Interspecies molecular chimeras of kit help define the binding site of the stem cell factor.
Open Access
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 13 (4) , 2224-2234
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.13.4.2224
Abstract
The extracellular portion of the kit-encoded receptor for the stem cell factor (SCF) comprises five immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domains. To localize the ligand recognition site, we exploited the lack of binding of human SCF to the murine receptor by using human-mouse hybrids of Kit and species-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that inhibit ligand binding. Replacement of the three N-terminal Ig-like domains of the murine Kit with the corresponding portion of the human receptor conferred upon the chimeric receptor high-affinity binding of the human ligand as well as of human-specific ligand-inhibitory MAbs. By constructing five chimeric murine Kit proteins which individually contain each of these three human Ig-like units or pairs of them, we found that the second human domain confers upon the mouse Kit high-affinity binding of the human ligand and also binding of species-specific SCF-competitive MAbs. Nevertheless, the flanking Ig-like domains also affect high-affinity recognition of SCF. Moreover, it appears that the determinants that define ligand specificity of the murine and the human receptors do not structurally coincide. This observation allowed us to identify a chimeric receptor that displayed a dual specificity; namely, it bound with high affinity either the human or the murine SCF molecules and reacted with mouse- as well as human-specific ligand-inhibitory MAbs. Conversely, another chimera, which included all of the five Ig-like domains, bound neither ligand. In conclusion, interdomain packing involving the second Ig-like domain of human Kit and noncontiguous structural motifs of the receptor are involved in SCF recognition.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The kit ligand encoded at the murine Steel locus: a pleiotropic growth and differentiation factorCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1991
- The kit ligand: A cell surface molecule altered in steel mutant fibroblastsCell, 1990
- Stem cell factor is encoded at the SI locus of the mouse and is the ligand for the c-kit tyrosine kinase receptorCell, 1990
- Identification, purification, and biological characterization of hematopoietic stem cell factor from buffalo rat liver-conditioned mediumCell, 1990
- Mast cell growth factor maps near the steel locus on mouse chromosome 10 and is deleted in a number of steel allelesCell, 1990
- Identification of a ligand for the c-kit proto-oncogeneCell, 1990
- Primary structure and functional expression of rat and human stem cell factor DNAsCell, 1990
- GROWTH FACTOR RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1988
- The Immunoglobulin Superfamily—Domains for Cell Surface RecognitionAnnual Review of Immunology, 1988
- Preparation of Iodine-131 Labelled Human Growth Hormone of High Specific ActivityNature, 1962