Abstract

A cDNA clone corresponding to the entire coding region of the bovine ETB endothelin receptor mRNA was isolated from a lung cDNA library and sequenced. The cDNA encodes 441 amino acids: 26 constituting an NH2-terminal signal peptide and 415 constituting the mature receptor. The signal peptidase cleavage site was determined by direct amino acid sequencing of purified receptor. A comparison of the predicted amino acid sequence with the available bovine ETA and rat ETB endothelin receptor sequences revealed 63 and 85% homology, respectively. Endothelin receptors of various species are known to be very sensitive to a certain metal proteinase(s) and have been shown to be converted to a lower Mr form in the absence of EDTA. The metal proteinase cleavage site was also determined by direct protein sequencing of the proteolysis product. The amino acid sequence (Ala-Gly-X-Pro-Pro-Arg) surrounding the cleavage site (between Ala-79 and Gly-80) is conserved among the ETB endothelin receptors, explaining the above mentioned proteolytic conversion from the higher to lower Mr forms observed in various species.

Highlights

  • A cDNA clone corresponding to the entire coding receptor

  • Endothelin1 was first identified as a potent vasoactive agent produced metalproteinase.Sequencecomparisonindicatedthatthe bovine ETAand ETR receptors have diverged in their NH,and COOH-terminalregions

  • As expected from the biochemical analysis of the partial amino acid sequencing of the bovine lung endothelin endothelin signal transduction system, which indicated that endothelin receptorsbelong to theG protein-coupled receptor

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Summary

Introduction

A cDNA clone corresponding to the entire coding receptor. During the course of cDNA cloning based on the region of the bovine ETe endothelin receptor mRNA partial amino acid sequence, two reports appeared oncloning was isolated from a lung cDNA library and sequenced. Effort to determine the complete amino acid sequence of the bovine ETHreceptor we purified. We further determined the cleavage sites by the signal peptidase and an EDTA-sensitive

Results
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