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      Identification of the 37-kDa antigen in IDDM as a tyrosine phosphatase-like protein (phogrin) related to IA-2.

      Diabetes
      Animals, Antibodies, Antigen-Antibody Reactions, Autoantibodies, blood, Autoantigens, immunology, Cloning, Molecular, Cross Reactions, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, genetics, Insulinoma, Islets of Langerhans, Membrane Glycoproteins, biosynthesis, Membrane Proteins, Molecular Weight, Neoplasm Proteins, Nuclear Family, Pancreatic Neoplasms, Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 1, Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Rabbits, Rats, Receptor-Like Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Class 8, Recombinant Proteins, Reference Values

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          Abstract

          Antibodies to islet cell proteins detected as 37,000 and 40,000 M(r), tryptic fragments (37- and 40-kDa antigens) are strongly associated with progression to IDDM. The 40-kDa antigen has recently been identified as the tyrosine phosphatase-like protein IA-2 (ICA512) whereas the 37-kDa antigen has been suggested to be a different protein that has structural similarity to IA-2. A protein, phogrin, that has 80% amino acid sequence identity to IA-2 in the cytoplasmic domain, has recently been cloned from an insulinoma cell cDNA library. In this study, we have investigated possible relationships between the 37-kDa antigen and phogrin. Antibodies to phogrin were detected in sera from patients with IDDM, and these antibodies were strongly correlated with the presence of antibodies to the 37-kDa antigen. Trypsin treatment of immunoprecipitated phogrin generated a 37,000 M(r) fragment. Recombinant phogrin was able to block autoantibody binding to the 37-kDa antigen but not to the 40-kDa antigen, and rabbit antibodies raised to different regions of phogrin depleted insulinoma cell extracts specifically of the 37-kDa antigen. These results demonstrate that the 37-kDa antigen in IDDM is indistinguishable from phogrin and show that two distinct tyrosine phosphatase-related proteins are major targets of the autoimmune response in the disease.

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