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      The 67-kDa laminin receptor originated from a ribosomal protein that acquired a dual function during evolution.

      Molecular Biology and Evolution
      Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Binding Sites, genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Humans, Laminin, metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Molecular Weight, Neoplasms, Phylogeny, Protein Precursors, chemistry, Receptors, Laminin, Ribosomal Proteins, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid

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          Abstract

          The 67-kDa laminin receptor (67LR) is a nonintegrin cell surface receptor that mediates high-affinity interactions between cells and laminin. Overexpression of this protein in tumor cells has been related to tumor invasion and metastasis. Thus far, only a full-length gene encoding a 37-kDa precursor protein (37LRP) has been isolated. The finding that the cDNA for the 37LRP is virtually identical to a cDNA encoding the ribosomal protein p40 has suggested that 37LRP is actually a component of the translational machinery, with no laminin-binding activity. On the other hand, a peptide of 20 amino acids deduced from the sequence of 37LR/p40 was shown to exhibit high laminin-binding activity. The evolutionary relationship between 23 sequences of 37LRP/p40 proteins was analyzed. This phylogenetic analysis indicated that all of the protein sequences derive from orthologous genes and that the 37LRP is indeed a ribosomal protein that acquired the novel function of laminin receptor during evolution. The evolutionary analysis of the sequence identified as the laminin-binding site in the human protein suggested that the acquisition of the laminin-binding capability is linked to the palindromic sequence LMWWML, which appeared during evolution concomitantly with laminin.

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