Cloning and expression of the cDNA for the murine interferon gamma receptor.

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RESUMO

A murine interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) receptor cDNA was isolated by screening a murine T-cell hybridoma library prepared in lambda gt10 with probes prepared from a human IFN-gamma receptor cDNA. The 2.1-kilobase (kb) cDNA encoded a serine-rich polypeptide of 477 amino acids that was 52% identical to the human protein. Southern and Northern (RNA) blot analyses indicated the presence of a single receptor gene and a single predominant 2.3-kb receptor transcript. Human embryonic kidney fibroblasts, stably transfected with the murine IFN-gamma receptor cDNA, expressed murine IFN-gamma receptors as detected by flow cytometry with either ligand or a receptor-specific monoclonal antibody. Nontransfected cells bound neither ligand nor antibody. Radioligand-binding analysis demonstrated that the transfectants expressed 530,000 murine IFN-gamma receptors per cell and bound murine IFN-gamma with a Ka of 1 x 10(9) M-1. However, despite high-level expression of murine IFN-gamma receptors, the transfected human cells responded only to human and not to murine IFN-gamma as detected by enhancement of major histocompatibility class I antigen expression and induction of antiviral activity. These results thus document the isolation and expression of a full-length murine IFN-gamma receptor cDNA and suggest that additional species-specific components may be necessary to form a biologically active IFN-gamma receptor.

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