Renal alpha-actinin-4: Purification and puromycin aminonucleoside-binding property

2003 
Mutations in the gene encoding nonmuscle alpha-actin-in-4 (actinin-4), an actin cross-linking protein, lead to congenital nephrosis. This suggests that actinin-4 is an essential component of the glomerular filtration barrier. In the present study, we attempted to purify actinin-4 from the mammalian kidney. We also examined an interaction of the protein with puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN), which can induce nephrosis in animals. A 100-kD protein reactive with antibody against muscle alpha-actinin was purified from the Triton-insoluble cytoskeleton of porcine kidney, by MgCl 2 treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation, and subsequent DEAE-cellulose chromatography and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Its partial amino acid sequence was then determined. A filamentous actin (F-actin)-binding activity of the purified protein was examined by a cosedimentation assay. Interactions of the purified protein and its fragments with PAN were analyzed by an affinity assay using PAN-Sepharose. Determined 134 amino acid sequences of the purified porcine renal 100-kD protein were completely identical with those deduced from nucleotide sequence of the cDNA encoding human actinin-4. The purified protein possessed the known function of alpha-actinin, the F-actin-binding activity, and was tightly bound to PAN. The PAN-binding site was mapped within a central rod domain of the protein, which is a possible interaction site for various cytoskeletal and transmembrane proteins. We have established an efficient purification method for renal actinin-4. Moreover, our findings indicate that the central rod domain of actinin-4 has a high affinity to PAN. In the PAN nephrosis animal model, actinin-4 might be a target protein from PAN nephrotoxicity.
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