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. 1997 Mar;27(3):584-8.
doi: 10.1002/eji.1830270303.

Cleavage of the low-affinity receptor for human IgE (CD23) by a mite cysteine protease: nature of the cleaved fragment in relation to the structure and function of CD23

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Cleavage of the low-affinity receptor for human IgE (CD23) by a mite cysteine protease: nature of the cleaved fragment in relation to the structure and function of CD23

O Schulz et al. Eur J Immunol. 1997 Mar.

Abstract

Der p I, a cysteine protease representing a major allergen of the house dust mite Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, has recently been shown to cleave CD23 from the surface of cultured human B cells (RPMI 8866 B cell line). We have now undertaken a detailed investigation of CD23 cleavage by Der p I. We demonstrate that Der p I cleaves CD23 at two sites (Ser155-Ser156 and Glu298-Ser299) to produce a 17-kDa fragment containing the lectin domain and only part of the C-terminal tail. No such effect was demonstrable with mouse CD23, a finding which was anticipated based on its lack of the cleavage sites identified on human CD23. Based on the cleavage pattern and the model of CD23, we propose a sequence of events leading to the liberation of the 17-kDa soluble CD23 fragment. The biological significance of such cleavage is underlined by the demonstration that Der p I-treated B lymphocytes lose their ability to bind IgE, and that the 17-kDa fragment (amino acids 156-298) contains the minimum structural requirement (amino acids 156-288) for binding to both IgE and CD21.

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