The Journal of Biochemistry
Online ISSN : 1756-2651
Print ISSN : 0021-924X
A Half-Type ABC Transporter TAPL Is Highly Conserved between Rodent and Man, and the Human Gene Is Not Responsive to Interferon γ in Contrast to TAP1 and TAP2
Ayako KobayashiMild KasanoTatsuo MaedaShin-ichiro HortKiyoto MotojimaMikio SuzukiTsutomu FujiwaraEi-ichi TakahashiToshio YabeKeiji TanakaMasanori KasaharaYoko YamaguchiMasatomo Maeda
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2000 Volume 128 Issue 4 Pages 711-718

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Abstract

TAPL is a half-type ABC transporter with sequence similarity to TAP1 and TAP2 that is transcribed in various rat tissues [Yamaguchi, Y., Kasano, M., Terada, T., Sato, R., and Maeda, M. (1999) FEBS Lett. 457, 231-236]. Primary structures of the human and mouse orthologous counterparts were deduced from cDNAs cloned by means of polymerase chain reaction, and they were compared with that of the rat. The mammalian TAPLs (rat, mouse, and human) are highly conserved, since about 95% of the amino acid residues are identical between rodents and man. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the evolutional rate of TAPL is much slower than those of TAP1 and TAP2, although TAPL could have diverged from an ancestor of TAP1 or that of TAP1 and TAP2. The TAPL-GFP fusion protein transiently expressed in Cos-1 cells was co-localized with PDI, suggesting that TAPL is inserted into endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The conservation of the peptide-binding motifs of TAP proteins in TAPL raises the possibility that the TAPL might be a peptide transporter. The gene for human TAPL is assigned to chromosome 12q24.31-q24.32, while those for TAP1 and TAP2 are located at the MHC locus of chromosome 6p21.3. Furthermore, the transcription of TAPL gene is not responsive to interferon-γ, in contrast to TAP1 and TAP2. These results indicate that the gene regulation of TAPL is different from those of TAP1 and TAP2.

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