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(Received for publication, April
10, 1995; and in revised form, July 20, 1995) The primary and gene structures and tissue distribution of
porcine SPAI-2, a protein that belongs to the WAP protein superfamily
and has a sodium-potassium ATPase inhibitory activity, were determined
by molecular cloning and Northern analysis. A full-length cDNA clone
was isolated from a porcine duodenum cDNA library. The cDNA insert
encoded a polypeptide of 187 amino acids, which is composed of three
domains: a hydrophobic presequence of 21 amino acids, a prosegment of
105 amino acids ending with Asp
Volume 270,
Number 38,
Issue of September 22, pp. 22428-22433, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
, and the mature SPAI-2
sequence of 61 amino acids beginning with Pro
. The
prosegment contained 16 repeats of a hexapeptide that is highly
homologous to the repetitive sequence found in the transglutaminase
domain of the human elafin, an elastase-specific inhibitor that also
belongs to the WAP superfamily. The repetitive sequence was
demonstrated to be a good substrate of transglutaminase using a
recombinant preparation produced in Escherichia coli. A
porcine genomic library was then screened for the SPAI gene.
Characterization and sequencing of positive clones indicated that the
gene is similar to the elafin gene, having 3 exons encoding the
5`-untranslated region and signal sequence, proSPAI, and
3`-untranslated region, respectively. Northern blot analysis revealed
intestine-specific expression of SPAI mRNA; the message was especially
abundant in the small intestine. ProSPAI was also found in the
circulation. The similarity of proSPAI to elafin in the domain
structure, the acid-labile nature of the cleavage site
(Asp
-Pro
), and the fact that the major form
of SPAI in the plasma is proSPAI strongly suggest that proSPAI is not
the precursor but rather it is the native form of SPAI. Like elafin,
therefore, SPAI appears to be a new type of biologically active
substance with a transglutaminase substrate domain that acts as an
anchoring sequence.
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