Altevogt P, Schreck J, Schraven B, Meuer S, Schirrmacher V, Mitsch A
Institut für Immunologie und Genetik, Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, Heidelberg, FRG.
Int Immunol. 1990;2(4):353-60. doi: 10.1093/intimm/2.4.353.
A monoclonal antibody (mAb 12-15) reactive with the mouse CD2 was found to co-precipitate a high-molecular-weight glycoprotein from mouse thymocyte, splenic lymphocyte, Con A blast, and T cell tumor detergent lysates which was identified as the leukocyte common T 200 glycoprotein (CD45). The reactivity was specific for CD2 since antibodies to CD3 did not co-precipitate the T200 glycoprotein. mAb 12-15 did not react with immunoaffinity-purified T200 glycoprotein, ruling out the possibility that the antibody detected a cross-reactive epitope. Biochemical data indicated that the association of CD2 with T200 was not generated during lysis of the cell and that the molecular complex was non-covalently linked since it could be destroyed by high salt washing or boiling in SDS. Distribution analysis in Triton X114-H2O revealed that, in contrast to free T200 molecules, the complexed T200 was enriched in the detergents phase. To investigate the CD2-T200 association in more detail at the cell surface, modulation of CD2 and T200 was studied. Modulation could be induced on Con A blasts by monoclonal antibodies followed by cross-linking with a FITC-conjugated second antibody. Within 24 h the expression of CD2 or T200 was reduced to approximately 10-20% of the initial value on the majority of cells. However, two-color fluorescence showed that modulation of CD2 did not lead to co-modulation of CD3 or T200. A possible physiological role of CD2-T200 complexes is discussed.