Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1991 Jul 15;88(14):6353-7.

    Molecular cloning and primary structure of Kell blood group protein.

    Lee S, Zambas ED, Marsh WL, Redman CM.

    Lindsley F. Kimball Research Institute of the New York Blood Center, NY 10021.

    The Kell blood group is a major antigenic system in human erythrocytes. Kell antigens reside on a 93-kDa membrane glycoprotein that is surface-exposed and associated with the underlying cytoskeleton. We isolated tryptic peptides and, based on the amino acid sequence of one of the peptides and by using the PCR, prepared a specific oligonucleotide to screen a lambda gt10 human bone-marrow cDNA library. Four clones were isolated, one containing cDNA with an open reading frame for an 83-kDa protein. All known Kell amino acid sequences were present in the deduced sequence; moreover, rabbit antibody to a 30-amino acid peptide, prepared from this sequence, reacted on an immunoblot with authentic Kell protein. The Kell cDNA sequence predicts a 732-amino acid protein. Hydropathy analysis indicates a single membrane-spanning region, suggesting that Kell protein is oriented with 47 of its N-terminal amino acids in the cell cytoplasm, and a 665-amino acid segment, which contains six possible N-glycosylation sites, is located extracellularly. Computer-based search showed that Kell has structural and sequence homology to a family of zinc metalloglycoproteins with neutral endopeptidase activity.

    PMID: 1712490 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 52081

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read