Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.1.30.1 (
S1 nuclease
)
3,660
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Anti-receptor antibodies have previously been used in two cytokine systems (IL-1 and TNF alpha) to identify the existence of different cytokine receptors on different cell types. In this study, we have similarly used two approaches to evaluate whether IL-4 receptors on different cell types are identical, or whether more than one species of
IL-4 receptor
exists. The first approach involved production of monoclonal antibodies specific for the
IL-4 receptor
expressed by the murine mast cell line, MC/9. Six anti-
IL-4 receptor
monoclonal antibodies were produced against the purified soluble extracellular domain of the recombinant
IL-4 receptor
derived from MC/9 cells. These antibodies were capable of binding to and specifically immunoprecipitating the soluble extracellular domain of the recombinant mast cell
IL-4 receptor
. Following biotinylation of the antibodies and addition of phycoerythrin-streptavidin, their binding to cell associated IL-4 receptors on MC/9 mast cells could be readily visualized by immunofluorescence. Using this approach, the anti-mast cell IL-4R antibodies were found to specifically bind IL-4 receptors expressed on a variety of other murine cell types, including T cells, B cells, macrophages, fibroblasts, and L cells. The antibodies did not bind to two human cell lines known to bind human but not murine IL-4. The intensity of staining was directly related to the number of IL-4 binding sites identified previously by receptor-ligand equilibrium binding analyses. As a second approach to evaluating potential receptor heterogeneity, we constructed
S1 nuclease
protection assay probes for two separate regions of the mast cell
IL-4 receptor
, one located in the extracellular domain and one in the intracellular domain. Subsequent S1 analyses showed that both regions are expressed by the following types of cells: T cells, B cells, macrophages, myeloid cells, L cells, and stromal cells. The two approaches used in this study therefore indicate that the same or highly similar
IL-4 receptor
species is expressed by a wide variety of hemopoietic and nonhemopoietic cells. Since the anti-
IL-4 receptor
antibodies produced in this study did not block binding of IL-4 to its receptor, we cannot exclude the possible existence of a second type of IL-4R coexpressed on the cells tested in this study, or expressed uniquely by other cell types that were not investigated.
...
PMID:Evaluation of murine interleukin 4 (IL-4) receptor expression using anti-receptor monoclonal antibodies and S1 nuclease protection analyses. 206 18