1. Academic Validation
  2. Cloning, expression, and chromosomal localization of the mouse meprin beta subunit

Cloning, expression, and chromosomal localization of the mouse meprin beta subunit

  • J Biol Chem. 1993 Oct 5;268(28):21035-43.
C M Gorbea 1 P Marchand W Jiang N G Copeland D J Gilbert N A Jenkins J S Bond
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biological Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey 17033.
PMID: 8407940
Abstract

Meprins are plasma membrane homo- or hetero-oligomeric metalloendopeptidases that contain glycosylated alpha and/or beta subunits. This paper reports the cloning and Sequencing of the mouse kidney beta subunit. The primary translation product is composed of 704 Amino acids which includes a transient signal sequence of 20 Amino acids at the NH2 terminus. The protease domain (Asn-63 to Leu-260) contains the putative zinc-binding motif characteristic of metalloendopeptidases of the "astacin family." The COOH terminus contains an epidermal growth factor-like domain, a potential membrane-spanning domain, and an additional 26 Amino acids. The beta subunit has an overall 42% identity to the alpha subunit, however, a 56-amino acid segment near the COOH terminus of alpha is missing in beta, and the putative transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of the subunits share no significant sequence similarity. NH2-terminal analyses of detergent-solubilized mature forms revealed that, unlike alpha, the prosequence (Leu-21 to Lys-62) is not removed from the beta subunit. Northern blot analysis revealed a 2.5-kilobase message for the beta subunit in the kidney and intestine of C57BL/6 and C3H/He mice. The gene for the beta subunit was localized to mouse chromosome 18. These studies indicate that alpha and beta probably derived from a common ancestral gene, but have evolved so that their genes are on two different chromosomes, and their tissue-specific expression and post-translational processing differ.

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