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J Virol, January 1998, p. 593-599, Vol. 72, No. 1
Laboratory of Immunogenetics, National
Institute of Animal Health, Tsukuba, Ibaraki-ken 305, Japan
Received 18 July 1997/Accepted 28 September 1997
A mouse cDNA (mBLVR1) which was highly homologous to the bovine
cDNA of the bovine leukemia virus receptor (BLVR) gene
was cloned. The mBLVR1 cDNA, of 4,730 bp, covered nearly the full length of the mRNA (about 5 kb) and included an open reading frame (ORF) encoding a protein of 1,199 amino acids. While the bovine BLVR
protein was thought to be a type I transmembrane protein, the deduced
protein coded by mBLVR1 did not appear to be a typical transmembrane protein. The ORF of mBLVR1 ended at a site 280 amino acids upstream of the termination codon of the bovine
BLVR ORF, so the deduced mouse BLVR protein lacked the corresponding
transmembrane and cytoplasmic regions of the predicted bovine BLVR
protein. No significant hydrophobic region was found in the mouse
protein. Recently, a human cDNA which was highly
homologous (69.6% homology) to the mouse BLVR gene
was reported. The cDNA encodes the
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Mouse Homolog of the Bovine Leukemia Virus Receptor Is
Closely Related to the
Subunit of Adaptor-Related Protein
Complex AP-3, Not Associated with the Cell Surface
subunit of the human
adaptor-related protein complex AP-3, which aligned almost collinearly
with the mouse BLVR protein. AP-3 and all other related adaptor
protein complexes have been shown to be associated with intracellular
vesicles but not with the cell surface. Thus, the mouse
BLVR homolog appeared to be the mouse AP-3
subunit itself or closely related to it, but the bovine BLVR gene
seemed slightly different from the adaptor subunit gene family.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of
Immunogenetics, National Institute of Animal Health, 3-1-1 Kannondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki-ken 305, Japan. Phone: 81-298-38-7757. Fax:
81-298-38-7880. E-mail: hikeda{at}niah.affrc.go.jp.
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