| Literature DB >> 10050030 |
A Harada1, K Takeuchi, N Dohmae, K Takio, T Uenaka, J Aoki, K Inoue, M Umeda.
Abstract
Immunoblotting showed that a monoclonal antibody, 3A10, binds to a series of rat brain-specific antigens with molecular masses of 150-, 120-, 118-, 106-, 104-, 79-, and 77-kDa. The expression of 3A10 antigens is dependent on the developmental stage of the brain; only the 106-kDa antigen is detected during embryonic stages of rat brain development, while the expression of the remaining 6 antigens starts after birth and reaches a maximum during postnatal days 15-21. Detection of the 3A10 antigens in cultured neuronal and glial cells derived from cerebral cortices of rat brain at embryonic day 18 showed that the 77-, 79-, 106-, and 150-kDa antigens are specifically expressed in neuronal cells. The 77-kDa antigen was purified and identified as synapsin I by amino acid sequence analyses of the peptide fragments isolated after Achromobacter protease I treatment. During the isolation of 3A10-reactive proteins by immunological screening of cDNA libraries constructed from adult rat brain, we found that all of the 3A10-reactive clones contain nucleotide sequences encoding the unique amino acid sequence TRSP(S, R,G)P. Analyses of 3A10-binding to various synthetic peptides showed that the monoclonal antibody recognizes a specific conformational structure formed by either the TRSPXP sequence or similar amino acid sequences that are expressed on a series of developmentally expressed brain proteins.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10050030 DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a022306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biochem ISSN: 0021-924X Impact factor: 3.387