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Yamamoto, Maho Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University
Kondo, Rina Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University
Hozumi, Haruka Department of Applied Chemistry and Biotechnology, Faculty of Engineering, Okayama University
Doi, Seita Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University
Denda, Miwako Cell Free Sciences Co., Ltd.
Magari, Masaki Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University Kaken ID publons researchmap
Kanayama, Naoki Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University ORCID Kaken ID publons researchmap
Hatano, Naoya Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University
Morishita, Ryo Cell Free Sciences Co., Ltd.
Tokumitsu, Hiroshi Applied Cell Biology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University ORCID Kaken ID publons researchmap
Abstract
During screening of protein-protein interactions, using human protein arrays carrying 19,676 recombinant glutathione s-transferase (GST)-fused human proteins, we identified the high-mobility protein group 20A (HMG20A) as a novel S100A6 binding partner. We confirmed the Ca2+-dependent interaction of HMG20A with S100A6 by the protein array method, biotinylated S100A6 overlay, and GST-pulldown assay in vitro and in transfected COS-7 cells. Co-immunoprecipitation of S100A6 with HMG20A from HeLa cells in a Ca2+-dependent manner revealed the physiological relevance of the S100A6/HMG20A interaction. In addition, HMG20A has the ability to interact with S100A1, S100A2, and S100B in a Ca2+-dependent manner, but not with S100A4, A11, A12, and calmodulin. S100A6 binding experiments using various HMG20A mutants revealed that Ca2+/S100A6 interacts with the C-terminal region (residues 311-342) of HMG20A with stoichiometric binding (HMG20A:S100A6 dimer = 1:1). This was confirmed by the fact that a GST-HMG20A mutant lacking the S100A6 binding region (residues 311-347, HMG20A-Delta C) failed to interact with endogenous S100A6 in transfected COS-7 cells, unlike wild-type HMG20A. Taken together, these results identify, for the first time, HMG20A as a target of Ca2+/S100 proteins, and may suggest a novel linkage between Ca2+/S100 protein signaling and HMG20A function, including in the regulation of neural differentiation.
Keywords
S100 protein
HMG20A
protein-protein interaction
Ca2+-signal transduction
genome-wide screening
Published Date
2021-03-30
Publication Title
Biomolecules
Volume
volume11
Issue
issue4
Publisher
MDPI
Start Page
510
ISSN
2218-273X
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
File Version
publisher
PubMed ID
NAID
DOI
Web of Science KeyUT
Related Url
isVersionOf https://doi.org/10.3390/biom11040510
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/