Abstract
Unlike mammals, bony fish possess multiple genes encoding the complement component C3, a member of the alpha2-macroglobulin (alpha2M) protein family, presumably expanding the diversity of immune recognition. To examine whether the alpha2M gene has also duplicated and diverged in the bony fish lineage, cDNA cloning of alpha2M from a pseudotetraploid teleost, the common carp (Cyprinus carpio), was conducted and resulted in the isolation of three distinct alpha2M sequences from a single individual, indicating the presence of multiple alpha2M genes in this species. The deduced amino acid sequences contained a post-translational cleavage signal, predicting a C3-like two-chain structure, as in lamprey alpha2M. Two distinct alpha2M proteins were purified from carp serum; both proved to be Mr 380,000 dimers, the subunits of which are composed of disulfide-linked alpha chains (Mr 93,000) and beta chains (Mr 85,000), as reported for the alpha2M from plaice, another teleost species. The presence of an internal thioester in the alpha chain was demonstrated by its autolytic fragmentation and direct incorporation of [14C]methylamine. Interestingly, the three forms of carp alpha2M exhibited outstanding sequence diversity in the bait region which displays target sequences for various proteases, and in the C-terminal region of the alpha chain assigned as the receptor-binding domain, while an Asn residue at the position corresponding to the catalytic His in C3 was completely conserved in the carp alpha2Ms, as in most alpha2Ms of other animals. The possible functional significance of the sequence diversity is discussed.
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