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1.
Kell, a 93 kDa type II membrane glycoprotein, and XK, a 444 amino acid multi-pass membrane protein, are blood group proteins that exist as a disulfide-bonded complex on human red cells. The mechanism of Kell/XK assembly was studied in transfected COS cells co-expressing Kell and XK proteins. Time course studies combined with endonuclease-H treatment and cell fractionation showed that Kell and XK are assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum. At later times the Kell component of the complex was not cleaved by endonuclease-H, indicating N-linked oligosaccharide processing and transport of the complex to a Golgi and/or a post-Golgi cell fraction. Surface-labeling of transfected COS cells, expressing both Kell and XK, demonstrated that the Kell/XK complex travels to the plasma membrane. XK expressed in the absence of Kell was also transported to the cell surface indicating that linkage of Kell and XK is not obligatory for cell surface expression.  相似文献   

2.
Lee S  Russo DC  Pu J  Ho M  Redman CM 《Immunogenetics》2000,52(1-2):53-62
The human Kell blood group system is important in transfusion medicine, since Kell is a polymorphic protein and some of its antigens can cause severe reactions if mismatched blood is transfused, while maternal alloimmunization may lead to fetal and neonatal anemia. In humans, Kell is an Mr 93,000 type II membrane glycoprotein with endothelin-3-converting enzyme activity that is linked by a single disulfide bond to another protein, XK, that spans the membrane ten times. An absence of XK leads to clinical symptoms termed the McLeod syndrome. We determined the cDNA sequence of the mouse Kell homologue, the organization of the gene, expression of the protein and its enzymatic function on red cells. Comparison of human and mouse Kell cDNA showed 80% nucleotide and 74% amino acid sequence identity. Notable differences are that the mouse Kell protein has eight probable N-linked carbohydrate side chains, compared to five for human Kell, and that the mouse homologue has one more extracellular cysteine than human Kell protein. The mouse Kell gene (Kel), like its human counterpart, is similarly organized into 19 exons. Kel was located to proximal Chromosome 6. Northern blot analysis showed high expression in spleen and weaker levels in testis and heart. Western blot analysis of red cell membrane proteins demonstrated that mouse Kell glycoprotein has an apparent Mr of 110,000 and, on removal of N-linked sugars, 80,000. As in human red cells, Kell is disulfide-linked to XK and mouse red cells have endothelin-3-converting enzyme activity.  相似文献   

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4.
beta-Spectrin is an erythrocyte membrane protein that is defective in many patients with abnormalities of red blood cell shape including hereditary spherocytosis and elliptocytosis. It is expressed not only in erythroid tissues but also in muscle and brain. We wished to determine the regulatory elements that determine the tissue-specific expression of the beta-spectrin gene. We mapped the 5'-end of the beta-spectrin erythroid cDNA and cloned the 5'-flanking genomic DNA containing the putative beta-spectrin gene promoter. Using transfection of promoter/reporter plasmids in human tissue culture cell lines, in vitro DNase I footprinting analyses, and gel mobility shift assays, a beta-spectrin gene erythroid promoter with two binding sites for GATA-1 and one site for CACCC-related proteins was identified. All three binding sites were required for full promoter activity; one of the GATA-1 motifs and the CACCC-binding motif were essential for activity. The beta-spectrin gene promoter was able to be transactivated in heterologous cells by forced expression of GATA-1. In transgenic mice, a reporter gene directed by the beta-spectrin promoter was expressed in erythroid tissues at all stages of development. Only weak expression of the reporter gene was detected in muscle and brain tissue, suggesting that additional regulatory elements are required for high level expression of the beta-spectrin gene in these tissues.  相似文献   

5.
The Kell blood group is a highly polymorphic system containing over 20 different antigens borne by the protein Kell, a 93-kDa type II glycoprotein that displays high sequence homology with members of the M13 family of zinc-dependent metalloproteases whose prototypical member is neprilysin. Kell K1 is an antigen expressed in 9% of the Caucasian population, characterized by a point mutation (T193M) of the Kell K2 antigen, and located within a putative N-glycosylation consensus sequence. Recently, a recombinant, non-physiological, soluble form of Kell was shown to cleave Big ET-3 to produce the mature vasoconstrictive peptide. To better characterize the enzymatic activity of the Kell protein and the possible differences introduced by antigenic point mutations affecting post-translational processing, the membrane-bound forms of the Kell K1 and Kell K2 antigens were expressed either in K562 cells, an erythroid cell line, or in HEK293 cells, a non-erythroid system, and their pharmacological profiles and enzymatic specificities toward synthetic and natural peptides were evaluated. Results presented herein reveal that the two antigens possess considerable differences in their enzymatic activities, although not in their trafficking pattern. Indeed, although both antigens are expressed at the cell surface, Kell K1 protein is shown to be inactive, whereas the Kell K2 antigen binds neprilysin inhibitory compounds such as phosphoramidon and thiorphan with high affinity, cleaves the precursors of the endothelin peptides, and inactivates members of the tachykinin family with enzymatic properties resembling those of other members of the M13 family of metalloproteases to which it belongs.  相似文献   

6.
Monospecific Kell blood group antibodies, of either human alloimmune or mouse monoclonal origin, react with a single surface-exposed protein of 93,000 daltons. Chymotryptic peptide maps of the 93,000-dalton protein isolated by antibodies of two different specificities (anti-K7 or anti-K14) indicate that Kell epitopes reside on the same protein. Kell protein is similar in size to band 3 protein but differs markedly in its tryptic and chymotryptic peptide maps, indicating that they are different proteins. In addition, sheep antibody to human band 3 does not react with Kell protein. Rabbit antibody to Kell protein reacts, by Western immunoblotting, with membrane proteins from Kell antigen positive red blood cells but not from those of a Ko (Kell null) cell. In intact red cells only a small portion of the Kell protein is available to lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination. Under nonreducing conditions Kell antigen is isolated not only as a 93,000-dalton protein but also as larger protein complexes ranging in size from above 200,000 to 115,000 daltons. Treatment of red cells with iodoacetamide, prior to isolation of Kell protein, reduces the amount of the very large complexes, but Kell protein occurs both as 115,000- and 93,000-dalton proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Lipocalin 2 (LCN2), a secreted protein of the lipocalin family, induces apoptosis in some types of cells and inhibits bacterial growth by sequestration of the iron-laden bacterial siderophore. We have recently reported that LCN2 inhibits the production of red blood cells in the mouse. Here we analyzed the role of LCN2 in human hematopoiesis. Expression of LCN2 was observed not only in mature cells such as those of the granulocyte/macrophage and erythroid lineages but also in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. We also examined expression of two candidate receptors for LCN2, brain type organic cation transporter (BOCT) and megalin, in various cell types. BOCT showed relatively high levels of expression in erythroid and hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells but lower levels in granulocyte/macrophage and T lymphoid cells. Megalin was expressed at high levels in T lymphoid and erythroid cells but at lower levels in granulocyte/macrophage lineage cells. LCN2 suppressed the growth of erythroid and monocyte/macrophage lineages in vitro, but did not have this effect on cells of other lineages. In addition, immature hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells were not sensitive to LCN2. These results demonstrate a lineage-specific role for LCN2 in human hematopoiesis that is reminiscent of its effects upon mouse hematopoiesis and strongly suggest an important in vivo function of LCN2 in the regulation of human hematopoiesis.  相似文献   

8.
A role of EphB4 receptor and its ligand,ephrin-B2, in erythropoiesis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Erythropoiesis is regulated not only by erythropoietin but also by microenvironments which are composed of transmembrane molecules. We have previously shown that a receptor tyrosine kinase EphB4 is predominantly expressed on human erythroid progenitors in bone marrow. EphB4 is expressed in approximately 45% of hematopoietic progenitor cells, which are CD34-positive and c-Kit-positive in human umbilical cord blood (hUCB). The transmembrane ligand for EphB4 or ephrin-B2 is expressed on bone marrow stromal cells and arterial endothelial cells. When such EphB4-positive hematopoietic progenitor cells were co-cultured with stromal cells which express ephrin-B2, they were immediately detached from stromal cells and differentiated to mature erythroid cells. At that time, expression of EphB4 immediately down-regulated. In contrast, on ephrin-B2 non-expressing stromal cells, they remained EphB4-positive cells and the generated number of mature erythroid cells was less than that on ephrin-B2 expressing stromal cells. Additionally, ephrin-B2 expression on endothelial cells up-regulated under hypoxic condition. Taken together, we propose that one of the molecular cues that regulate erythropoiesis is ephrin-B2 on stromal cells.  相似文献   

9.
 The human Kx blood group antigen is carried by a 37 000 M r apparent molecular mass membrane polypeptide which is deficient in rare individuals with the McLeod syndrome. The X-linked human XK gene is transcribed in many tissues including adult skeletal muscle and brain, sieges of disorders observed in McLeod syndrome. We report here the cloning of the orthologous mouse XK mRNA. Comparison of XK from human and mouse revealed 80% sequence similarity at the amino acid level. The mouse XK gene is organized in two exons and is expressed in many tissues, but its expression pattern is slightly different from that of the human gene. The presence in mouse erythrocyte membrane of a 43 000 M r Kx-related protein was demonstrated by immunoblotting with a rabbit antiserum directed against the human protein. With non-reduced samples, a 140 000 M r species was detected instead of the 43 000 M r protein, suggesting that, as demonstrated in the Kx polypeptide might be complexed with another protein in mouse red cells, presumably the homologue of the human Kell protein of 93 000 M r. Received: 22 February 1999 / Revised: 8 June 1999  相似文献   

10.
Peng J  Redman CM  Wu X  Song X  Walker RH  Westhoff CM  Lee S 《Gene》2007,392(1-2):142-150
The McLeod phenotype is derived from various forms of XK gene defects that result in the absence of XK protein, and is defined hematologically by the absence of Kx antigen, weakening of Kell system antigens, and red cell acanthocytosis. Individuals with the McLeod phenotype usually develop late-onset neuromuscular abnormalities known as the McLeod syndrome (MLS). MLS is an X-linked multi-system disorder caused by absence of XK alone, or when the disorder is caused by large deletions, it may be accompanied with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), chronic granulomatous disease (CYBB), retinitis pigmentosa (RPGR), and ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTC). XK defects derived from a large deletion at the XK locus (Xp21.1) have not been characterized at the molecular level. In this study, the deletion breakpoints of two novel cases of McLeod phenotype with extensive deletions are reported. Case 1 has greater than 1.12 million base-pairs (mb) deletion around the XK locus with 7 genes affected. Case 2 has greater than 5.65 mb deletion from TCTE1L to DMD encompassing 20 genes. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that DMD, XK and CYBB have close paralogs, some of which may partially substitute for the functions of their counterparts. The loci around XK are highly conserved from fish to human; however, the disorders are probably specific to mammals, and may coincide with the translocation of the loci to the X chromosome after the speciation in birds. The non-synonymous to synonymous nucleotide substitution rate ratio (omega=dN/dS) in these genes was examined. CYBB and RPGR show evidence of positive selection, whereas DMD, XK and OTC are subject to selective constraint.  相似文献   

11.
We created a monoclonal antibody, designated EB1 (IgM, kappa), that reacts with erythroblasts by fusion of P3-X63-Ag8.653 with splenocytes of rats immunized with erythroblastic islands isolated from mice spleens. Western blotting revealed that EB1 reacted with the band 3 protein of the erythrocytic membrane. It stained erythrocytes and erythroblasts, forming clusters in the bone marrow, splenic red pulp, and fetal liver, but did not stain other tissues in the cryostat sections. The EB1 antigen was detected during dimethyl sulfoxide-induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that the EB1 antigen was expressed from the basophilic erythroblasts during normal erythroid differentiation. Preferential segregation of the EB1 antigen on the cell membrane of the nucleating erythroblasts was not observed. These results suggest that EB1 is specific for erythrocyte band 3 protein and may be useful for studying erythroid cell differentiation.  相似文献   

12.
Kx is a quantitatively minor blood group protein of human erythrocytes which is thought to be a membrane transporter. In the red cell membrane, Kx forms a complex stabilized by a disulfide bond with the Kell blood group membrane protein which might function as a metalloprotease. The palmitoylation status of these proteins was studied by incubating red cells with [3H] palmitic acid. Purification of the Kell-Kx complex, by immunochromatography on an immobilized human monoclonal antibody of Kell blood group specificity demonstrated that the Kx but not the Kell protein is palmitoylated. Six cysteines in Kx are predicted to be intracytoplasmic and might be targets for palmitoylation. Three of these cysteines are present in a portion of sequence which is predicted to form an amphipathic alpha helix. Palmitoylation of one or several of these cysteines might contribute to anchor the cytoplasmic portion of the Kx protein to the inner surface of red cell membrane.  相似文献   

13.
To identify neuron-specific genes, we performed gene expression profiling, cDNA microarray and in silico ESTs (expressed sequence tags) analyses. We identified a human neuron-specific gene, KIAA1110 (homologue of rat synArfGEF (Po)), that is a member of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for the ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF). RT-PCR analysis showed that the KIAA1110 gene was expressed specifically in the brain among adult human tissues, whereas no apparent expression was observed in immature neural tissues/cells, such as fetal brain, glioma tissues/cells, and neural stem/precursor cells (NSPCs). The KIAA1110 protein was shown to be expressed in mature neurons but not in undifferentiated NSPCs. Immunohistochemical analysis also showed that KIAA1110 was expressed in neurons of the human adult cerebral cortex. Furthermore, the pull-down assay revealed that KIAA1110 has a GEF activity toward ARF1 that regulates transport along the secretion pathway. These results suggest that KIAA1110 is expressed specifically in mature neurons and may play an important role in the secretion pathway as a GEF for ARF1.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Abstract: Two membrane glycoproteins acting as energy-dependent efflux pumps, mdr -encoded P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and the more recently described multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP), are known to confer cellular resistance to many cytotoxic hydrophobic drugs. In the brain, P-gp has been shown to be expressed specifically in the capillary endothelial cells forming the blood-brain barrier, but localization of MRP has not been well characterized yet. Using RT-PCR and immunoblot analysis, we have compared the expression of P-gp and Mrp1 in homogenates, isolated capillaries, primary cultured endothelial cells, and RBE4 immortalized endothelial cells from rat brain. Whereas the mdr1a P-gp-encoding mRNA was specifically detected in brain microvessels and mdr1b mRNA in brain parenchyma, mrp1 mRNA was present both in microvessels and in parenchyma. However, Mrp1 was weakly expressed in microvessels. Mrp1 expression was higher in brain parenchyma, as well as in primary cultured brain endothelial cells and in immortalized RBE4 cells. This Mrp1 overexpression in cultured brain endothelial cells was less pronounced when the cells were cocultured with astrocytes. A low Mrp activity could be demonstrated in the endothelial cell primary monocultures, because the intracellular [3H]vincristine accumulation was increased by several MRP modulators. No Mrp activity was found in the cocultures or in the RBE4 cells. We suggest that in rat brain, Mrp1, unlike P-gp, is not predominantly expressed in the blood-brain barrier endothelial cells and that Mrp1 and the mdr1b P-gp isoform may be present in other cerebral cells.  相似文献   

16.
alpha-Spectrin is a highly expressed membrane protein critical for the flexibility and stability of the erythrocyte. Qualitative and quantitative defects of alpha-spectrin are present in the erythrocytes of many patients with abnormalities of red blood cell shape including hereditary spherocytosis and elliptocytosis. We wished to determine the regulatory elements that determine the erythroid-specific expression of the alpha-spectrin gene. We mapped the 5' end of the alpha-spectrin erythroid cDNA and cloned the 5' flanking genomic DNA containing the putative alpha-spectrin gene promoter. Using transfection of promoter/reporter plasmids in human tissue culture cell lines, in vitro DNase I footprinting analyses, and gel mobility shift assays, an alpha-spectrin gene erythroid promoter with binding sites for GATA-1- and NF-E2-related proteins was identified. Both binding sites were required for full promoter activity. In transgenic mice, a reporter gene directed by the alpha-spectrin promoter was expressed in yolk sac, fetal liver, and erythroid cells of bone marrow but not adult reticulocytes. No expression of the reporter gene was detected in nonerythroid tissues. We conclude that this alpha-spectrin gene promoter contains the sequences necessary for low level expression in erythroid progenitor cells.  相似文献   

17.
Liver-intestine cadherin (LI-cad) is a non-classical cadherin, which is expressed during intestinal development, but absent in normal liver tissue. Our earlier investigation has detected overexpression of LI-cad in gastric adenocarcinoma and indicated its association with lymph node metastasis. Herein, we found in RT-PCR and TaqMan Q-PCR that LI-cad was identified in HCC cell lines, HuH-7, Hep-3B, and PLC/PRF/5, but not in MIHA and HepG2 non-tumorigenic cells. Immunofluorescence cytochemistry assay revealed that the LI-cad was predominantly expressed in cytoplasm of HCC cells, contrary to that of E-cad immunostain at the plasma membrane region. By testing against 18 pairs of HCC and adjacent non-tumor tissues, 13 cases (72.2%) showed over expression of LI-cad in HCC tissues, 2 cases (11.1%) were similar, and 3 cases did not yield detectable signal. None of the 6 normal liver specimens tested was positive with LI-cad. Taken together, LI-cad could be a potential disease marker for HCC.  相似文献   

18.
We identified a gene encoding a novel secreted protein in mice and humans and named it Brorin. Mouse Brorin consists of 324 amino acids with a putative secreted signal sequence at its amino terminus and two cysteine-rich domains in its core region. Positions of 10 cysteine residues in the domains of Brorin are similar to those in the cysteine-rich domains of members of the Chordin family. However, the amino acid sequence of Brorin is not significantly similar to that of any other member of the Chordin family, indicating that Brorin is a unique member of the family. Mouse Brorin protein produced in cultured cells was efficiently secreted into the culture medium. The protein inhibited the activity of bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) and BMP6 in mouse preosteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells. Mouse Brorin was predominantly expressed in neural tissues in embryos and also predominantly expressed in the adult brain. In the brain, the expression was detected in neurons, but not glial cells. The neural tissue-specific expression profile of Brorin is quite distinct from that of any other member of the Chordin family. Brorin protein promoted neurogenesis, but not astrogenesis, in mouse neural precursor cells. The present findings indicate that Brorin is a novel secreted BMP antagonist that potentially plays roles in neural development and functions.  相似文献   

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We identified a novel adaptor protein that contains a Src homology (SH)3 domain, SH3 binding proline-rich sequences, and a leucine zipper-like motif and termed this protein WASP interacting SH3 protein (WISH). WISH is expressed predominantly in neural tissues and testis. It bound Ash/Grb2 through its proline-rich regions and neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) through its SH3 domain. WISH strongly enhanced N-WASP-induced Arp2/3 complex activation independent of Cdc42 in vitro, resulting in rapid actin polymerization. Furthermore, coexpression of WISH and N-WASP induced marked formation of microspikes in Cos7 cells, even in the absence of stimuli. An N-WASP mutant (H208D) that cannot bind Cdc42 still induced microspike formation when coexpressed with WISH. We also examined the contribution of WISH to a rapid actin polymerization induced by brain extract in vitro. Arp2/3 complex was essential for brain extract-induced rapid actin polymerization. Addition of WISH to extracts increased actin polymerization as Cdc42 did. However, WISH unexpectedly could activate actin polymerization even in N-WASP-depleted extracts. These findings suggest that WISH activates Arp2/3 complex through N-WASP-dependent and -independent pathways without Cdc42, resulting in the rapid actin polymerization required for microspike formation.  相似文献   

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