Effects of truncations in the N- and C-terminal domains of filensin on filament formation with phakinin in cell-free conditions and cultured cells

FEBS Open Bio. 2023 Nov;13(11):1990-2004. doi: 10.1002/2211-5463.13700. Epub 2023 Aug 30.

Abstract

Filensin and phakinin are lens fiber cell-specific proteins that constitute the beaded filaments (BFs) that are critical for maintaining lens transparency. In the Shumiya cataract rat, filensin 94 kDa undergoes N- and C-terminal proteolytic processing to give a transient 50 kDa fragment and a final 38 kDa fragment, just before opacification. To characterize the effects of this processing on filensin function, recombinant proteins representing the two filensin fragments, termed Fil(30-416) and Fil(30-369), respectively, were examined. Fil(30-416) lacks the N-terminal 29 amino acids and the C-terminal 248 amino acids. Fil(30-369) lacks the N-terminal 29 residues and the C-terminal 295 residues. In cell-free assembly characterized by electron microscopy, filensin and Fil(30-416) co-polymerized with phakinin and formed rugged, entangled filaments, whereas Fil(30-369) formed only aggregates. In cultured SW-13 and MCF-7 cells expressing fluorescent fusion proteins, filensin and Fil(30-416) co-polymerized with phakinin and formed cytoplasmic sinuous filaments with different widths, while Fil(30-369) gave aggregates. Therefore, while truncation of the N-terminal 29 amino acids did not affect filament formation, truncation of the C-terminal 295 but not the 248 residues resulted in failure of filament formation. These results indicate that the tail B region (residues 370-416) of rat filensin is essential for filament formation with phakinin. Truncation of the tail B region by proteolytic processing in the cataract rat lens might interfere with BF formation and thereby contribute to opacification.

Keywords: beaded filament; cataract; filensin; fluorescent protein; intermediate filament; phakinin.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acids
  • Animals
  • Cataract*
  • Cells, Cultured
  • Rats
  • Recombinant Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • phakinin
  • filensin
  • Recombinant Proteins
  • Amino Acids