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Human macrophage colony‐stimulating factor heterogeneity results from alternative mRNA splicing, differential glycosylation, and proteolytic processing
19
Citations
46
References
1989
Year
ImmunologyImmunologic MechanismImmune SystemSplicing VariantMrna SpeciesTranscriptional RegulationImmunogeneticsProtein ExpressionHuman MacrophageDifferential GlycosylationRna ProcessingM-csf Protein HeterogeneityGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyPhagocyteAlternative Mrna SplicingMedicineSingle Gene
The single gene for human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF, or CSF-1) generates multiple mRNA species that diverge within the coding region. We have characterized translation products of these mRNA species from native and recombinant sources. Immunoblots of reduced native M-CSF indicate that multiple glycosylated species ranging from 25 kd to 200 kd are secreted by human monocytes and cell lines. In contrast, CV-1 cells expressing a short M-CSF clone secrete only 24 kd recombinant M-CSF. Synthetic peptide antibodies were developed to distinguish between secreted recombinant M-CSF from long and short mRNA splicing variants. Immunoblot analysis indicates that alternative mRNA splicing generates some M-CSF protein heterogeneity. Most secreted MIA PaCa-2 M-CSF reacts with long-clone-specific antibody. Lectin affinity chromatography shows that variable glycosylation contributes significantly to MIA PaCa-2 M-CSF size heterogeneity. In addition, cell lysates also contain larger M-CSF species that apparently undergo proteolytic processing before secretion. The data indicate that M-CSF protein heterogeneity results from both pre- and post-translational processing.
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