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Publication : Molecular analysis of human complement component C5: localization of the structural gene to chromosome 9.

First Author  Wetsel RA Year  1988
Journal  Biochemistry Volume  27
Issue  5 Pages  1474-82
PubMed ID  3365401 Mgi Jnum  J:9157
Mgi Id  MGI:57620 Doi  10.1021/bi00405a012
Citation  Wetsel RA, et al. (1988) Molecular analysis of human complement component C5: localization of the structural gene to chromosome 9. Biochemistry 27(5):1474-82
abstractText  A human C5 clone (pC5HG2) was isolated from a cDNA library constructed from Hep G2 mRNA. The DNA sequence showed that the pC5HG2 insert was comprised of 3309 base pairs of pro-C5 coding sequence and 404 base pairs of 3'-untranslated sequence. The derived amino acid sequence contained the entire coding sequence of the C5 alpha-chain, the beta-alpha-chain junction region, and 100 amino acids (approximately 50%) of the beta-chain. Protein sequences of four C5 tryptic peptides were aligned exactly to this sequence and demonstrated that C5 synthesized and secreted by Hep G2 cells is probably identical with plasma-derived C5. Coding sequence alignment of the human C5 sequences with those of murine C5 indicated that 80% of the nucleotides and 79% of the amino acids were placed identically in the two species. Amino acid sequence alignment of the homologous family members C3, C4, and alpha 2-macroglobulin with that of C5 demonstrated 27%, 25%, and 19% identity, respectively. As was found in murine C5, the corresponding thiol ester region of human C5 contained several conserved amino acids, but the critical cysteine and glutamine residues which give rise to the intramolecular thiol ester bond in C3, C4, and alpha 2-macroglobulin were absent in C5, having been replaced by serine and alanine, respectively. With the use of a panel of hamster-human somatic cell hybrids, the C5 gene was mapped to human chromosome 9. In situ chromosomal hybridization studies employing metaphase cells further localized the gene to bands 9q32-34, with the largest cluster of grains at 9q34.1.
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