| Literature DB >> 15028623 |
He Zhu1, Jonathan Hayes, Michael Chen, James Baldwin, John E Piletz.
Abstract
A candidate human imidazoline-1 receptor, designated imidazoline receptor antisera-selected (IRAS) protein, was cloned based on immunoreactivity with antiserum against a purified imidazoline receptor binding peptide (IRBP antiserum). Human IRAS is 167 kD in size, different from 33- to 85-kD IRBP bands previously linked to the human platelet I(1) receptor. To explore the possible relationship between IRAS and these smaller proteins, seven different epitope-specific antisera against IRAS were raised in rabbits for comparison with IRBP antiserum. Focus was on antiserum(227-241), corresponding to amino acids No. 227 to 241 in IRAS, because this antiserum was found uniquely able to immunoprecipitate non-denatured 85-kD and 170-kD forms of IRAS from a human megakaryoblastoma cell line (MEG01), a model of platelet-producing cells. Human platelets lacked the 170-kD form of IRAS, but 33-kD and 85-kD bands were detectable and seemed to be possible fragments of full-length IRAS. The intensity of the 85-kD band detected by antiserum(227-241) was significantly correlated (r = 0.62, P = 0.04) with the intensity of the 33-kD band across 11 human platelet samples. A positive correlation between the intensities of the 33-kD and 85-kD bands is consistent with both being fragments of IRAS.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 15028623 DOI: 10.1196/annals.1304.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci ISSN: 0077-8923 Impact factor: 5.691