RGD Reference Report - Biosynthesis and molecular cloning of sulfated glycoprotein 1 secreted by rat Sertoli cells: sequence similarity with the 70-kilodalton precursor to sulfatide/GM1 activator. - Rat Genome Database

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Biosynthesis and molecular cloning of sulfated glycoprotein 1 secreted by rat Sertoli cells: sequence similarity with the 70-kilodalton precursor to sulfatide/GM1 activator.

Authors: Collard, MW  Sylvester, SR  Tsuruta, JK  Griswold, MD 
Citation: Collard MW, etal., Biochemistry 1988 Jun 14;27(12):4557-64.
RGD ID: 633775
Pubmed: PMID:3048385   (View Abstract at PubMed)

Sulfated glycoprotein 1 (SGP-1) is one of the abundant proteins secreted by rat Sertoli cells. Pulse-chase labeling shows that SGP-1 is synthesized as a cotranslationally glycosylated 67-kilodalton (kDa) precursor which is posttranslationally modified to a 70-kDa form before secretion to the extracellular space. A plasmid cDNA library was constructed from immunopurified mRNA, and two overlapping clones coding for the entire protein coding sequence were isolated. The cDNAs represent 27 nucleotides of 5' noncoding sequence, 1554 nucleotides of coding sequence, and 594 nucleotides of 3' noncoding sequence. The derived SGP-1 sequence contains 554 amino acids and has a molecular weight of 61,123. Four potential N-glycosylation sites occur within the sequence. An internal region of SGP-1 shows 78% sequence identity with the 67 N-terminal amino acids described for human sulfatide/GM1 activator (SAP-1). Sequence comparisons suggest that SGP-1 is the precursor to sulfatide/GM1 activator; however, the secretion of the protein from Sertoli cells is distinct from the proteolytic processing and lysosomal compartmentalization which have been described for human fibroblasts. The presence of internal sequence similarity suggests that three additional binding sites may occur in SGP-1. Northern blots show similar levels of expression for the 2.6-kilobase SGP-1 mRNA in all tissues examined. The site of SGP-1 synthesis in testis was localized to Sertoli cells by immunofluorescence and in situ hybridization.

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Gene Psap prosaposin Rattus norvegicus

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