How to translate text using browser tools
1 August 2005 cDNA Cloning of a Mannose-Binding Lectin-Associated Serine Protease (MASP) Gene from Hagfish (Eptatretus burgeri)
Liqiu Song, Kazufumi Takamune, Yoshiaki Sugawara, Tamotsu Fujii
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Hagfish, agnathan cyclostome, is the most primitive extant vertebrate and its complement (C) system seems to be a primordial system in comparison with a well-developed C system in gnathostome vertebrates. From a phylogenic perspective of defense mechanisms, we have isolated complement C3 from the serum of hagfish (Eptatretus burgeri). In this study, we first attempted to identify a hagfish Bf or C2 as a C3 convertase by RT-PCR using degenerative primers designed on the basis of the conserved amino acid stretches among the several kinds of serine proteases. Contrary to our expectation, homology search of cloned RT-PCR product suggested that there was a partial cDNA encoding the homologue of neither Bf nor C2 but a mannose-binding lectin-associated serine protease (MASP). Analyses of a full-length cDNA clone isolated from a hagfish liver cDNA library by using the partial cDNA as a probe indicated that this cDNA encoded hagfish MASP 1. This evidence strongly suggests that the hagfish defends itself against pathogens at least by the complement system composed of lectin pathway.

Liqiu Song, Kazufumi Takamune, Yoshiaki Sugawara, and Tamotsu Fujii "cDNA Cloning of a Mannose-Binding Lectin-Associated Serine Protease (MASP) Gene from Hagfish (Eptatretus burgeri)," Zoological Science 22(8), 897-904, (1 August 2005). https://doi.org/10.2108/zsj.22.897
Received: 24 May 2005; Accepted: 1 July 2005; Published: 1 August 2005
KEYWORDS
complement
cyclostome
hagfish
lectin pathway
MASP
serine protease
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top