"Protein phosphatase 4 interacts with the Survival of Motor Neurons complex and enhances the temporal localisation of snRNPs."Carnegie GK, Sleeman JE, Morrice N, Hastie CJ, Peggie MW, Philp A, Lamond AI, Cohen PT.(2003) J Cell Sci May 15;116(Pt 10):1905-13
Abstract
Protein phosphatase 4 (PPP4) is a ubiquitous essential protein serine/threonine
phosphatase found in higher eukaryotes. Coordinate variation of the levels of
the catalytic subunit (PPP4c) and the regulatory subunit (R2) suggests that
PPP4c and R2 form a heterodimeric core to which other regulatory subunits bind.
Two proteins that specifically co-purify with Flag-epitope-tagged R2 expressed
in HEK-293 cells were identified as Gemin3 and Gemin4. These two proteins have
been identified previously as components of the Survival of Motor Neurons (SMN)
protein complex, which is functionally defective in the hereditary disorder
spinal muscular atrophy. Immuno-sedimentation of the epitope-tagged SMN protein
complex from HeLa cells expressing CFP-SMN showed that the SMN protein interacts,
as previously reported, with Gemin2 (SIP1), Gemin3 and Gemin4 and in addition
associates with PPP4c. The SMN complex has been implicated in the assembly and
maturation of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs). Expression of GFP-R2-PPP4c
in HeLa cells enhances the temporal localisation of newly formed snRNPs, which
is consistent with an association of R2-PPP4c with the SMN protein complex.