Identification and Initial Characterization of Four Novel Members of the Interleukin-1 Family

Sanjay Kumar(New Frontier), Peter McDonnell(Molecular Biology Consortium), Ruth Lehr(New Frontier), Lauren A. Tierney(New Frontier), Maritsa N. Tzimas(New Frontier), Don E. Griswold(New Frontier), Elizabeth A. Capper(New Frontier), Ruth Tal‐Singer(New Frontier), Grace I. Wells(New Frontier), Michael L. Doyle(New Frontier), Peter R. Young(Molecular Biology Consortium)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
April 1, 2000
Cited by 361Open Access
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Abstract

Interleukin-1 (IL-1), fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), and their homologues are secreted factors that share a common beta-barrel structure and act on target cells by binding to cell surface receptors with immunoglobulin-like folds in their extracellular domain. While numerous members of the FGF family have been discovered, the IL-1 family has remained small and outnumbered by IL-1 receptor homologues. From expressed sequence tag data base searches, we have now identified four additional IL-1 homologues, IL-1H1, IL-1H2, IL-1H3, and IL-1H4. Like most other IL-1/FGFs, these proteins do not contain a hydrophobic leader sequence. IL-1H4 has a propeptide sequence, while IL-1H1, IL-1H2, and IL-1H3 encode only the mature protein. Circular dichroism spectra and thermal stability analysis suggest that IL-1H1 folds similarly to IL-1ra. The novel homologues are not widely expressed in mammals. IL-1H1 is constitutively expressed only in placenta and the squamous epithelium of the esophagus. However, IL-1H1 could be induced in vitro in keratinocytes by interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha and in vivo via a contact hypersensitivity reaction or herpes simplex virus infection. This suggests that IL-1H1 may be involved in pathogenesis of immune mediated disease processes. The addition of four novel IL-1 homologues suggests that the IL-1 family is significantly larger than previously thought.


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