Journal article
Reconstitution of bacterial-expressed human CD94: The importance of the stem region for dimer formation
JC Boyington, AN Raiz, AG Brooks, A Patamawenu, PD Sun
Protein Expression and Purification | ACADEMIC PRESS INC | Published : 2000
Abstract
Human CD94 is a subunit of the disulfide-linked, heterodimeric natural killer (NK) cell surface receptor CD94/NKG2. This receptor, a member of the C-type lectin superfamily, participates in regulating NK cell directed lysis through interaction with the major histocompatibility antigen HLA-E. Two forms of CD94 were expressed using a bacterial expression system and refolded in vitro. One form, residues 34-179, designated S34, corresponds to the entire extracellular region of the receptor, including a 23-residue stem region, and the other, residues 51-179, designated E51, corresponds only to the putative carbohydrate recognition domain of the receptor. The refolded full-length S34 protein exist..
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Awarded by National Institutes of Health