[No authors listed]
Using degenerate oligonucleotide primers corresponding to conserved regions of the G-protein coupled receptor superfamily, we carried out a low-stringency polymerase chain reaction and obtained two novel partial-length clones from a rat brain cDNA library. We used one of these clones for conventional library screening and isolated a longer cDNA clone, designated as RBU-15, from another rat brain library. Although RBU-15 was truncated at its 5' end, Northern blot analysis revealed that the gene was expressed in the brain and spleen. Next, we isolated a full-length cDNA clone, designated as HB-954, from a human fetal brain library, using RBU-15 as a probe. The deduced amino acid sequence of HB-954 contained four putative glycosylation sites in the N-terminal part, seven transmembrane domains, and a large cytosolic domain in the C-terminal part. The protein products of RBU-15 and HB-954 likely belong to a distinctive subfamily, because no receptors in the superfamily were found to be closely related to them.
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