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Merck

Characterization of the gene for the a subunit of human factor XIII (plasma transglutaminase), a blood coagulation factor.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1988-08-01)
A Ichinose, E W Davie
RESUMEN

Factor XIII (plasma transglutaminase, fibrin stabilizing factor) is a glycoprotein that circulates in blood as a tetramer (a2b2) consisting of two a and two b subunits. The primary structures of the a and b subunits of human factor XIII have been reported by a combination of cDNA cloning and amino acid sequence analysis. To establish the gene structure of the a subunit for factor XIII, several human genomic libraries were screened by using the cDNA encoding the a subunit as a probe. Among approximately equal to 5 x 10(7) recombinant phage, 121 have been shown to contain an insert encoding a portion of the a subunit. Twenty-five unique clones were then characterized by restriction mapping, Southern blotting, and DNA sequencing. Overlapping clones encoding the a subunit of factor XIII span greater than 160 kilobases. The gene was found to contain 15 exons separated by 14 introns. All the sequences of the introns at the intron-exon boundaries were GT-AG, which are the same as those found in other eukaryotic genes. DNA sequence analysis revealed that the activation peptide released by thrombin, the active site cysteine region, the two putative calcium-binding regions, and the thrombin cleavage site leading to inactivation are encoded by separate exons. This suggests that the introns may separate the a subunit into functional and structural domains. A comparison of the amino acid sequence deduced from the genomic DNA sequence with those deduced from cDNA or determined by amino acid sequence analysis of the plasma and placental proteins revealed apparent amino acid polymorphisms in six positions of the polypeptide chain of the a subunit.