Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a lymphokine originally described as a humoral factor required for the continued proliferation of activated T-cell clones. It also seems to be involved in the mitogenic response of thymocytes, in augmenting natural killer cell activity, in the generation of cytotoxic T cells and in the induction of other lymphokines such as gamma-interferon and a B-cell growth factor (BCGF-1). More recently, there has been evidence for the involvement of IL-2 per se in the stimulation of B-cell growth (ref. 10 and T. Kishimoto and J. Vilcek, personal communications). We have reported previously the cloning and expression of a human IL-2 complementary DNA. The cDNA encodes biologically active IL-2 which would consist of 153 amino acids, including a signal sequence. Because so much of the work on IL-2 has been done in the human and mouse, we sought to obtain cDNA encoding murine IL-2, and we now report the cloning, expression and sequence analysis of murine IL-2 cDNAs. The longest cDNA insert encodes a polypeptide of 169 amino acids, containing unique repeats of a CAG sequence which would encode 12 consecutive glutamine residues within the active IL-2 molecule.
A cDNA library was prepared from the poly(A) mRNA isolated from human peripheral blood lymphocytes which were induced by combined treatment with phytohemagglutinin and a phorbol ester. Recombinant plasmids containing human interferon-gamma (HuIFN-gamma) cDNAs were identified by the oligonucleotide-hybridization method. Nucleotide sequence analysis showed that the nucleotide and amino-acid sequences of HuIFN-gamma cDNA in plasmid pIFN gamma-G4 differed from the published data at amino acid position 9 (CAA for glutamine versus AAA for lysine). The cDNA in plasmid pIFN gamma-G4 was expressed under control of the simian virus 40 early promoter in monkey COS cells and a biologically active HuIFN-gamma was secreted from the cells. The cDNA was also inserted into an expression vector carrying an E. coli tryptophan promoter and was expressed in E. coli. The results suggest that the conversion from lysine to glutamine at amino acid position 9 might not affect the specific activity of HuIFN-gamma.
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