Publication | Open Access
Molecular basis of subtotal complement C6 deficiency. A carboxy-terminally truncated but functionally active C6.
53
Citations
36
References
1995
Year
GeneticsImmunologyPathologyMolecular BiologyNucleic Acid Amplification TestSplicing VariantHematologyGene StructureNormal C6C6 MoleculeGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyComplement SystemSubtotal C6Natural SciencesPathogenesisActive C6Molecular BasisMedicine
Individuals with subtotal complement C6 deficiency possess a C6 molecule that is 14% shorter than normal C6 and present in low but detectable concentrations (1-2% of the normal mean). We now show that this dysmorphic C6 is bactericidally active and lacks an epitope that was mapped to the most carboxy-terminal part of C6 using C6 cDNA fragments expressed as fusion proteins in the pUEX expression system. We thus predicted that the abnormal C6 molecule might be carboxy-terminally truncated and sought a mutation in an area approximately 14% from the carboxy-terminal end of the coding sequence. By sequencing PCR-amplified products from this region, we found, in three individuals from two families, a mutation that might plausibly be responsible for the defect. All three have an abnormal 5' splice donor site of intron 15, which would probably prevent splicing. An in-frame stop codon is found 17 codons downstream from the intron boundary, which would lead to a truncated polypeptide 13.5% smaller than normal C6. This result was unexpected, as earlier studies mapped the C5b binding site, or a putative enzymatic region, to this part of C6. Interestingly, all three subjects were probably heterozygous for both subtotal C6 and complete C6 deficiency.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1