Four different forms of interferon-induced 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase identified by immunoblotting in human cells.

Judith Chebath(Weizmann Institute of Science), P D Benech(Weizmann Institute of Science), Ara G. Hovanessian(Weizmann Institute of Science), J Galabru(Weizmann Institute of Science), Michel Revel(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
March 1, 1987
Cited by 238Open Access
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Abstract

Antibodies against synthetic peptides derived from the cDNA sequence of interferon-induced 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase, and which immunoprecipitate the native enzyme activity, were found to detect multiple enzyme forms in denaturing electrophoretic immunoblots. In some human cell lines, four different interferon-induced proteins of 40, 46, 67, and 100 kDa were found to react with the same peptide antibodies. Each isolated form was shown to have 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase activity, but the dependence on double-stranded RNA was markedly different for activation of the individual enzymes. The four enzyme forms also differ in their intracellular localization, on microsomes (100 kDa), in nuclei (67, 46, 40 kDa), and on membrane structures (67 kDa). Plasma membranes from interferon-treated Daudi lymphoblastoid cells are highly enriched in the 67-kDa 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase form. The 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase activity induced by interferons in human cells appears, therefore, as a complex multienzyme system.


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