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Reconstitution of functional receptors for human granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF): evidence that the protein encoded by the AIC2B cDNA is a subunit of the murine GM-CSF receptor.
Author(s) -
Toshio Kitamura,
Kazuhiro Hayashida,
Kazuhiro Sakamaki,
Takashi Yokota,
Katsuhiro Arai,
Atsushi Miyajima
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.88.12.5082
Subject(s) - interleukin 10 receptor, alpha subunit , interleukin 5 receptor alpha subunit , microbiology and biotechnology , interleukin 12 receptor, beta 1 subunit , biology , protein subunit , g alpha subunit , gamma aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha 1 , receptor , granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor receptor , scn3a , interleukin 21 receptor , biochemistry , macrophage colony stimulating factor , macrophage , gene , in vitro
The high-affinity receptor for human granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) is composed of two subunits, alpha and beta. The alpha subunit binds GM-CSF with low affinity, whereas the beta subunit does not bind GM-CSF by itself. The alpha and beta subunits together form the high-affinity GM-CSF receptor. The beta subunit has extensive sequence homology with the mouse interleukin 3 (IL-3) receptor (AIC2A) and its homologue (AIC2B) that does not bind IL-3 or other cytokines including GM-CSF. To examine the function of these receptor components, we expressed the alpha subunit of the hGM-CSF receptor with the human beta subunit or the mouse AIC2A or AIC2B in a mouse IL-3-dependent pro-B-cell line, Ba/F3, and in a mouse IL-2-dependent T-cell line, CTLL2. Coexpression of the alpha and beta subunits in Ba/F3 and CTLL2 cells resulted in high-affinity hGM-CSF binding and growth response to low concentrations of hGM-CSF. Whereas Ba/F3 cells expressing the alpha subunit alone proliferated in response to high concentrations of hGM-CSF, CTLL2 cells expressing the alpha subunit alone did not respond to hGM-CSF at all. Since Ba/F3 cells express endogenous AIC2A and AIC2B whereas CTLL2 expresses neither of them, we examined the possibility that either AIC2A or AIC2B is involved in the formation of a functional GM-CSF receptor. The expression of the human alpha subunit with AIC2B, but not with AIC2A, in CTLL2 cells conferred a growth response to hGM-CSF. These results indicate that the beta subunit of the GM-CSF receptor is required for generation of growth signals and that AIC2B is likely the beta subunit of the mouse GM-CSF receptor.

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