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Publication : Cyclophilin: a specific cytosolic binding protein for cyclosporin A.

First Author  Handschumacher RE Year  1984
Journal  Science Volume  226
Issue  4674 Pages  544-7
PubMed ID  6238408 Mgi Jnum  J:37376
Mgi Id  MGI:84772 Doi  10.1126/science.6238408
Citation  Handschumacher RE, et al. (1984) Cyclophilin: a specific cytosolic binding protein for cyclosporin A. Science 226(4674):544-7
abstractText  Cyclophilin, a specific cytosolic binding protein responsible for the concentration of the immunosuppressant cyclosporin A by lymphoid cells, was purified to homogeneity from bovine thymocytes. Cation-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography resolved a major and minor cyclophilin species that bind cyclosporin A with a dissociation constant of about 2 X 10(-7) moles per liter and specific activities of 77 and 67 micrograms per milligram of protein, respectively. Both cyclophilin species have an apparent molecular weight of 15,000, an isoelectric point of 9.6, and nearly identical amino acid compositions. A portion of the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of the major species was determined. The cyclosporin A-binding activity of cyclophilin is sulfhydryl dependent, unstable at 56 degrees C and at pH 4 or 9.5, and sensitive to trypsin but not to chymotrypsin digestion. Cyclophilin specifically binds a series of cyclosporin analogs in proportion to their activity in a mixed lymphocyte reaction. Isolation of cyclophilin from the cytosol of thymocytes suggests that the immunosuppressive activity of cyclosporin A is mediated by an intracellular mechanism, not by a membrane-associated mechanism.
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