, Vallee, R.B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dynamin was discovered in bovine brain tissue as a nucleotide-sensitive microtubule-binding protein of relative molecular mass 100,000. It was found to cross-link microtubules into highly ordered bundles, and appeared to have a role in intermicrotubule sliding in vitro. Cloning and sequencing of rat brain dynamin complementary DNA identified an N-terminal region of about 300 amino acids which contained the three consensus elements characteristic of GTP-binding proteins. Extensive homology was found between this domain and the mammalian Mx proteins which are involved in interferon-induced viral resistance, and with the product of the VPS1 locus in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which has been implicated both in membrane protein sorting, and in meiotic spindle pole separation. Dynamin-containing microtubule bundles were not observed in an immunofluorescence study of cultured mammalian cells, but a role for a GTP-requiring protein in intermicrotubule sliding during mitosis in plants has been reported. We report here that Drosophila melanogaster contains multiple tissue-specific and developmentally-regulated forms of dynamin, which are products of the shibire locus previously implicated in endocytic protein sorting.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/351583a0