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Publication : Cloning, characterization, and mapping of a murine promiscuous chemokine receptor gene: homolog of the human Duffy gene.

First Author  Luo H Year  1997
Journal  Genome Res Volume  7
Issue  9 Pages  932-41
PubMed ID  9314499 Mgi Jnum  J:38315
Mgi Id  MGI:1096690 Doi  10.1101/gr.7.9.932
Citation  Luo H, et al. (1997) Cloning, characterization, and mapping of a murine promiscuous chemokine receptor gene: homolog of the human Duffy gene [letter]. Genome Res 7(9):932-41
abstractText  We report here the isolation and genomic organization of the orthologous mouse Duffy gene, name Dfy. It is a single copy gene located in chromosome 1 in a region homologous to the human Duffy gene (FY). Sequence analyses indicate that Dfy consists of two exons: exon 1 of 55 nucleotides, which encodes 7 amino acid residues; and exon 2 of 1038 nucleotides, which encodes 327 residues. The single intron consists of 462 nucleotides. The 5'-end promoter region contains motifs involved ir 1 vertebrate development in addition to potential binding sites of factors for globin transcription. The open reading frame (ORF) shows 60% homology with the human Duffy protein. However, mouse erythrocytes are serologically Duffy-negative and mouse erythrocyte membrane proteins do not cross-react with two Duffy-specific rabbit polyclonal antibodies. The deduced protein predicts a M-r of 36,692 and carries three potential N-glycosylation sites to asparagine residues. Hydropathy analysis predicts an exocellular amino-terminal domain of 57 residues, seven transmembrane alpha-helices, and an endocellular carboxy-terminal domain of 29 residues. In bone marrow and spleen, Dfy expresses a major 1.4-kb and a minor 1.8-kb mRNA. Contrary to humans, Dfy is expressed in liver, synthesizing a 1.4-kb mRNA, and is repressed in kidney. Dfy is highly expressed in mouse brain and produces a major 8.5-kb and a minor 10.2-kb mRNA. The human erythroleukemia K562 cells, transfected with cDNA encoding the mouse Duffy-like protein and mouse erythrocytes, have the same chemokine binding profiles indicating that they contain the same protein.
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