Title of article :
Molecular Identification and Expression of Erythroid K:Cl Cotransporter in Human and Mouse Erythroleukemic Cells,
Author/Authors :
Christine M. Pellegrino، نويسنده , , Anne C. Rybicki، نويسنده , , Sylvia Musto، نويسنده , , Ronald L. Nagel، نويسنده , , Robert S. Schwartz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
10
From page :
31
To page :
40
Abstract :
ABSTRACT: A major pathway for K+efflux in human reticulocytes and young RBCs is K:Cl cotransport (K:Cl-CT). The activity of K:Cl-CT is increased in pathologic RBCs containing hemoglobins S and C and may contribute to the abnormal dehydration state of these cells. Human K:Cl-CT (gene product KCC1) has been recently sequenced from human (hKCC1), rabbit and rat tissue by Gillenet al.(J Biol Chem 271:16237, 1996). We report here the sequence of KCC1 from human and mouse erythroleukemic cells (K562 and MEL cells, respectively). The cDNA for human erythroid-KCC1 is 100% identical to hKCC1 and the cDNA for mouse erythroid-KCC1 shares 89% identity with hKCC1, which translates to 96% identity at the amino acid level. Mammalian KCC1 is strongly conserved with >95% identity between human, rabbit, rat, and mouse KCC1 proteins. We did not detect any full-length mRNA transcripts of human erythroid-KCC1 in circulating reticulocytes. We detected two mRNA isoforms of human erythroid-KCC1 that resulted in C-terminal truncated proteins (73 amino acid and 17 amino acids, respectively). Human and mouse erythroidKCC1 differed at several consensus sites including a predicted PKC phosphorylation site at108threonine and a predicted CK2 phosphorylation site at51serine, within the predicted cytoplasmic N-terminal, that are present in human but not mouse erythroid-KCC1. Expression of MEL-KCC1 mRNA increases substantially upon DMSO-induced differentiation opening the possibility that erythroid-KCC1 plays a role in early erythroid maturation events. The molecular identification of erythroid-KCC1 is an important step towards understanding the physiologic role mediated by this protein in young and pathologic RBCs and during erythropoiesis, as well as providing a new tool for the elucidation of pathways and signals involved in RBC volume regulation.
Keywords :
erythropoiesis , K562 , MEL , erythrocyte , cation transport , Cell volume
Journal title :
Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases
Record number :
498195
Link To Document :
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