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Comparative Study
. 1985 Jun;134(6):3987-93.

Plasma cell antigen PC-1 and the transferrin receptor in mouse, rat, and hamster: serologic and biochemical analysis

  • PMID: 2985702
Comparative Study

Plasma cell antigen PC-1 and the transferrin receptor in mouse, rat, and hamster: serologic and biochemical analysis

I R van Driel et al. J Immunol. 1985 Jun.

Abstract

The plasma cell membrane antigen PC-1 and the receptor for the iron transport protein transferrin are high m.w., developmentally regulated proteins consisting of two similar or identical disulfide-bonded subunits. In this paper, we report the results of a serologic and biochemical analysis of these proteins in various strains of inbred mice, and in rats and hamsters. A monoclonal antibody against the PC-1a allelic product is shown to detect an antigenic determinant on the PC-1 molecule that has the same strain distribution as the antigen previously detected with polyclonal alloantisera. The mouse PC-1 protein was purified from plasma cells of the PC-1a genotype and was used to generate polyclonal rabbit anti-PC-1 antibodies. These antibodies precipitated a homologous protein from plasmacytoma cells derived from PC-1- congenic mice, demonstrating that PC-1b is not a "null" allele. The PC-1b allelic product had a slightly lower apparent m.w. than the PC-1a product, and had a slightly more basic isoelectric point. Rabbit anti-mouse PC-1 antibodies also precipitated a homologous protein from immunoglobulin-secreting cells of rat and hamster origin, but did not show detectable cross-reaction with the transferrin receptor. Disulfide bonding between chains was conserved in both PC-1 and the transferrin receptor in all species examined, but transferrin receptors from mouse cells had a significantly higher apparent m.w. than those of rat, hamster, or human cells.

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