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Canine CD34: cloning of the cDNA and evaluation of an antiserum to recombinant protein.

作者信息

McSweeney P A, Rouleau K A, Storb R, Bolles L, Wallace P M, Beauchamp M, Krizanac-Bengez L, Moore P, Sale G, Sandmaier B, de Revel T, Appelbaum F R, Nash R A

机构信息

Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.

出版信息

Blood. 1996 Sep 15;88(6):1992-2003.

PMID:8822918
Abstract

Increasingly, enriched populations of hematopoietic progenitors are used in experimental and clinical transplantation studies. The separation of progenitors is based on the expression of CD34, a marker preferentially expressed on progenitor cells. The dog model has been important for preclinical transplant studies, because it has proven predictive for outcomes in human hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. To identify and isolate canine hematopoietic progenitors, we have cloned a cDNA encoding a CD34 homologue from a canine myelomonocytic leukemia cell line, ML2. The CD34 homologue cDNA predicts an amino acid sequence that is highly conserved with human and murine CD34 in the cytoplasmic domain, transmembrane domain, and C-terminal end of the extracellular domain, but shows considerable divergence from these sequences at the amino-terminal end of the protein. In Western blotting studies, canine CD34 homologue (caCD34) appears to be a heavily and variably glycosylated protein with a molecular weight of approximately 100 kD and shows some tissue-specific differences in protein mass. To evaluate the expression of caCD34 protein, the extracellular domain of caCD34 was expressed as an Ig fusion protein and used as an immunogen to generate a rabbit polyclonal antiserum. The antiserum reacted against the fusion protein, against vascular endothelium, and with three leukemic cell lines. Approximately 1% of canine bone marrow cells stained brightly with antibodies to caCD34 and this population was 25- to 50-fold enriched for colony-forming units-granulocyte-macrophage as compared to unfractionated marrow mononuclear cells. These findings suggest that the canine CD34 homologue is expressed on bone marrow progenitor cells and, thus, that this molecule should be a valuable marker for identifying and isolating canine hematopoietic progenitors for experimental hematopoiesis and stem cell transplantation.

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