Molecular cloning of a porcine gene syk that encodes a 72-kDa protein-tyrosine kinase showing high susceptibility to proteolysis

Takeaki Taniguchi(Mitsubishi Group (Japan)), Tomoko Kobayashi(Mitsubishi Group (Japan)), J. Kondo(University of Fukui), Kyôko Takahashi(University of Fukui), Hiroaki Nakamura(Mitsubishi Group (Japan)), Junichi Suzuki(Mitsubishi Group (Japan)), Katsuya Nagai(University of Fukui), Takechiyo Yamada(University of Fukui), Shun‐ichi Nakamura(University of Fukui), Hirohei Yamamura(Mitsubishi Group (Japan))
Journal of Biological Chemistry
August 1, 1991
Cited by 448Open Access
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Abstract

By using antibodies raised against a portion of N terminus of 40-kDa kinase (Kobayashi, T., Nakamura, S., Taniguchi, T., and Yamamura, H. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 188, 535-540), not only 40-kDa protein but also 72-kDa protein were detected on immunoblot analysis of porcine spleen homogenate. In splenocytes preparation, the antibodies could immunoprecipitate protein-tyrosine kinase activity of the 72-kDa protein but not detect the 40-kDa protein even on immunoblot. After incubation of crude spleen homogenate at 37 degrees C with or without various protease inhibitors, immunoblot analysis revealed proteolytic breakdown of the 72-kDa protein to 40-kDa fragment. Next, using oligonucleotides designed according to partially sequenced information of the 40-kDa kinase as a probe, we have isolated a clone containing entire coding sequence for the 40-kDa kinase from a porcine spleen cDNA library. This clone had a 1884-base-pair-long open reading frame encoding 628-amino-acid polypeptide with a calculated molecular weight of 71,618. The deduced amino acid sequence did not contain a ligand binding or membrane spanning region but did a well-conserved protein-tyrosine kinase domain and two src homology region 2 domains. The sequences of these domains showed 30-40% identity to those of other protein-tyrosine kinases, but those of remaining parts were quite unique. From these results, we concluded that the 40-kDa kinase was generated by proteolysis from the 72-kDa holoprotein which was a new member of nonreceptor protein-tyrosine kinase so far reported. We therefore designated this gene as syk after spleen tyrosine kinase.


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