Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 7, 3554-3560, Copyright © 1987 by Society for Neuroscience
Phosphatase and carbocyanine dye binding define different types of phosphate groups in mammalian neurofilaments
H Ksiezak-Reding and SH Yen
Department of Pathology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461.
The phosphorylation state of human and bovine spinal cord neurofilaments
(NF) was studied by direct phosphate analysis and carbocyanine dye
("Stains-all") binding to NF polypeptides resolved on SDS-polyacrylamide
gels. Electrophoretically purified NF-H (200 kDa), NF-M (160 kDa), and NF-L
(68 kDa) of human origin contained 24, 18, and 4 mol phosphate/mol protein,
whereas bovine NF contained 53, 23, and 5 mol phosphate/mol protein,
respectively. Incubation of NF preparations with E. coli alkaline
phosphatase removed about 55% of the phosphate from NF-H, about 30% of the
phosphate from both human and bovine NF-M, but did not change the phosphate
content of NF-L. This treatment also inhibited or substantially reduced the
binding of electroblotted NF-H and NF-M to 2 anti-NF monoclonal antibodies
known to recognize phosphorylated sites on projection side arms.
"Stains-all" was found to be a very sensitive probe for detection of
phosphorylated cytoskeletal proteins. Without the phosphatase treatment, NF
and other phosphoproteins, MAP1, MAP2, tubulin, and tau, all bound the
carbocyanine dye on SDS gels, forming blue dye-protein complexes. Measured
densitometrically at 615 nm, the staining intensity (relative units/mol
protein) was 9, 9, and 3 for human and 10, 13, and 6 for bovine NF-H, NF-M,
and NF-L, respectively. NF-H bound the dye less efficiently than was
expected from its phosphate content. After phosphatase treatment, NF-H,
with half of its phosphate residues remaining, no longer formed blue
complex with "Stains-all," the staining intensity of NF-M decreased by
20-40%, and the staining of NF- L was not changed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT
250 WORDS)