Primary structure of human insulin-like growth factor-binding protein/placental protein 12 and tissue-specific expression of its mRNA.
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Julkunen M, Koistinen R, Aalto-Setala K, Seppala M, Janne OA, Kontula K
Primary structure of human insulin-like growth factor-binding protein/placental protein 12 and tissue-specific expression of its mRNA.
FEBS Lett. 1988 Aug 29;236(2):295-302.
- PubMed ID
- 2457513 [ View in PubMed]
- Abstract
The low-molecular-mass insulin-like growth factor-binding protein (IGF-BP) and placental protein 12 (PP12) are identical proteins that are present in human serum, amniotic fluid, secretory endometrium and decidua. IGF-BP/PP12 is believed to act as an autocrine or paracrine regulator of cell growth. A cDNA clone encompassing the entire protein coding region of this protein was isolated from a human decidual cDNA library. The authenticity of the cDNA was verified by in vitro transcription/translation experiments and by the identity of the 10 N-terminal amino acids deduced for the mature peptide with those obtained by direct protein sequencing. The amino acid sequence indicates that pre-IGF-BP/PP12 consists of 259 amino acid residues. The putative signal peptide is 25 residues long, and the mature protein thus contains 234 amino acids and has a molecular mass of 25293 Da. The sequence is very cysteine-rich at the N-terminus after which there are regions of clustered Pro, Glu, Ser and Thr residues (so-called PEST regions), which exist in proteins with short half-lives. The amino acid sequence also includes an Arg-Gly-Asp tripeptide that may function as a cell recognition signal. The IGF-BP/PP12 gene encodes a single 1.6 kb mRNA species that is expressed in decidua, secretory endometrium, liver and a human hepatoma cell line (HepG2). Southern blot analysis suggests that there is a single IGF-BP/PP12 gene in the human genome.