Abstract

The aminopeptidase N (CD13, EC 3.4.11.2) is a well-characterized surface molecule expressed in a variety of cell types and species. Recent data indicate an expression of the APN mRNA and the corresponding aminopeptidase activity in human peripheral T cells and related cell lines as well. Here, the sensitive method of competitive PCR was used to quantify low amounts of APN mRNA in T cell lines. An APN cDNA fragment en-shortened by a deletion of 87 bp was used as an internal APN-specific standard. The myelo-monocytic cell line U937 and the lymphoid T cell lines HuT78 and H9 contain 2.3 × 107, 5.9 × 106 and 5.6 × 106 copies/μg total RNA, corresponding to 160, 70 and 50 copies/cell, respectively. These data have been confirmed by determination of the APN activity, that represents a fraction only of the total cellular neutral aminopeptidase activity in hematopoetic cells. In the case of the CD13-positive cell line U937, ∼60–70% of the total neutral aminopeptidase activity could be attributed to APN. In contrast, only a minor fraction (5–20%) of the cellular neutral aminopeptidase activity in the T cell lines H9 and HuT78 represents APN. The results suggest that APN gene expression within the hematopoetic system is not restricted to myelo-monocytic cells, instead a low APN expression may be a common feature of lymphocytes, at least of T cells, too.

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