Abstract

Murine interleukin-5 (IL-5) binds to its receptor with high and low affinity. It has been shown that the high affinity IL-5 receptor (IL-5-R) is composed of at least two membrane protein subunits and is responsible for IL-5-mediated signal transduction. One subunit of the high affinity IL-5-R is a 60 kDa membrane protein (p60 IL-5-R) whose cDNA was isolated using the anti-IL-5-R monoclonal antibody (mAb), H7. This subunit alone binds IL-5 with low affinity. The second subunit does not bind IL-5 by itself, and is expressed not only on IL-5-dependent cell lines but also on an IL-3-dependent cell line, FDC-P1. Expression of the p60 IL-5-R cDNA in FDC-P1 cells, which do not bind IL-5, reconstituted the high affinity IL-5-R. We have characterized the second subunit of the IL-5-R by using another anti-IL-5-R mAb, R52.120, and the anti-IL-3-R mAb, anti-Aic-2. The anti-Aic-2 mAb down-regulated binding of IL-5 to an IL-5-dependent cell line, Y16. Both R52.120 and anti-Aic-2 mAbs recognized membrane proteins of 130-140 kDa expressed on FDC-P1 and Y16 cells. The R52.120 mAb recognized both murine IL-3-R (AIC2A) and its homologue (AIC2B) expressed on L cells transfected with suitable cDNAs. The high affinity IL-5-R was reconstituted on an L cell transfectant co-expressing AIC2B and p60 IL-5-R, whereas only the low affinity IL-5-R was detected on a transfectant co-expressing AIC2A and p60 IL-5-R.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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