Proceedings of the Korean Society of Applied Pharmacology (한국응용약물학회:학술대회논문집)
- 1995.10a
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- Pages.107-113
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- 1995
Functional characterization of the distal long arm of laminin: Characterization of Cell- and heparin binding activities
- Sung, Uhna (The University of Chicago, Howard Hughes Medical Institute) ;
- O′Rear, Julian J. (Department of Pathology, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School) ;
- Yurchenco, Peter D. (Department of Pathology, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School)
- Published : 1995.11.01
Abstract
Basement membrane laminin is a multidomain glycoprotein that interacts with itself, heparin and cells. The distal long arm plays major cell and heparin interactive roles. The long arm consists of three subunits (A, B1, B2) joined in a coiled-coil rod attached to a terminal A chain globule (G). The globule is in turn subdivided into five subdomains (Gl-5). In order to analyze the functions of this region, recombinant G domains (rG, rAiG, rG5, rGΔ2980-3028) were expressed in Sf9 insect cells using a baculovirus expression vector. A hybrid molecule (B-rAiG), consisting of recombinant A chain(rAiG) and the authentic B chains (E8-B)was assembled in vitro. The intercalation of rAiG into E8-B chains suppressed a heparin binding activity identified in subdomain Gl-2. By the peptide napping and ligand blotting, the relative affinity of each subeomain to heparin was assigned as Gl> G2= G4> G5> G3, such that G1 bound strongly and G3 not at all. The active heparin binding site of G domain in intact laminin appears to be located in G4 and proximal G5. Cell binding was examined using fibrosarcoma Cells. Cells adhered to E8, B-rAiG, rAiG and rG, did not bind on denatured substrates, poorly bound to the mixture of E8-B and rG. Anti-
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