Cloning and sequence of several alpha 2u-globulin cDNAs.

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RESUMO

We describe a simple cloning procedure for alpha 2u-globulin that requires neither enrichment of mRNA for cloning nor purification of a specific probe for screening recombinant colonies. Total adult male liver poly(A)+RNA was used as template for cloning, and the subsequent recombinant colonies were screened by comparing hybridization to radioactive cDNA probes prepared from hepatic male and female mRNA, respectively. Almost all of the selected "male-specific" clones were later shown to contain alpha 2u-globulin sequences. This cloned alpha 2u-globulin cDNA has been shown to specifically hybridize to male rat liver RNA, which, when isolated and translated in vitro, codes for a 21,000-dalton protein (pro-alpha 2u-globulin) immunologically identical to alpha 2u-globulin. When translation occurs in the presence of pancreatic microsomes this in vitro synthesized pro-alpha 2u-globulin is processed to the 19,000-dalton mature form of alpha 2u-globulin. The nucleotide sequence of the alpha 2u-globulin cDNA has been determined, thus elucidating the complete amino acid sequence of alpha 2u-globulin and most of the hydrophobic "leader" sequence of pro-alpha 2u-globulin. The amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA is in agreement with the partial sequence that we previously determined by sequential Edman degradation of the purified protein. alpha 2u-Globulin cDNA clones contain within the 3'-untranslated region one or both of the two putative polyadenylylation/transcription termination sites (A-A-T-A-A-A and A-A-T-T-A-A-A). Either of these can be used, generating alpha 2u-globulin mRNA species of two lengths. A codon usage analysis of the cDNA showed that, although all six leucine codons are used for the 14 leucine residues in mature alpha 2u-globulin, the seven leucines in the partial leader sequence reported are all encoded by the same codon, CTG. The primary amino acid sequence contains a unique Asn-Gly-Ser sequence, likely to be in beta-turn conformation, as the probable site of glycosylation for this glycoprotein.

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