pubmed:abstractText |
Cysteine string proteins (Csps) are synaptic vesicle proteins thought to be involved in calcium-dependent neurotransmitter release at nerve endings. Here, we report the cloning of two Csp variants, termed Csp1 and Csp2, from bovine adrenal medullary chromaffin cells. The bovine Csp1 appears to be the homologue of rat brain Csp, sharing 95% identity at the amino acid level. The nucleotide sequence of csp2 is identical with that of csp1 except for a 72-base insert which introduces a stop codon into the coding sequence, which would be predicted to result in a truncated protein 3.3 kDa smaller than Csp1. Furthermore, polymerase chain reaction analysis detected homologues of Csp1 and Csp2 in rat kidney, liver, pancreas, spleen, lung, and adrenal gland. Expression of Csps in non-neuronal tissues was confirmed by Northern blotting and by immunoblotting with anti-Csp1 antiserum which also demonstrated expression of both full-length and truncated Csps in spleen. The widespread tissue distribution is inconsistent with a role of Csps as specific regulators of presynaptic calcium channels as previously proposed. We suggest that Csps may have a more general role in membrane traffic in non-neuronal as well as neuronal cells.
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