A 45‐kDa human T‐cell membrane glycoprotein functions in the regulation of cell proliferative responses

Abstract
A 45-kDa human T cell surface glycoprotein which is tightly bound in the membrane or the resting T cell is released into the cell medium in soluble form after cell growth activation by phytohemagglutinin or neuraminidase/galactose oxidase treatments. In limited proteolysis by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, two major 35-kDa and 27-kDa peptide fragments of the surface-iodinated 45-kDa protein are common to the membrane-bound and the released forms, but a third 18-kDa fragment is observed exclusively with the released protein. The apparent molecular masses of the deglycosylated peptide backbones of the membrane-bound and the released molecule are 30 ± 1 kDa, although a small size difference cannot be excluded. A polyclonal rabbit anti-(T cell membrane protein) antiserum precipitates the 45-kDa protein. A monoclonal anti-(45-kDa protein) antibody precipitates the membrane-bound 45-kDa protein solubilized with octyl glucoside, but does not precipitate the released protein. In cell culture assays, the monoclonal anti-(45-kDa protein} antibody specifically enhances the cell proliferative responses in phytohemagglutinin-treated and mixed lymphocyte cultures. These observations suggest that the 45-kDa protein has a specific receptor function in the regulation of cell proliferative responses.