We have isolated a pigment cell-specific cDNA clone from a B16 mouse melanoma cDNA library by differential hybridization. The mRNA of isolated cDNA is highly expressed in B16 melanoma cells and in black mouse (C57BL/6) skin, but is not detectable in mouse neuroblastoma cells nor in K1735 mouse amelanotic melanoma cells. The protein sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the cloned cDNA shows significant similarity to the entire region of Neurospora tyrosinase. To know the identity of cDNA, we transfected K1735 amelanotic melanoma and COS-7 cells with the cDNA carried in a simian virus 40 vector (pKCRH2). We confirmed that the isolated cDNA encodes mouse tyrosinase by immunofluorescence staining of transfected cells using two different anti-T4-tyrosinase monoclonal antibodies. Tyrosinase is composed of 513 amino acids with a molecular weight of 57,872 excluding a hydrophobic signal peptide of 24 amino acids.
Inflammatory immune reactions occur during transplant rejections and autoimmune diseases. Such reactions are mediated by cytokines, including interleukin-8 (IL-8). Cyclosporin A (CsA) exerts immunosuppressive activities by binding to immunoregulatory proteins termed cyclophilins. The anti-inflammatory effects of CsA are still not fully understood. Searching for novel neutrophil-activating proteins, we observed that an antiserum against human recombinant Interleukin-8 (IL-8) cross-reacted with cyclophilins in Western blots. Furthermore, native IL-8 was found to specifically bind CsA, whereas biologically inactive analogs of CsA were not bound by IL-8. Putative binding sites for CsA on IL-8 could be identified on the basis of structural similarities between IL-8 and cyclophilin. However, IL-8 lacks peptidyl-prolyl-isomerase (PPlase) enzyme activity, which is regarded as a characteristic of cyclophilins. We conclude that the specific binding of CsA to IL-8 may explain some of the anti-inflammatory effects of CsA. IL-8 may be a novel member of the cyclophilins lacking PPlase activity.
A type I restriction endonuclease from a new isolate of Escherichia coli (E. coli E166) has been purified and characterised. The enzyme, EcoD, has a recognition sequence similar in overall structure to the previously determined type I enzyme sequences, an exception being that it is degenerate. The sequence is 5
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