Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex

Autoantibodies directed against self-antigens are characteristic features of a number of human diseases. In systemic rheumatic diseases, these include antibodies that react with extracellular molecules; the cell membrane; nuclear and cytoplasmic components. Our laboratories have been interested in u...

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Autores principales: Chan,Edward K.L., Fritzler,Marvin J.
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso 1998
Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-34581998000200001
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spelling oai:scielo:S0717-345819980002000012003-08-18Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi ComplexChan,Edward K.L.Fritzler,Marvin J. Autoantibodies directed against self-antigens are characteristic features of a number of human diseases. In systemic rheumatic diseases, these include antibodies that react with extracellular molecules; the cell membrane; nuclear and cytoplasmic components. Our laboratories have been interested in understanding autoimmune responses in systemic lupus erythematosus and related disease states and using human autoantibody as molecular probes in studying the cell biology of target antigens. This review summarizes our research efforts in dissecting the autoimmune response to the Golgi complex via expression cloning using human autoantibodies. We have cloned 4 of 5 known Golgi autoantigens that are referred to as golgin-95/GM130, golgin-97, golgin-160/GCP170, and golgin-245, respectively based on their molecular weights. The fifth is giantin, also known as macrogolgin or GCP372. Interestingly, the amino acid sequences deduced for all Golgi autoantigens indicate that they are proteins with predominantly coiled-coil domains and non-alpha helical domains at the N- and C-termini. The current postulate is that these coiled-coil rich proteins like golgin-95/GM130 form intermolecular complexes with a docking protein p115 that has been shown to be important for Golgi vesicular traffic. An alternative nonexclusive hypothesis is that these coiled-coil rich proteins are the components of the "strings" that are important in linking and guiding vesicles in intercisternae traffic. How this family of coiled-coil proteins and their complexes become autoimmune targets remains to be determined.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessPontificia Universidad Católica de ValparaísoElectronic Journal of Biotechnology v.1 n.2 19981998-08-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-34581998000200001en10.4067/S0717-34581998000200001
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
description Autoantibodies directed against self-antigens are characteristic features of a number of human diseases. In systemic rheumatic diseases, these include antibodies that react with extracellular molecules; the cell membrane; nuclear and cytoplasmic components. Our laboratories have been interested in understanding autoimmune responses in systemic lupus erythematosus and related disease states and using human autoantibody as molecular probes in studying the cell biology of target antigens. This review summarizes our research efforts in dissecting the autoimmune response to the Golgi complex via expression cloning using human autoantibodies. We have cloned 4 of 5 known Golgi autoantigens that are referred to as golgin-95/GM130, golgin-97, golgin-160/GCP170, and golgin-245, respectively based on their molecular weights. The fifth is giantin, also known as macrogolgin or GCP372. Interestingly, the amino acid sequences deduced for all Golgi autoantigens indicate that they are proteins with predominantly coiled-coil domains and non-alpha helical domains at the N- and C-termini. The current postulate is that these coiled-coil rich proteins like golgin-95/GM130 form intermolecular complexes with a docking protein p115 that has been shown to be important for Golgi vesicular traffic. An alternative nonexclusive hypothesis is that these coiled-coil rich proteins are the components of the "strings" that are important in linking and guiding vesicles in intercisternae traffic. How this family of coiled-coil proteins and their complexes become autoimmune targets remains to be determined.
author Chan,Edward K.L.
Fritzler,Marvin J.
spellingShingle Chan,Edward K.L.
Fritzler,Marvin J.
Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
author_facet Chan,Edward K.L.
Fritzler,Marvin J.
author_sort Chan,Edward K.L.
title Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
title_short Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
title_full Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
title_fullStr Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
title_full_unstemmed Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi Complex
title_sort golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the golgi complex
publisher Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
publishDate 1998
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-34581998000200001
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