Abstract
We have recently cloned the human LRIG1 gene (formerly LIG1). LRIG1 is a predicted integral cell-surface protein showing similarities to Kekkon-1, the Drosophila melanogaster epidermal growth-factor-receptor antagonist. A specific peptide antibody, LRIG1-151, was raised in rabbits and used to study the LRIG1 protein. LRIG1 migrated in denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions as two species with apparent molecular weights of 143 kDa and 134 kDa, and as two fragments corresponding to an N-terminal 111-kDa species and a C-terminal 32-kDa species. Under non-reducing conditions, both apparent monomers and apparent higher molecular weight complexes were evident. Immunoblotting analysis of cell-surface-biotinylated lysates and confocal microscopy revealed that LRIG1 was localized to the cell surface in ZR-75 cells expressing endogenous LRIG1 and in COS-7 cells expressing a synthetic LRIG1-GFP fusion protein. Immunohistochemical analysis of normal human tissues showed staining for LRIG1 in epithelia in various organs, scattered neurons, and muscles. Immunoblotting demonstrated LRIG1 protein in tissue lysates from normal human prostate, mammary epithelial cells, ileum, stomach, lung, and cerebral cortex. These results demonstrate that LRIG1 is an integral cell-surface membrane protein that is expressed by specific cells in various human tissues and that its 143-kDa form might be cleaved into 111-kDa and 32-kDa fragments.
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