A human genomic DNA segment containing the gene for the corticotropin‐releasing factor precursor has been isolated by screening a gene library with an ovine cDNA probe. The cloned DNA segment has been subjected to restriction endonuclease mapping and nucleotide sequence analysis. Comparison of the nucleotide sequence of the gene with that of the ovine cDNA indicates that an intron of 800 bp is inserted in the segment encoding the 5′‐untranslated region of the mRNA. The segment corresponding to the protein‐coding and the 3′‐untranslated region of the mRNA is uninterrupted. The mRNA and amino acid sequences of the human corticotropin‐releasing factor precursor have been deduced from the corresponding gene sequence. The deduced amino acid sequence of human corticotropin‐releasing factor exhibits seven amino acid substitutions in comparison with the ovine counterpart.
cDNA clones having a nucleotide sequence encoding a human monocyte chemotactic and activating factor (MCAF) were isolated and sequenced. The amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence reveals the primary structure of the MCAF precursor to be composed of a putative signal peptide sequence of 23 amino acid residues and a mature MCAF sequence of 76 amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence of MCAF showed 25-55% homology with other members of an inducible cytokine family, including macrophage inflammatory protein and some putative polypeptide mediators known as JE, LD78, RANTES and TCA-3. This suggests that MCAF is a member of family of factors involved in immune and inflammatory responses.
The chromosomal gene for human interleukin 1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) was isolated from a human genomic DNA library by using as a probe cloned human IL-1 alpha cDNA. Complete nucleotide sequence of about 12 kilobase pairs (kbp) long was determined and the structure and organization of this gene were elucidated. This gene contains seven exons and six introns. The first exon encodes the 5'-untranslated region. Most of the prepeptide portion of the precursor polypeptide is encoded by the next three exons, and the mature form of IL-1 alpha is encoded by the remaining three exons. The last exon also encodes the intronless 3'-untranslated region. The fourth intron as well as both 5'- and 3'-flanking regions contains the sequence of an Alu family member. In the middle part of the last intron, a 46-bp sequence with a unique structure is repeated five times in a head to tail manner. These repeats are flanked by the regions containing alternative purine and pyrimidine tracts. In the 5'-flanking region, immediately upstream of the putative TATA box, the 16-bp sequence highly homologous to the binding site of the adenovirus 2 major late promoter transcription factor is identified. The nucleotide sequence reported here showed only one nucleotide substitution in the 3'-untranslated exon in comparison with the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA from HL-60, a promyelocytic leukemia cell line, previously cloned and sequenced in our laboratories.
DNA sequence complementary to the mRNA for rabbit interleukin-1 precursor (preIL-1) has been cloned from the cDNA library constructed using partially purified poly(A)+RNA from induced rabbit alveolar macrophages by mRNA hybridization-translation assay. By using this cDNA as a probe, human IL-1 cDNA was isolated from the cDNA library prepared using poly(A)+RNA from induced HL-60 cells, a human monocyte-like cell line. The amino acid sequences of the human and rabbit preIL-1 deduced from the cDNA sequences reveal their primary structures which consists of 271 and 267 amino acid residues, respectively. The amino acid sequence is 64% conserved between human and rabbit. The difference in number of amino acid residues results from the carboxy-terminal extention of 4 amino acid residues in human preIL-1. Expression of the cloned human cDNA in E. coli yielded biologically active IL-1.
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