Polymorphism of the C3b/C4b receptor (CR1): characterization of a fourth allele.

Abstract
The receptor for C3b/C4b (C3bR or CR1) has an unusual polymorphism in which three codominant alleles determine variants with a large difference in Mr (160,000, 190,000, or 220,000). We found an individual who has, in addition to the common 190,000 Mr molecule, a C3bR whose Mr is 250,000. In this proband and in some members of his family, this novel heterozygous phenotype can be isolated from 125I surface-labeled cells by iC3 or iC4 affinity chromatography or by immunoprecipitation with the use of polyclonal or monoclonal anti-C3bR. Relative to the 190,000 Mr C3bR, E from individuals in this family have 20 to 30% of the total receptor counts in the 250,000 Mr C3bR. However, on C3bR-bearing leukocytes there is a much larger amount of the 250,000 Mr C3bR (approximately 60%) relative to the 190,000 Mr C3bR. Similar to the other three C3bR variants, the Mr is 5,000 greater on polymorphonuclear cells than on E, and treatment of this new C3bR with endoglycosidase F decreases its Mr by approximately 10,000. Therefore, because this variant is inherited and has structural and functional similarities to the other three C3bR, we conclude that this 250,000 Mr CR1 probably represents a fourth allele.