A cDNA coding for human interleukin 2 (IL-2) was inserted into the genome of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus adjacent to the polyhedrin promoter. Cells infected with recombinant virus produced high levels of Mr 15,500 IL-2 polypeptide, the majority of which was secreted into the culture medium during infection. The recombinant IL-2 was able to stimulate the growth of an IL-2-dependent cell line. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the insect-derived IL-2 was identical to that of natural IL-2. Thus, a mammalian signal peptide was recognized and properly removed in insect cells.
The visco-elastic properties of salivary secretions are due to high molecular-weight glycoproteins, known as mucins. Mucins are composed of numerous oligosaccharide side-chains O-glycosidically linked through 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-alpha-D-galactose to the hydroxyl groups of seryl and threonyl residues of the protein core; on the average, every fourth amino acid residue is involved in such a bond. This work conveys their isolation and purification, compiles the compositional analysis of several mammalian submaxillary and sublingual mucins; defines the conditions of the alkaline beta-elimination reaction, its mechanism, and importance in structural studies of glycoprotens, and briefly discusses the influence of stimuli on mucous secretions, as well as biosynthesis, structural diversity, and physiological role of salivary mucous glycoproteins.
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