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Biological chemistry Hoppe-Seyler 1989-May

The Hodgkin-associated Ki-1 antigen exists in an intracellular and a membrane-bound form.

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H Hansen
H Lemke
G Bredfeldt
I Könnecke
B Havsteen

Keywords

Abstract

The Hodgkin-associated Ki-1 antigen occurs in two different molecular forms. The 120-kDa membrane-associated form is a phosphorylated glycoprotein, which is derived from a non-phosphorylated intracellular 84-kDa apoprotein that is co-translationally N-glycosylated with a carbohydrate portion of 6 kDa. The other form of the Ki-1 antigen is a non-glycosylated phosphoprotein of 57 kDa which only occurs intracellularly. Both forms of the antigen are phosphorylated at serine residues. Enzymatic cleavage with sialidase reduced the 120-kDa membrane antigen by about 15 kDa, while its 90-kDa precursor and the 57-kDa intracellular form of the Ki-1 antigen remained unaltered. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that the 57-kDa and 90/120-kDa molecules are synthesized independently of each other. Four to eight hours after synthesis, the degradation of the 120-kDa molecule to a 105-kDa membrane-associated intermediate begins. This is further processed and appears in the cell supernate as a 90-kDa molecule. Hodgkin's disease-derived, Epstein-Barr virus-transformed cell lines and the acute T cell leukemia line MOLT-4 contain both forms of the Ki-1 antigen, whereas only the 57-kDa intracellular antigen is expressed in U266/B1 myeloma cells, in the Burkitt lymphoma cell lines Raji and Daudi and in acute promyelocytic HL-60 leukemia cells.

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