Abstract

Rat soluble MHC class I synthesis was studied at both RNA and protein levels to determine whether multiple forms of soluble MHC class I molecules are produced by different mechanisms. RT-PCR and sequencing of MHC class I transcripts identified an alternatively spliced nonclassical MHC class I gene product, lacking both exon 5 and 6, in both spleen and liver. Immunoprecipitation and SDS-PAGE identified two distinct soluble MHC class I proteins in both splenocyte- and hepatocyte-culture supernatants. The 36Kd classical soluble MHC class I protein (RT1.A a) was precipitated by both allele-specific (MN4.91.6, R3/13, R2/15S) and pan-reactive (OX18) mAbs. The 39Kd non-RT1.A soluble MHC class I protein was precipitated only by OX18. The production of soluble RT1.A a was inhibited by a metalloproteinase inhibitor, but not by serine/thiol protease inhibitors. None of these protease inhibitors interfered with the soluble non-RT1.A production, suggesting that it might be derived from an alternatively spliced MHC class I transcript. The soluble non-RT1.A was always associated with β2m. However, soluble RT1.A a molecule was cleaved in β2m-free form and was reassociated with β2m in culture supernatants. Thus two soluble MHC class I molecules, classical (36Kd RT1.A a) and nonclassical (the alternatively spliced transcript), were produced from rat cells. Alternative splicing led to the nonclassical soluble MHC class I synthesis. Proteolytic cleavage by metalloproteinase led to the classical soluble MHC class I synthesis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call