Three alternatively spliced variants of the gene coding for the human bone morphogenetic protein-1

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Abstract

The human bone morphogenetic protein-1 was originally identified as a protein with the capacity to stimulate bone and cartilage growth in vitro. Its gene sequence identified it as an alternatively spliced human homolog of the Drosophila dorsal-ventral patterning tolloid gene and suggested that it activates transforming growth factor-β-like molecules by proteolytic cleavage. Its expression pattern and its recently identified activity as a procollagen C proteinase, however, suggest that it has a more general function in the early stages of embryogenesis. This view is strengthened by the previous observation of a third alternatively spliced isoform of the gene, called bone morphogenetic protein 1/His. We now show that the gene is expressed in three additional variants, leading to shorter and slightly modified C-termini. The three variants are preferentially expressed in placenta but show individual differences in their expression profiles in other soft tissues.

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Janitz, M., Heiser, V., Böttcher, U., Landt, O., & Lauster, R. (1998). Three alternatively spliced variants of the gene coding for the human bone morphogenetic protein-1. Journal of Molecular Medicine, 76(2), 141–146. https://doi.org/10.1007/s001090050202

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