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Human CD6 possesses a large, alternatively spliced cytoplasmic domain
- Source :
- European journal of immunology. 25(10)
- Publication Year :
- 1995
-
Abstract
- Human CD6 is a monomeric 105/130-kDa T cell surface glycoprotein that is involved in T cell activation. The apparent discrepancy between the size of the cytoplasmic domain in human (44 amino acids) and mouse (243 amino acids) CD6, led us to use reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction of human peripheral blood lymphocyte mRNA to isolate cDNA clones that include the carboxyl-terminal coding region of human CD6. The nucleotide sequence of the longest human cDNA clone, CD6-PB1, predicts a protein of 668 amino acids with a 244-amino acid cytoplasmic domain similar in size to and possessing 71.5% amino acid sequence identity with the cytoplasmic domain of mouse CD6. This previously unrecognized 244-amino acid cytoplasmic domain does not have significant homology to any other known protein (except mouse CD6), but does possess two proline-rich motifs containing the SH3 domain-binding consensus sequence, a serine-threonine-rich motif repeated three times, three protein kinase C phosphorylation-site motifs, and 10 casein kinase-2 phosphorylation-site motifs. These sequences are likely to play a role in the ability of CD6-specific monoclonal antibodies to stimulate T cell proliferation. Full-length CD6 cDNA containing this cytoplasmic domain sequence encodes a monomeric 105/130-kDa protein that can be immunoprecipitated from the surface of transfected cells and comigrates upon SDS-PAGE with wild-type CD6 immunoprecipitated from PBL. We also isolated two alternatively spliced forms of human CD6 cDNA lacking sequences encoding membrane-proximal regions of the cytoplasmic domain which maintain the same reading frame as CD6-PB1. The short cytoplasmic domain of the previously reported human CD6-15 cDNA clone results from a deletion of a 20-bp segment through use of an alternative 3' splice site, resulting in a frame shift and premature termination of translation relative to the clones we have isolated. These data demonstrate that human CD6 possesses a large cytoplasmic domain containing sequence motifs that are likely to be involved in signal transduction upon stimulation of T cells through CD6 ligation.
- Subjects :
- Antigens, Differentiation, T-Lymphocyte
DNA, Complementary
RNA Splicing
T-Lymphocytes
Immunology
Molecular Sequence Data
Sequence alignment
Biology
Lymphocyte Activation
Transfection
Polymerase Chain Reaction
src Homology Domains
Mice
Protein structure
L Cells
Species Specificity
Antigens, CD
Complementary DNA
Consensus sequence
Immunology and Allergy
Animals
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Peptide sequence
chemistry.chemical_classification
Base Sequence
Nucleic acid sequence
Antibodies, Monoclonal
Molecular biology
Amino acid
Protein Structure, Tertiary
chemistry
Sequence motif
Sequence Alignment
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00142980
- Volume :
- 25
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European journal of immunology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b5c3c63f8f475c6818a9bad53ada7c60