Publication | Open Access
Primary structure of rat pulmonary surfactant protein D. cDNA and deduced amino acid sequence.
103
Citations
36
References
1992
Year
Pulmonary SurfactantAmino AcidsLung InflammationGlycobiologyMolecular BiologyPulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyPulmonary PharmacologyGlycosylationProtein FunctionLung DepositionSurfactant Protein DBiochemistryG Protein-coupled ReceptorPulmonary FibrosisMembrane BiologyAmino Acid SequenceCell BiologyStructural BiologyPulmonary DiseasePrimary StructureNatural SciencesCell-matrix InteractionLung MechanicsRat Sp-dMedicineCarbohydrate-protein InteractionExtracellular Matrix
Surfactant protein D (SP-D) is a carbohydrate-binding glycoprotein containing a collagen-like domain that is synthesized by alveolar type II epithelial cells. The complete primary structure of rat SP-D has been determined by sequencing of a cloned cDNA. The protein consists of three regions: an NH2-terminal segment of 25 amino acids, a collagen-like domain consisting of 59 Gly-X-Y repeats, and a COOH-terminal carbohydrate recognition domain of 153 amino acids. There are 6 cysteine residues present in rat SP-D: 2 in the NH2-terminal noncollagenous segment and 4 in the COOH-terminal carbohydrate-binding domain. The collagenous domain contains one possible N-glycosylation site. The protein is preceded by a cleaved, NH2-terminal signal peptide. SP-D shares considerable homology with the C-type mammalian lectins. Hybridization analysis demonstrates that rat SP-D is encoded by a 1.3-kilobase mRNA which is abundant in lung and highly enriched in alveolar type II cells. Extensive homology exists between rat SP-D and bovine conglutinin.
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