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Publication : Molecular cloning, characterization, and differential expression pattern of mouse lung surfactant convertase.

First Author  Krishnasamy S Year  1998
Journal  Am J Physiol Volume  275
Issue  5 Pt 1 Pages  L969-75
PubMed ID  9815115 Mgi Jnum  J:50850
Mgi Id  MGI:1312966 Doi  10.1152/ajplung.1998.275.5.L969
Citation  Krishnasamy S, et al. (1998) Molecular cloning, characterization, and differential expression pattern of mouse lung surfactant convertase. Am J Physiol 275(5 Pt 1):L969-75
abstractText  We recently reported the purification and partial amino acid sequence of surfactant convertase, a 72-kDa glycoprotein involved in the extracellular metabolism of lung surfactant (S Krishnasamy, N J Gross, AL Teng, RM Schultz, and R Dhand. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 235: 180-4, 1997). We report here the isolation of a cDNA clone encoding putative convertase from a mouse lung cDNA library. The cDNA spans a 1,836-bp sequence, with an open reading frame encoding 536 amino acid residues in the mature protein and an 18-amino acid signal peptide at the NH2 terminus. The deduced amino acid sequence matches the four partial amino acid sequences (68 residues) that were previously obtained from the purified protein. The deduced amino acid sequence contains an 18-amino acid residue signal peptide, a serine active site consensus sequence, a histidine consensus sequence, five potential N-linked glycosylation sites, and a COOH-terminal secretory-type sequence His-Thr-Glu-His-Lys. Primer-extension analysis revealed that transcription starts 29 nucleotides upstream from the start codon. Northern blot analysis of RNA isolated from various mouse organs showed that convertase is expressed in lung, kidney, and liver as a 1,800-nucleotide-long transcript. The nucleotide and amino acid sequences of putative convertase are 98% homologous with mouse liver carboxylesterase. It thus may be the first member of the carboxylesterase family (EC 3.1.1.1) to be expressed in lung parenchyma and the first with a known physiological function.
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