posted on 2013-11-22, 00:00authored byMicaela Vargas, Raghavendra Karamsetty, Stephen H. Leppla, G. Jilani Chaudry
Tumor endothelial marker 8 (TEM8; ANTXR1) is one of two anthrax toxin receptors; the other is capillary morphogenesis
gene 2 protein (CMG2; ANTXR2). TEM8 shows enhanced expression in certain tumor endothelia, and is thought to be
a player in tumor vasculature formation. However, a comprehensive expression profile of individual TEM8 variants in normal
or cancerous tissues is lacking. In this work we carried out an extensive analysis of all splice variants of human TEM8 in 12
digestive tissues, and 8 each fetal and adult tissues, 6 of them cognate pairs. Using variant-specific primers, we first
ascertained the status of full-length transcripts by nested PCR. We then carried out quantitative analysis of each transcript
by real-time PCR. Three splice variants of TEM8 were reported before, two single-pass integral membrane forms (V1 and V2)
and one secreted (V3). Our analysis has revealed two new variants, one encoding a membrane-bound form of the receptor
and the other secreted, which we have designated V4 and V5, respectively. All tissues had V1, V2, V3, and V4, but only
prostate had V5. Real-time PCR revealed that all variants are present at different levels in various tissues. V3 appeared the
most abundant of all. To ascertain its functionality for anthrax toxin, we expressed the newly identified form V4 in a receptornegative
host cell, and included V1 and V2 for comparison. Cytotoxicity, toxin binding, and internalization assays showed V4
to be as efficient a receptor as V1 and V2.
Funding
Funding for this work was provided to GJC by The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio Area Foundation, and National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases/National Institute of General Medical Sciences grant SC1AI081654 (Minority Biomedical Research Support-Support of Competitive
Research). MV was supported for her PhD by the Minority Biomedical Research Support-Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement grant GM60655 to the
University of Texas at San Antonio.