Abstract

BE2 is a cell surface monomeric 78-kDa protein (BE2-78) expressed on the malignant lymphocytes of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and adult T-cell leukemia, on some lymphocytes from patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and on Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B cells. BE2-78 positivity of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma tumor cells is a useful diagnostic and prognostic determinant in evaluating patients with that disorder. The BE2-78 protein was isolated from Epstein Barr virus-transformed B cells, purified by 1- and 2-dimensional electrophoresis and then sequenced. The sequence of 4 isolated peptide fragments was highly homologous with the 78-kDa heat shock protein, BiP, an endoplasmic reticulum chaperone. The similarity between BiP and BE2-78 was supported by the demonstration that BE2-78, like BiP, avidly binds to ATP. However, polyclonal and monoclonal reagents that recognize cytoplasmic 70- and 78-kDa heat shock proteins do not detect the BE2-78 antigen on the cell surface of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma or Epstein Barr virus-transformed lymphocytes, and peptide mapping demonstrates sequence divergence, suggesting that either they are distinct or conformationally different molecules. Our results indicate that BE2-78 is a cell surface heat shock protein. The possibility that malignant or transformed lymphocytes may express cell surface molecules with the capacity to bind a spectrum of exogenous or endogenous peptides has potential implications for tumor immunology. Int. J. Cancer 71: 1077-1085, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss Inc.

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