1. Expression of Bruton's agammaglobulinemia tyrosine kinase gene, BTK, is selectively down-regulated in T lymphocytes and plasma cells
- Author
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C. I. Edvard SMITH, Baskin B, Humire-Greiff P, Jn, Zhou, Pg, Olsson, Hs, Maniar, Kjellén P, Jd, Lambris, Christensson B, and Hammarström L
- Subjects
B-Lymphocytes ,X Chromosome ,Base Sequence ,T-Lymphocytes ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Plasma Cells ,Gene Expression ,Cell Differentiation ,Tretinoin ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Agammaglobulinemia ,Bone Marrow ,Phorbol Esters ,Humans ,Mast Cells ,RNA, Messenger ,DNA Primers - Abstract
The gene mutated in the human disease, X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA), is related to the Src gene family of cytoplasmic protein-tyrosine kinases and is designated Btk (Bruton's agammaglobulinemia tyrosine kinase; formerly Atk/Bpk; the human gene is denoted BTK, using capital letters according to the kinase nomenclature). We have recently reported that this gene is expressed in B lymphocytes and that the specific mRNA was undetectable in T cells using Northern blotting. Further analyses of different sources of B and T lymphocytes confirmed this pattern. However, BTK transcripts were undetectable in four plasmacytoma lines. Moreover, as virtually normal amounts of BTK transcripts were found in PBMC from two patients carrying a point mutation in BTK, despite low B cell numbers, we anticipated that the gene would also be expressed in cells of other lineages. The erythroleukemia cell line K-562, the promyelocytic line HL-60 and the histiocytic lymphoma line U-937 were found to have BTK mRNA levels comparable to B cells. BTK mRNA was also detected in monocytes from healthy donors as well as in the human immature basophilic cell line KU812, in the human mast cell leukemia cell line HMC-1 and in the CD34 expressing myeloblast KG-1. A similar expression pattern was obtained when BTK protein was analyzed by immunoprecipitation and Western blotting. Using a polymerase chain reaction-based analysis, a small amount (less than 1% of the level in B cells) of BTK mRNA was identified in T lymphocytes. Our findings are compatible with a general expression of the BTK gene in hematopoietic cells, except in T lymphocytes and plasma cells, in which the transcript level is selectively down-regulated.
- Published
- 1994