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. 1992 Mar 25;267(9):6171-7.

Cell-associated episialin is a complex containing two proteins derived from a common precursor

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  • PMID: 1556125
Free article

Cell-associated episialin is a complex containing two proteins derived from a common precursor

M J Ligtenberg et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

cDNA for the epithelial sialomucin episialin encodes a transmembrane molecule with a large extracellular domain, which mainly consists of repeats of 20 amino acids. Here we confirm the existence of a previously proposed proteolytic cleavage of episialin that occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum (Hilkens, J., and Buijs, F. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 4215-4222) and show that a similar cleavage takes place in in vitro translation systems. Using in vitro translation of truncated mRNAs, we map the cleavage site to a region located between 71 and 53 amino acids upstream of the transmembrane domain. Analysis of a mutant, in which this region has been deleted, indicates that the cleavage sites used in vitro and in vivo are identical or in close proximity. Both cleavage products remain associated although they are not linked through disulfide bonds. Therefore, the subunit derived from the N terminus, which represents the actual mucin-like domain, remains indirectly anchored to the cell membrane as a result of its interaction with the C-terminal subunit.

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