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Publication : Membrane-bound transferrin-like protein (MTf): structure, evolution and selective expression during chondrogenic differentiation of mouse embryonic cells.

First Author  Nakamasu K Year  1999
Journal  Biochim Biophys Acta Volume  1447
Issue  2-3 Pages  258-64
PubMed ID  10542324 Mgi Jnum  J:58252
Mgi Id  MGI:1347137 Doi  10.1016/s0167-4781(99)00173-6
Citation  Nakamasu K, et al. (1999) Membrane-bound transferrin-like protein (MTf): structure, evolution and selective expression during chondrogenic differentiation of mouse embryonic cells. Biochim Biophys Acta 1447(2-3):258-64
abstractText  Mouse membrane-bound transferrin-like protein (MTf) cDNA was cloned to examine its expression during chondrogenic differentiation in the mouse embryonic cell line ATDC5, and to analyze the phylogenetic relationships among the MTfs of four animal species and 23 other transferrin members. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the MTf gene diverged from the common ancestor gene earlier than the genes of the other transferrins such as serum transferrin, lactoferrin and ovotransferrin, and that the divergence occurred after the divergence of vertebrates and invertebrates. MTf, as well as the other transferrins, consists of two repeated domains. The similarity between the N-terminal and the C-terminal domains of MTf is much higher than that of the other transferrins, although the five amino acid residues required for iron binding were not conserved in the C-terminal domain of MTf in contrast to the conservation of these residues in both domains of the other transferrins. Among various adult mouse tissues, MTf mRNA was expressed at the highest level in cartilage and at a moderate level in the testis. MTf mRNA was expressed only at very low levels in the brain, spleen, thymus, muscle, lung, skin and intestine, and hardly detected in the heart, kidney, stomach and liver. In cultures of the mouse ATDC5 cell line, MTf is developmentally expressed in parallel with the expression of type II collagen and aggrecan, in the pattern commensurate with the onset of chondrogenesis to form cartilage nodules. The structural characteristics and the expression pattern suggest that during development and in adult tissues, MTf has some functions that are different from those of other transferrins.
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