Ta. Judge et al., CLONING THE RAT HOMOLOG OF THE CD28 CTLA-4-LIGAND B7-1 - STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL-ANALYSIS/, International immunology, 7(2), 1995, pp. 171-178
T cell activation involves the delivery of two independent signals to
the naive T cell. The first signal occurs with engagement of the TCR,
One of the best characterized second signals is ligation of CD28 on th
e surface of T cells by B7 molecules (B7-1, B7-2) present on the surfa
ce of activated antigen presenting cells (APCs). Recent studies have d
emonstrated that injection of a human fusion protein, CTLA-4-lg, which
in humans binds to both B7-1 and B7-2, prevents cardiac allograft rej
ection in a rat transplantation model when given 48 h after engraftmen
t. In order to better characterize the role of B7-1 (which is maximall
y expressed 48 h after activation of APCs) in this model, as well as i
n models of tumor-induced immune responses, we have cloned the rat hom
olog of B7-1, and now report on its structure and function. A 1030 bp
cDNA containing the entire coding sequence of the rat B7-1 was cloned
with a polymerase chain reaction strategy utilizing degenerate primers
derived from published murine and human B7-1 sequences. The rat B7-1
coding sequence is 67 and 81% homologous to human and murine B7-1 cDNA
s, and the predicted peptide sequence is likewise 57 and 66% identical
to the peptide sequences of human and murine B7-1 respectively. The g
reatest area of identity occurs in the extracellular portion of the mo
lecule, particularly the lg-C like domain. Rat B7-1 shares only simila
r to 25% overall peptide homology with the published peptide sequences
for human and murine B7-2 but retains a region of similarity in the l
gC domain that is present in all 87 molecules sequenced to date. RNA b
lot hybridization of lipopolysaccharide-stimulated splenocytes demonst
rates six distinct bands ranging from 1.2 to 6.3 kb. Rat B7-1 transfec
ted CHO cells specifically bind human CTLA-4-lg as assessed by flow cy
tometry. Furthermore, CHO-rat B7-1(+) cells co-stimulate highly purifi
ed T cells activated with phytohemagglutinin or bacterial superantigen
, and this effect is virtually completely blocked by human CTLA-4-lg.
Thus, the immunosuppressive effect of human CTLA-4-lg in rat transplan
tation models correlates with functional blockade of rat B7-1.