Cerebellar beta 2-chimaerin, a GTPase-activating protein for p21 ras-related rac is specifically expressed in granule cells and has a unique N-terminal SH2 domain.
beta-Chimaerin, a 30-kDa GTPase- activating protein (GAP) for the p21 Ras-related Rac, is expressed specifically in late stage spermatocytes (Leung, T., How, B.-E., Manser, E., and Lim, L. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 3813-3816). Using antibodies raised against beta-chimaerin, we detected a major 46-kDa RacGAP in the rat cerebellum. With beta-chimaerin cDNA as a probe and using polymerase chain reaction, cDNAs from both human and rat cerebellum were isolated. The human and rat cDNAs encoded sequences containing cysteine-rich and GAP domains identical to those of testis beta-chimaerin. The cDNAs also encoded an additional N-terminal SH2 (Src homology 2) domain, probably derived from the beta-chimaerin gene by alternate splicing. This SH2 domain of the predicted 54-kDa protein was strikingly similar to that of alpha 2-chimaerin, including replacement by glutamic acid of the invariant tryptophan present at the start of other SH2 domains. The SH2 domains of alpha- and beta-chimaerin thus represent a subset of SH2 domains. The cerebellar beta-chimaerin ( beta 2-) is expressed mainly in granule cells and exhibits postnatal developmental increases. beta 2-Chimaerin was enriched in particulate/synaptosomal fractions. In the mouse weaver mutant lacking mature granule cells, there is a corresponding decrease in beta 2-chimaerin, which could well serve as a marker of granule cell differentiation.[1]References
- Cerebellar beta 2-chimaerin, a GTPase-activating protein for p21 ras-related rac is specifically expressed in granule cells and has a unique N-terminal SH2 domain. Leung, T., How, B.E., Manser, E., Lim, L. J. Biol. Chem. (1994) [Pubmed]
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