Previous Article | Next Article 
Mol Cell Biol. 1988 April; 8(4): 1540-1550
Cloning of the human keratin 18 gene and its expression in nonepithelial mouse cells.
D A Kulesh and
R G Oshima
Cancer Research Center, La Jolla Cancer Research Foundation, California 92037.
ABSTRACT
Human keratin 18 (K18) and the homologous mouse protein, Endo B, are intermediate filament subunits of the type I keratin class. Both are expressed in many simple epithelial cell types including trophoblasts, the first differentiated cell type to appear during mouse embryogenesis. The K18 gene was identified and cloned from among the 15 to 20 similar sequences identified within the human genome. The identity of the cloned gene was confirmed by comparing the sequence of the first two exons to the K18 cDNA sequence and transfecting the gene into various murine cell lines and verifying the encoded protein as K18 by immunoprecipitation and partial peptide mapping. The transfected K18 gene was expressed in mouse HR9 parietal endodermal cells and mouse fibroblasts even though the fibroblasts fail to express endogenous Endo B. S1 nuclease protection analysis indicated that mRNA synthesized from the transfected K18 gene is initiated at the same position as authentic K18 mRNA found in both BeWo trophoblastoma cells and HeLa cells. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that the human K18 protein is stable in murine parietal endodermal cells (HR9) which express EndoA, a complementary mouse type II keratin. Surprisingly, however, K18 was degraded when synthesized in cells which lack a type II keratin. This turnover of K18 may be an important mechanism by which epithelial cells maintain equal molar amounts of both type I and II keratins. In addition, the levels of the endogenous type I Endo B in parietal endodermal cells were compensatingly down regulated in the presence of the K18 protein, while the levels of the endogenous type II Endo A were not affected in any of the transfected cell lines.
Mol Cell Biol. 1988 April; 8(4): 1540-1550
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Winger, Q. A., Guttormsen, J., Gavin, H., Bhushan, F.
(2007). Heat Shock Protein 1 and the Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 14 Pathway Are Important for Mouse Trophoblast Stem Cell Differentiation. Biol. Reprod.
76: 884-891
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Windoffer, R., Woll, S., Strnad, P., Leube, R. E.
(2004). Identification of Novel Principles of Keratin Filament Network Turnover in Living Cells. Mol. Biol. Cell
15: 2436-2448
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Owens, D. W., Wilson, N. J., Hill, A. J. M., Rugg, E. L., Porter, R. M., Hutcheson, A. M., Quinlan, R. A., van Heel, D., Parkes, M., Jewell, D. P., Campbell, S. S., Ghosh, S., Satsangi, J., Lane, E. B.
(2004). Human keratin 8 mutations that disturb filament assembly observed in inflammatory bowel disease patients. J. Cell Sci.
117: 1989-1999
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
van Leenders, G. J. L. H., Gage, W. R., Hicks, J. L., van Balken, B., Aalders, T. W., Schalken, J. A., De Marzo, A. M.
(2003). Intermediate Cells in Human Prostate Epithelium Are Enriched in Proliferative Inflammatory Atrophy. Am. J. Pathol.
162: 1529-1537
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Hesse, M., Magin, T. M., Weber, K.
(2002). Genes for intermediate filament proteins and the draft sequence of the human genome: novel keratin genes and a surprisingly high number of pseudogenes related to keratin genes 8 and 18. J. Cell Sci.
114: 2569-2575
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Peters, B., Kirfel, J., Bussow, H., Vidal, M., Magin, T. M.
(2001). Complete Cytolysis and Neonatal Lethality in Keratin 5 Knockout Mice Reveal Its Fundamental Role in Skin Integrity and in Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex. Mol. Biol. Cell
12: 1775-1789
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Alexander, C. M., Selvarajan, S., Mudgett, J., Werb, Z.
(2001). Stromelysin-1 Regulates Adipogenesis during Mammary Gland Involution. JCB
152: 693-703
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Paladini, R. D., Coulombe, P. A.
(1999). The Functional Diversity of Epidermal Keratins Revealed by the Partial Rescue of the Keratin 14 Null Phenotype by Keratin 16. JCB
146: 1185-1201
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rhodes, K., Oshima, R. G.
(1998). A Regulatory Element of the Human Keratin 18 Gene with AP-1-dependent Promoter Activity. J. Biol. Chem.
273: 26534-26542
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ness, S. L., Edelmann, W., Jenkins, T. D., Liedtke, W., Rustgi, A. K., Kucherlapati, R.
(1998). Mouse Keratin 4 Is Necessary for Internal Epithelial Integrity. J. Biol. Chem.
273: 23904-23911
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Tschentscher, P., Wagener, C., Neumaier, M.
(1997). Sensitive and specific cytokeratin 18 reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction that excludes amplification of processed pseudogenes from contaminating genomic DNA. Clin. Chem.
43: 2244-2250
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Pankov, R, Simcha, I, Zoller, M, Oshima, R., Ben-Ze'ev, A
(1997). Contrasting effects of K8 and K18 on stabilizing K19 expression, cell motility and tumorigenicity in the BSp73 adenocarcinoma. J. Cell Sci.
110: 965-974
[Abstract]
-
Casanova, L, Bravo, A, Were, F, Ramirez, A, Jorcano, J., Vidal, M
(1995). Tissue-specific and efficient expression of the human simple epithelial keratin 8 gene in transgenic mice. J. Cell Sci.
108: 811-820
[Abstract]
-
Chan, Y, Anton-Lamprecht, I, Yu, Q C, Jackel, A, Zabel, B, Ernst, J P, Fuchs, E
(1994). A human keratin 14 "knockout": the absence of K14 leads to severe epidermolysis bullosa simplex and a function for an intermediate filament protein.. Genes Dev.
8: 2574-2587
[Abstract]
-
Wu, R., Galvin, S, Wu, S., Xu, C, Blumenberg, M, Sun, T.
(1993). A 300 bp 5'-upstream sequence of a differentiation-dependent rabbit K3 keratin gene can serve as a keratinocyte-specific promoter. J. Cell Sci.
105: 303-316
[Abstract]
-
Dahlstrand, J., Zimmerman, L. B., McKay, R. D., Lendahl, U.
(1992). Characterization of the human nestin gene reveals a close evolutionary relationship to neurofilaments. J. Cell Sci.
103: 589-597
[Abstract]
-
Oshima, R G, Abrams, L, Kulesh, D
(1990). Activation of an intron enhancer within the keratin 18 gene by expression of c-fos and c-jun in undifferentiated F9 embryonal carcinoma cells.. Genes Dev.
4: 835-848
[Abstract]
-
Dale, B. A., Salonen, J., Jones, A. H.
(1990). New Approaches And Concepts in The Study of Differentiation of Oral Epithelia. CROBM
1: 167-190
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Oshima, R G, Trevor, K, Shevinsky, L H, Ryder, O A, Cecena, G
(1988). Identification of the gene coding for the Endo B murine cytokeratin and its methylated, stable inactive state in mouse nonepithelial cells.. Genes Dev.
2: 505-516
[Abstract]