학술논문

Gastric M1 mucin, an early oncofetal marker of colon carcinogenesis, is encoded by the MUC5AC gene
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Cancer; 2 March 1998, Vol. 75 Issue: 5 p767-773, 7p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00207136; 10970215
Abstract
Gastric M1 mucin and the MUC5AC gene show a similar oncofetal expression in the colon. Our aim was to determine whether M1 mucin is the product of the MUC5AC gene. A recombinant baculovirus encoding the C-terminal portion of the MUC5AC gene as a fusion protein was isolated and the immunoreactivity of the recombinant mucin (rM) toward M1 antibodies studied. Chicken antibodies also were raised against purified rM. Besides its reactivity with L56/C, a serum recognizing the bacterially expressed MUC5AC gene product, rM was endowed with M1 immunoreactivity: (i) rM-expressing cells were stained specifically with anti-M1 serum and with the monoclonal antibody (MAb) 21M1, defining the M1-f epitope; (ii) both L56/C and anti-M1 antibodies recognized the same bands in immunoblots of rM-containing cell extracts; (iii) the 21M1 antibody reacted with rM in an immunoradiometric assay. Among the 7 M1 epitopes, M1-f was the only one encoded by the 3' portion of the MUC5AC gene. It was the only epitope detected in a native mucin M1-derived 170 kDa bromelain proteolytic fragment. Furthermore, the staining patterns of human tissues obtained with either anti-rM chicken antibodies or anti-M1 antibodies were identical. We conclude that M1 immunoreactivity is encoded at least in part by the MUC5AC gene. Int. J. Cancer 75:767–773, 1998.© 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.