Abstract

One-hundred-eighty kilodalton bullous pemphigoid antigen (BPAG2) is recognized by autoantibodies in the sera of patients with blistering skin diseases, bullous pemphigoid (BP), and herpes gestationis (HG). In this study, we have screened a mouse epidermal keratinocyte cDNA library with a 1.0-kb human BPAG2 cDNA, which has been shown to correspond to two collagenous domains (Giudice et al: J Clin Invest 87:734-738, 1991). Screening of the mouse library identified two cDNA clones, the larger one being 1.8 kb in size. Comparison of the mouse amino acid sequences, as deduced from cDNA, with the corresponding human sequences revealed 86% homology. Furthermore, Northern hybridizations of mouse epidermal RNA with these cDNA revealed the presence of an mRNA transcript of approximately 6 kb, the size of the human BPAG2 mRNA. Elucidation of the deduced amino-acid sequences revealed the presence of definitely one and possibly two putative membrane-associated segments, suggesting that the 180-kDa BP antigen is a transmembrane protein. The sequence analysis also identified a 7-amino-acid segment that was predicted by computer analysis to be antigenic. Elucidation of the divergence between the mouse and previously published human and chicken BPAG2 sequences indicated that this protein segment was relatively well conserved. These data suggest, therefore, that the 180-kDa bullous pemphigoid antigen associated with hemidesmosomes is a well-conserved transmembrane protein that may play a critical role in the attachment of epidermis to the underlying basement membrane.

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