Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Identification and characterization of a C‐terminally extended form of recombinant murine IL‐6

12

Citations

19

References

1991

Year

Abstract

Murine interleukin-6 (mIL-6) was expressed in Escherichia coli in the insoluble fraction of cell lysates. Approximately equal amounts of two polypeptide species, reactive with anti-IL-6 antibodies, were produced. The two forms of mIL-6 were isolated and found to have identical N-terminal sequences initiated by Met-Phe-Pro-Thr-Ser-Gln-. Peptide mapping after endoproteinase glu-C digestion led to isolation and characterization of the C-terminal peptides from each of the two forms and allowed the source of the heterogeneity to be identified as a C-terminal addition of three amino acids, Gln-Lys-Leu, to authentic mIL-6. Inspection of the nucleotide sequence of the plasmid containing the mIL-6 gene and expression of the plasmid in other strains suggested that the addition of three amino acids was caused by a readthrough of the termination codon arising from an unexpected suppressor mutation in the original host strain. Although the C-terminus of IL-6 is critical for the activity of this cytokine, the IL-6 variant with extended C-terminus was fully active in two separate bioassays. This suggests that the additional amino acids do not disrupt the structure or function of this important region of the molecule.

References

YearCitations

Page 1