Abstract
To study the molecular regulation of C4 and factor B synthesis in mouse peritoneal macrophages, mouse C4 cDNA clones isolated from an H-2d haplotype liver cDNA library, and a previously described mouse factor B cDNA clone, pBmB2 (9), were used to assess quantitative and qualitative differences in C4 and factor B mRNA in resident and elicited cells. The C4 clones that were isolated, pBmS2 (1 Kb) and pBmS10 (0.9 Kb), overlap and together span a 1.5 Kb coding region of mouse pro-C4, extending from the alpha-chain through the gamma-chain; four nucleotide substitutions are evident in comparing 316 bp of the sequence of clone pBmS10 to that of a previously described mouse C4 clone, pMLC4/w7-2 (23). By using these probes, Northern blot analysis of total cellular RNA revealed similar C4 mRNA levels in resident peritoneal macrophages from high-C4 (B10.A) and low-C4 (C3HeB) strains. Pulse and pulse-chase studies of C4 and factor B synthesis were performed on resident, starch-elicited, and thioglycollate-elicited peritoneal macrophages at two culture time periods, 0 to 9 and 24 to 33 hr, and total cellular RNA was isolated from each population at 4.5 and 28.5 hr of culture for Northern blot analysis of C4 and factor B mRNA content. The data demonstrate that as previously reported, C4 production decreases in elicited compared with resident macrophages and decreases with time in culture; however, factor B synthesis does not differ among resident and elicited cells and it increases with time in culture. The variations in C4 and factor B production by mouse peritoneal macrophages are not associated with alterations in C4 and factor B protein processing, catabolism, or secretion; rather, they are a function of differences in net amounts of C4 and factor B mRNA. These data provide direct evidence that the regulation of expression of these class III MHC genes in mouse peritoneal macrophages is a pretranslational event.

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