Surface NADH oxidase of HeLa cells lacks intrinsic membrane binding motifs.

Article Details

Citation

Morre DJ, Sedlak D, Tang X, Chueh PJ, Geng T, Morre DM

Surface NADH oxidase of HeLa cells lacks intrinsic membrane binding motifs.

Arch Biochem Biophys. 2001 Aug 15;392(2):251-6.

PubMed ID
11488599 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Disulfide-thiol interchange proteins with hydroquinone (NADH) oxidase activities (designated NOX for plasma membrane-associated NADH oxidases) occur as extrinsic membrane proteins associated with the plasma membrane at the outer cell surface. The cancer-associated NOX protein, designated tNOX, has been cloned. The 34-kDa plasma membrane-associated form of the protein contains no strongly hydrophobic regions and is not transmembrane. No myristoylation or phosphatidylinositol anchor motifs were discovered. Evidence for lack of involvement of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linkage was derived from the inability of treatment with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C or with nitrous acid at low pH to release the NOX protein from the surface of HeLa cells or from plasma membranes isolated from HeLa cells. Binding of NOX protein to the plasma membrane via amino acid side chain modification or by attachment of fatty acids also is unlikely based on use of specific fatty acid antisera to protein bound fatty acids and as a result of binding to the cancer cell surface of a truncated form of recombinant tNOX. Incubation of cells or plasma membranes with 0.1 M sodium acetate, pH 5, at 37 degrees C for 1 h, was sufficient to release tNOX from the HeLa cell surface. Release was unaffected by protease inhibitors or divalent ions and was not accelerated by addition of cathepsin D. The findings suggest dissociable receptor binding as a possible basis for their plasma membrane association.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Ecto-NOX disulfide-thiol exchanger 2Q16206Details