Human serum was found to contain a variety of class I-like molecules by Western blotting with anti-class I heavy chain reagents: major bands usually are observed around Mr 44,000, 40,000, and 35,000-37,000. HLA-A24-positive individuals are distinguished by higher serum levels of Mr 44,000 and 40,000 class I-like molecules than those found in HLA-A24-negative individuals. The Mr 44,000 serum molecules are probably intact class I molecules that have been shed from the cell membrane, because they contain both a transmembrane segment (TM), as deduced from detergent-binding experiments, and a cytoplasmic tail (CT), as inferred from reactivity with an antipeptide serum specific for the cytoplasmic domain of class I antigens (RaCT). The Mr 35,000 and 37,000 molecules contain neither a TM nor a CT region and therefore are probably proteolytic breakdown products of cellular and/or serum Mr 44,000 molecules, although the existence of Q10-like molecules in man cannot be ruled out. The Mr 40,000 molecules do not contain a TM region. Mr 40,000 molecules reactive with the RaCT serum were found in the minority (2/13) of sera tested. We conclude that alternative splicing resulting in a precise excision of the TM exon plays a minor role in the generation of serum HLA class I antigens.
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