Abstract:
A method of identifying a therapeutic useful for treating or preventing Alzheimer&#39;s disease, which method includes the steps of contacting (a) a first molecule containing the couplone portion of APP (SEQ ID NO: 1) with (b) a second molecule containing the amino acid sequence of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 2) or an APP-associating region of G o  (SEQ ID NOs: 3, 4, or 5), in the presence of a candidate compound; and determining whether the candidate compound interferes with the association of the first and second molecules, such interference being an indication that the candidate compound is a potential Alzheimer&#39;s disease therapeutic.

Description:
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/019,208, filed Feb. 18, 1993, now abandoned. 
    
    
     The field of the invention is Alzheimer&#39;s disease therapeutics. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Alzheimer&#39;s disease (AD) is a progressive degenerative disorder of the brain that afflicts over four million people in the United States. No effective treatment is available. The most characteristic change observed upon post-mortem histopathological analysis of AD-afflicted brain tissue is the presence of neuritic and cerebrovascular plaques containing dense deposits of β-amyloid protein (Selkoe, Cell 58:611-612, 1989). β-amyloid is a 39-43 amino acid peptide (Glenner and Wong, biochem. biophys. Res. Commun. 120:885-890, 1984; Masters et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Aci. USA 82:4345-4249, 1985) synthesized as part of a larger precursor protein referred to as amyloid precursor protein (APP), which is known to have a number of isoforms in humans (APP 695 , Kang et al., Nature 325:733-736, 1987; APP 751 , Ponte et al., Nature 331:525-527, 1988, and Tanzi et al., Nature 331:528-530, 1988; and APP 770 , Kitaguchi et al., Nature 331:530-532, 1988). The amino terminal of β-amyloid is generated by cleavage of a peptide bond of APP which in APP 695  lies between Met596 and Asp597. 
     Although structural alterations of APP are implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer&#39;s disease, it remains unknown how they cause the disease. No biological function for APP has been identified, although there is evidence that APP has a receptor-like architecture (Kang et al., Nature 325:733-736, 1987; Ponte et al., Nature 331:525-527, 1988; Tanzi et al., Nature 331:528-530, 1988; Kitaguchi et al., Nature 331:530-532, 1988), is located on the neuronal surface (Dyrks et al., EMBO J. 7:949-957, 1988), and possesses an evolutionarily conserved cytoplasmic domain (Yamada et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 149:665-671, 1987). 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The methods and therapeutical compositions of the invention are based upon the discovery, described in detail below, that APP forms a complex with G o , a major GTP-binding protein (or &#34;G protein&#34;) in brain. Like all G proteins, a molecule of G o  is made up of one α subunit and one βγ subunit. Two isoforms of G o , known as G o1  (or G oA ) and G o2  (or G oB ), have been identified; they have slight amino acid differences in their α subunits, and are together referred to herein as G o . The cDNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence of the α subunits of each of G o1  and G o2  (as reported by Strathmann et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:6477-6481, 1990) are shown in FIG. 4a (SEQ ID NO: 2) and FIG. 4b (SEQ ID NO: 28), respectively. 
     The finding that APP associates with G o  is consistent with related findings concerning other G proteins, as disclosed in a second, commonly assigned application (U.S. Ser. No. 08/019,073) having the same inventor and filing date as the present application, which second application is herein incorporated by reference. The cytoplasmic APP 695  sequence His 657  -Lys 676  (SEQ ID NO: 1) possesses a specific G o  -activating function, and is necessary for complex formation of this APP with G o  ; this sequence, sometimes referred to as the &#34;couplone&#34; region of APP, is completely conserved in APP 751  and APP 770 , as well as in mouse APP 695 . This provides evidence that APP is a receptor coupled to G o , and suggests that abnormal APP-G o  signalling is involved in the Alzheimer&#39;s disease process. 
     The invention includes a method of identifying a therapeutic useful for treating or preventing Alzheimer&#39;s disease, which method includes the steps of 
     contacting (a) a first molecule containing the couplone portion of APP (SEQ ID NO: 1) with (b) a second molecule containing the amino acid sequence of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 2) or an APP-associating region of G o  (SEQ ID NOs: 3, 4, or 5), in the presence of a candidate compound; and 
     either (i) determining whether the candidate compound interferes with (i.e., inhibits partially or completely) the association of the first and second molecules, or (ii) determining whether the candidate compound interferes with the activation of the second molecule by the first molecule, such interference being an indication that the candidate compound is a potential therapeutic useful for treating or preventing Alzheimer&#39;s disease. The determining step may be accomplished by, for example, immmunoprecipitating the first molecule with an antibody specific for APP, and detecting the presence or amount of the second molecule which co-precipitates with the first molecule. Alternatively, the second molecule can be immunoprecipitated with an antibody specific for G o , following which the presence or amount of the first molecule which co-precipitates with the second molecule is determined. Where activation is the criterion being measured, the determination step may be accomplished by contacting the second molecule with a substrate which is or includes GTP or an analog of GTP [such as GTPγS or Gpp(NH)p], and detecting or measuring the binding of the substrate to the second molecule, wherein such binding is evidence of activation of the second molecule by the first molecule. In preferred embodiments, the contacting step is carried out in a cell-free system; the Mg 2+  concentration at which the contacting step is carried out is between approximately 1&#39;10 -7  and 1×10 -2  M, and the first molecule includes the cytoplasmic tail portion of APP 695  from residues 649 to 695 (SEQ ID NO: 6) and/or the membrane-spanning portion of APP 695  from residues 639 to 648 (SEQ ID NO: 7) (the entire membrane-spanning segment of APP 695  being from residues 625 to 648, SEQ ID NO: 8); the first molecule more preferably includes substantially all of APP (SEQ ID NO: 9). (Alternatively, the corresponding functional regions of APP 751  or APP 770 , or any other APP, may be used.) The second molecule preferably contains two or three of the putative APP-associating regions referred to above, and may also contain one or more of the GTP-binding regions of G o , corresponding to residues 35 to 50 (SEQ ID NO: 10), residues 201 to 218 (SEQ ID NO: 29), or residues 263 to 274 (SEQ ID NO: 30) of G o1  [Kaziro, &#34;Structure of the genes coding for the α subunits of G proteins&#34;, Ch. 1 in ADP-ribosylating Toxins and G proteins (Moss, J., and Vaughan, M. eds.) pp189-206, American society for Microbiology, Washington, D.C. (1988)], and more preferably contains substantially all of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 2). 
     The invention also includes a system (e.g., a cell-free in vitro system) for screening candidate Alzheimer&#39;s disease therapeutics, which system includes a first polypeptide containing a sequence essentially identical to that of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1), and a second polypeptide containing a sequence essentially identical to one, two or three of the putative APP-associating regions of G o  (SEQ ID NOs: 3, 4, and 5); the system may also include a means for detecting either (a) the association of the first polypeptide with the second polypeptide, or (b) the activation of the second polypeptide by the first polypeptide. The first polypeptide may conveniently be anchored to a solid material (e.g., a cellular membrane, a polystyrene surface, or a standard matrix material), or may be in a phospholipid vesicle. It may include a sequence essentially identical to the membrane-spanning region of APP, and/or a sequence essentially identical to the entire cytoplasmic tail of APP. The second molecule preferably contains the GTP-binding domain of G o , and more preferably contains the entire sequence of G o . 
     The invention also features a method for diminishing the activation of G o  in a neuronal cell by treating the cell with a compound, such as a peptide fragment of G o  or of the cytoplasmic tail of APP, which blocks association of neuronal G o  with, and/or activation of neuronal G o  by, the cytoplasmic tail of APP. The cell may be so treated in vivo (i.e., in an animal, e.g. a mammal such as a human or other primate, cow, horse, pig, sheep, goat, dog, cat, rat, mouse, guinea pig, hamster, or rabbit) or in vitro. This method may be used to prevent or treat the symptoms of Alzheimer&#39;s disease in a patient. Such a compound may include, for example, a peptide having fewer than 50 amino acids (preferably 40 or fewer, and more preferably 30 or fewer), and containing the sequence of peptide 20 . Also within the invention is a DNA molecule (e.g., a plasmid or viral DNA) encoding such a peptide, and a therapeutic composition containing, in a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, either the peptide or the DNA molecule. 
     In another aspect, the invention features a method for identifying a ligand for which APP is a receptor, which method includes the steps of 
     providing an APP molecule, the cytoplasmic tail of which is accessible to a molecule of G o  ; 
     contacting a candidate compound with the extracellular domain of the APP molecule; and 
     detecting either (a) association of G o  with the APP molecule, (b) dissociation of G o  from the APP molecule, or (c) activation of G o  by the APP molecule, such association, dissociation, or activation being evidence that the candidate compound is a ligand of APP. 
     Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the detailed description set forth below, and from the claims. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1(a) is a schematic diagram illustrating the structural organization of APP. The hatched box contains the sequence of the β/A 4  protein; the black box contains the so-called &#34;Peptide 20&#34; or couplone sequence; filled circles are N-glycosylation sites. The numbers designate amino acid sequence numbers corresponding to APP 695 . 
     FIG. 1(b) is a bar graph illustrating the effects of synthetic APP peptides on G o . In (b), (d), (e) and (f), values represent the mean ±S.E. of three experiments. 
     FIG. 1(c) is a graph illustrating the time course of the action of peptide 20 on G o . Values represent the mean of three experiments. Since the S.E. was &lt;5% of each value in this figure, the error bars are not indicated. 
     FIG. 1(d) is a graph illustrating the effects of peptide 20 variants on G o . 
     FIG. 1(e) is a graph illustrating the effect linkage with a transmembrane region has on the action of peptide 20 on G o . 
     FIG. 1(f) is a graph illustrating the effect of pertussis toxin on peptide 20-induced stimulation of GTP-γS binding to G o . 
     FIGS. 2a-2d is a set of SDS-PAGE gels analyzed by immunoblotting, which illustrate the immunoprecipitation of APP and G o  by an anti-APP antibody from brain membranes. (2a) Immunoprecipitation of APP by 22C11. (2b) Immunoprecipitation of G o  by 22C11. (2c) Effect of Mg 2+  on the immunoprecipitation of G o  by 22C11. (2d) Effect of peptide 20 on 22C11-induced precipitation of G o α (left) and APP (right). Each of the results presented in this figure was reproduced at least three times. 
     FIG. 3a is a schematic diagram of the construction method used to prepare recombinant mutant APP cDNAs. Regions labeled ATG, TAA, TGA signify original translation and termination sites and a newly inserted termination site, respectively. 
     FIG. 3b is a schematic diagram comparing the structures of authentic APP 695  and the two recombinant mutant APP polypeptides, ΔN and ΔC. 
     FIG. 3c is an immunoblot analysis of Sf9 membranes using anti-Alz 90, 1C1, and 4G5. 
     FIG. 3d is an immunoblot analysis of the 22C11-precipitate from an Sf9 membrane-G o  reconstitution mixture. 
     FIG. 3e is an immunoblot illustrating dissociation of G o  from APP by activation of G o . Each of the results presented in FIGS. 3c-e was reproduced at least three times. 
     FIG. 4a is the cDNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence of G o1  α (Strathmann et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:6477-6481, 1990) (SEQ ID NO: 2). 
     FIG. 4b is the cDNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence of G o2  α (Strathmann et al.) (SEQ ID NO: 28). 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     It was previously shown that the insulin-like growth factor II receptor (IGF-IIR) couples directly to the G protein referred to as G i  (Nishimoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264: 14029-14038, 1989) via a 14-residue section of the cytoplasmic tail of IGF-IIR, Arg 241  -Lys 2423  (Okamoto et al., Cell 62:709-717, 1990; Okamoto et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88:8020-8023, 1991). The structural determinants for the G i  -activating function in IGF-IIR were defined as (i) two basic residues at the N-terminal region of the amino acid sequence, and (ii) a C-terminal motif of B--B--X--B or B--B--X--X--B (where B is a basic residue and X is a non-basic residue) (Okamoto et al., Cell 62:709-717, 1990). To assess whether APP might function as a G protein-coupled receptor, the amino acid sequence of human APP695 was examined for regions of less than 26 residues which satisfy (i) and (ii). The sequence His 657  -Lys 676  is the only such region in the cytoplasmic domain of APP695. In two other isoforms of APP, APP751 (Ponte et al., Nature 331:525-527, 1988; Tanzi et al., Nature 331:528-530, 1988) and APP770 (Kitaguchi et al., Nature 331:530-532, 1988), as well as in mouse APP695 (Yamada et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 149:665-671, 1987), this sequence is completely conserved. 
     Preparation of peptides 
     A peptide corresponding to the His 657  -Lys 676  region of APP [HHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (SEQ ID NO: 1)] was synthesized and purified by standard methods using solid phase synthesis; this peptide is referred to as &#34;peptide 20&#34;. Similarly prepared were peptides corresponding to other regions of APP 695  : APP(1-10), MLPGLALLLL (SEQ ID NO: 11); APP(597-606) , DAEFRHDSGY (SEQ ID NO: 12); APP(677-695), MQQNGYENPTYKFFEQMQN (SEQ ID NO: 13); and APP(639-648), TVIVITLVML (SEQ ID NO: 7), a portion of the transmembrane region of APP; as well as the following variants of peptide 20: HGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (H-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 14); GVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (HH-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 15); HHGVVEVDAAVTPEE (RHLSK-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 16); KQYTSIHHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (KQYTSI-added, SEQ ID NO: 17); and TVIVITLVMLHHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (transmembrane region-connected peptide 20; SEQ ID NO: 18). Peptides were purified by HPLC to greater than 95% purity, and were used immediately after synthesis. 
     Materials and Methods. 
     Trimeric G o  was purified to homogeneity from bovine brain as described (Katada et al., FEBS Lett. 213:353-358, 1987). This G o  preparation was stored in 20 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, and 0.7% CHAPS, and diluted ≧10 fold for assays. G i3 α, which was used in combination with 1.5-fold concentrated Gβγ (Okamoto et al., Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88:8020-8023, 1991), was prepared as described by Morishita et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 161:1280-1285, 1989. Low molecular weight G proteins were prepared as described by Matsui et al., J. Biol. Chem. 263:11071-4, 1988; Gβγ was purified from bovine brain as set forth in Katada et al., FEBS Lett. 213:353-358, 1987. 
     GTPγS binding to G o  was assayed in a buffer containing 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 100 μM EDTA, 120 μM MgCl 2 , and 60 nM [ 35  S]GTPγS (DuPont-New England Nuclear) at 37° C., and the fraction of total G o  bound to GTPγS was measured as described (Okamoto et al., Cell 62:709-717, 1990). GTPγS binding to peptides was negligible. The total amount of G o  in a given preparation was defined as the saturation amount of GTPγS bound to G o  following a 30-min incubation of G o  with 10 mM Mg 2+  and ≧60 nM GTPγS at 30° C. 
     Reconstitution of G o  into phospholipid vesicles was accomplished with 1 mg/ml of phosphatidylcholine, using the gel filtration method (Nishimoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264:14029-14038, 1989). In a final incubation for GTPγS binding, 5 nM of reconstituted G o  was used. 
     For experiments exploring the effect of Mg 2+ , the Mg 2+  concentration was set by using Mg-EDTA buffer (Birnbaumer et al., J. Eur. J. Biochem. 136:107-112, 1983). 
     Bovine brain membranes, prepared as described (Katada et al., FEBS Lett. 213:353-358, 1987) and suspended in buffer A [10 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, 10 mM acetic acid, and 250 mM sucrose, plus a mixture (termed &#34;PAL&#34;) of 2 mM PMSF, 20 μg/ml aprotinin, and 20 μM leupeptin], were centrifuged and the pellet was solubilized for 1 h at 4° C. in buffer B (10 mM Hepes/NaOH (ph 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, 120 mM NaCl, 0.5% CHAPS, and PAL). Following centrifugation of the material at 15000 rpm for 1 h, the supernatant (500 μg protein, unless specified) was incubated in buffer C (20 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, 120 mM NaCl, and PAL) and 2% BSA with 22C11-coated protein G-Sepharose, which had been prepared by incubating protein G-Sepharose (Pharmacia) with anti-APP monoclonal antibody 22C11 (Boehringer Mannheim) for 1 h at 4° C. An antibody concentration of ≧2 μg/ml was found to saturate precipitation of APP and G o , so 2 μg/ml was the concentration used for immunoprecipitation studies. As a control, 2 μg/ml of rabbit IgG was used. After overnight shaking at 4° C., the immunoprecipitated sample was centrifuged at 5000 rpm for 5 min. The pellet was washed three times with ice-cold buffer C and the final pellet was applied to SDS-PAGE. Electroblotting onto a PVDF sheet was performed as described (Okamoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 266:1085-1091, 1991). After blocking with PBS containing 2% skim milk and 1% BSA, the sheet was incubated with the first antibody [1 μg/ml of 22C11; 1/1000 dilution of anti-G o  α monoclonal antibody GC/2 (DuPont-New England Nuclear); 1/1000 dilution of 1C1, a monoclonal antibody against the C-terminal peptide  677-695  of APP 695  ] for 4 h, and then exposed to horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat IgG reactive for mouse or rabbit immunoglobulins for 2-4 h at room temperature. The antigenic bands were detected with an ECL detection kit (Amersham). YL1/2 (SERA Lab), an anti-tubulin antibody, was used at 1:500 dilution for immunodetection. 
     Effects of synthetic APP peptides on G proteins. 
     In the experiment shown in FIG. 1(b), 10 nM G o  was incubated with water or 100 μM of each peptide for 2 min, and the amount of GTPγS bound to G o  at the end of this period was measured. In the experiment shown in FIG. 1(c), 10nM G o  was incubated with water (O) or 100 μM peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) (), and GTPγS binding was measured at the indicated times. From FIG. 1(d), it can be seen that peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) stimulated the rate constant of GTPγS binding to G o  in a dose-dependent manner, whereas FIG. 1(b) shows that peptides from other regions of APP695 were ineffective. GTPγS binding to G o  in the presence or absence of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) obeyed first-order kinetics according to the equation 
     
         ln[(Bt-B)/BT]=-k.sub.app t 
    
     (B is the binding at time t; BT is the total binding observable at infinite time; and k app  is the rate constant for GTPγS binding). The ability of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) to activate G o  was gradually decreased during storage at either -4° C. or -20° C. 
     Studies using structural variant peptides suggest that both the N-terminal basic residues and the C-terminal B--B--X--X--B motif play essential roles in the G o  -activating function of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) [FIG. 1(d)]. In this experiment, 10 nM G o  was incubated with various concentrations of HHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (peptide 20, SEQ ID NO: 1; □), HGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (H-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 14; ⋄), GVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (HH-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 15; □), HHGVVEVDAAVTPEE (RHLSK-deleted, SEQ ID NO: 16; ♦), or KQYTSIHHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK (KQYTSI-added, SEQ ID NO: 17; ▪), and GTPγS binding to G o  at 2 min. was measured. FIG. 1(d) indicates which aspects of primary structure determine the G o  -activator function of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1). Deletion of either one or both of the N-terminal His residues nullified G o  -activator function of the peptide. The peptide (SEQ ID NO: 16) in which the C-terminal five residues of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) has been deleted is several times less potent than peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1). 
     As illustrated in FIG. 1(e), G o  reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles was incubated with transmembrane region-connected peptide 20 (TVIVITLVMLHHGVVEVDAAVTPEERHLSK, SEQ ID NO: 18; □) or the partial sequence of the APP transmembrane domain alone (TVIVITLVML, SEQ ID NO: 7; □). Transmembrane region-connected peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 18) was also incubated with G o  in the absence of phospholipids and the presence of 0.07% CHAPS (♦). The transmembrane region-connected peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 18) stimulated G o  reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles with a potency 10 times greater than that of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1). The transmembrane region alone (SEQ ID NO: 7) was without effect on G o . In the absence of phospholipids, transmembrane region-connected peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 18) showed an effect on G o  no more potent than peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1). Therefore, the stimulatory action of this transmembrane region-connected peptide (SEQ ID NO: 18) is attributed to the peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) sequence; the potentiating effect of the transmembrane region may be exerted by interactions with phospholipids. 
     In the experiment shown in FIG. 1(f), ADP-ribosylation of G o  was accomplished by incubating G o  reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles with 10 μg/ml preactivated pertussis toxin in the presence of 10 μM NAD for 15 min at 30° C. as described (Okamoto et al,, Cell 62:709-717, 1990). Preactivation of pertussis toxin (Funakoshi, Japan) was carried out by treating the toxin with 100 μM ATP and 1 mM DTT for 10 min at 30° C. Reconstitution of G o  into phospholipid vesicles was accomplished with 1 mg/ml phosphatidylcholine (Sigman, P-5638) at a final G o  concentration of 50.2 nM in a buffer containing 20 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, and 100 mM NaCl by the gel filtration method (Nishimoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264:14029-14038, 1989). In a final incubation for GTPγS binding, 5 nM of reconstituted G o  was used. Increasing concentrations of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) were incubated for 2 min with G o  reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles which had been treated with pertussis toxin in the presence (♦) or absence (□) of NAD, and GTPγS binding to G o  was measured. 
     Although peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) produced 2-3 fold stimulation of GTPγS binding to G o  in the mid-range of Mg 2+  concentrations, the effect of peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) could not be observed at low (≦100 nM) or high (≧10 mM) Mg 2+  concentrations. 
     Peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) had little effect on G proteins other than G o  : G i1 , G i2 , G i3 , G S , c-Ki-ras p21 and smg p25A were not stimulated by this peptide (data not shown). Thus, peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) activates G o  in a receptor-like manner, suggesting that APP interacts directly with G o  through the peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) region. 
     Coprecipitation of APP and G o   
     In an effort to determine whether APP is linked to G o  in a native membrane environment, the coprecipitation studies shown in FIG. 2a were performed. Solubilized membranes of bovine brain were first immunoprecipitated by monoclonal anti-APP antibody 22C11, and the immunoprecipitate was then probed by immunodetection with 22C11 (Lane 2) or 1C1, a monoclonal antibody against the C-terminal peptide 677-695  of APP (SEQ ID NO: 13; Lane 4). Lanes 1 and 3 of FIG. 2a indicate the controls in which either no solubilized membranes were included (Lane 1), or rabbit IgG was used for the precipitation step instead of antibody 22C11 (Lane 3). In each control, immunodetection was performed with 22C11. The 55-kDa and 25-kDa bands seen in Lanes 1 and 2 may be heavy and light chains of the 22C11 used for precipitation, which reacted with an anti-mouse IgG antibody during immunodetection. The precipitate by control rabbit IgG contained no detectable APP. Although the 100 kD molecular size of APP appears here to be slightly less than the 110-130 kD reported (Weidemann et al., Cell 57:115-126, 1989), the precipitated form is unlikely to be an extracellular fragment of APP, because 1C1 recognizes this 100-kDa band. 
     In the experiment illustrated in FIG. 2b, coprecipitation of various G proteins with APP was investigated. Bovine brain membrane preparations were immunoprecipitated with 22C11; the immunoprecipitated proteins were subjected to SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted with the indicated anti-G protein antisera (1/1000 dilution). Lane 2: GC/2, anti-G o  α antiserum; lane 3:GC/2 plus 1 μg/ml of purified G o  ; lane 4: GA/1, common Gα antiserum; lane 5: AS/7, anti-Giα antiserum; lane 6: MS/1, common Gβ antiserum. Lane 1 shows a control immunoblot with GC/2, in which a buffer solution rather than the bovine brain membrane preparation was immunoprecipitated with 22C11. Lane 7 indicates immunoblotting with GC/2 of the precipitate resulting from immunoprecipitation of brain membranes with control rabbit IgG, rather than 22C11. The identity of the 39-kDa protein in lane 2 as G o  was verified by its absence in the non-membrane control (lane 1); by its staining with another G o  α-specific antibody, αGO1 (Morishita et al., Eur. J. Biochem. 174:7-94, 1988) (data not shown); and by a diminution of staining of this band in the presence of excess soluble G o  (lane 3). The 22C11-precipitate also contained immunoreactivity of Gβ in a doublet at 35-36-kDa (lane 6). The 22C11-precipitate did not react with an anti-Giα antibody AS/7 (lane 5). The antibody GA/1 detected only a 39-kDa band in the 22C11-precipitate (lane 4). The control rabbit IgG immunoprecipitate did not produce anti-G o  -immunoreactive bands corresponding to either APP or G o  (lane 7). These experiments indicate that the 22C11-precipitate from brain membranes contains APP immunoreactivity at 100 kDa, G o  α immunoreactivity at 39 kDa, and Gβ immunoreactivity in a doublet at 35-36 kDa, but no detectable immunoreactivity indicating the presence of G i  α or other heterotrimeric G proteins. A tubulin antibody, YL1/2, did not stain the 22C11-precipitate (data not shown). 
     In the experiment shown in FIG. 2c, the effect of Mg 2+  concentration on co-precipitation of G o  with anti-APP antibody was studied. 100 μg of solubilized brain membranes were precipitated by 22C11 in the presence of various Mg 2+  concentrations controlled with Mg-EDTA buffer (Birnbaumer et al., J. Eur. J. Biochem. 136:107-112, 1983). The precipitates were analyzed by immunoblotting with GC/2. The control lane indicates the results of precipitation of brain membranes by rabbit IgG followed by immunodetection with GC/2. In the absence of Mg 2+ , G o  was less efficiently co-precipitated by 22C11. Mg 2+  concentrations between 1 μM and 1 mM resulted in maximal immunoprecipitation of G o . At concentrations &gt;10 mM, relatively little G o  was precipitated. In contrast, immunoprecipitation of APP by 22C11 was not affected by Mg 2+  concentration (data not shown). These results indicate that, while Mg 2+  is not absolutely required for complex formation by APP and G o , the concentration of Mg 2+  does strongly influence complex formation. A mid range of Mg 2+  concentration was found to facilitate APP-G o  association. 
     FIG. 2d illustrates the results of an experiment indicating that peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) prevents the 22C11-mediated co-precipitation of G o , whereas it did not affect the precipitation of APP by 22C11. In contrast, a control peptide (SEQ ID NO: 13) representing a segment of APP different from that represented by peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1) had no discernable effect on 22C11-mediated co-precipitation of G o . In this experiment, solubilized brain membranes were incubated with 22C11-coated beads in the presence of 10 μM peptide 20 (SEQ ID NO: 1; 2nd and 5th lanes) or 10 μM of the control peptide, peptide 677-695  of APP (SEQ ID NO: 13; 3rd and 6th lanes), or in the absence of both of these peptides (1st and 4th lanes). In this experiment, an anti-mouse IgG antibody different from that used in (a) was employed. 
     Precipitation of G o  reconstituted with recombinant APP-antibody complex 
     A baculovirus DNA encoding full-length APP 695  (SEQ ID NO: 9) was prepared as outlined in FIG. 3a. Authentic mouse APP 695  cDNA (SEQ ID NO: 9) was provided by Dr. Yoshiyuki Sakaki (University of Tokyo, Japan) (Yamada et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 149:665-671, 1987) in the vector pUC18. The HindIII-BamHI fragment containing the entire coding region was initially subcloned into the vector pBR322 (pBR-APP). A single BamHI site was inserted immediately before the ATG codon of the HindIII-SphI fragment. This BamHI site was inserted to permit efficient expression of the encoded APP protein in baculovirus-infected cells. The BamHI site-inserted APP 695  -coding DNA (BamHI-APP 695 ) was constructed from the HindIII-SphI fragment and pBR-APP, utilizing their internal KpnI sites, and subcloned into pUC18. By using BamHI-APP 695  as template, two truncation mutants were generated and subcloned into pUC18. These mutants possess an insertion of two TGA codons immediately before (ΔN) or after (ΔC) the peptide 20 sequence. Each BamHI-BamHI fragment of these respective APP-variation-encoding pUC18 plasmids was inserted into the baculovirus transfer/expression vector pVL1393 (Invitrogen). The entire region that had been through a single-stranded intermediate was sequenced to confirm the absence of unwanted nucleotide changes. New insertions were generated by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis with a kit (Takara) by the method of Kunkel et al. (Meth. Enzymol. 154:367-382, 1987). For the insertion of a BamHI site, a restriction fragment encoding the ATG start codon was subcloned into the vector M13mp18 and a single stranded template was generated. An oligonucleotide primer (CCACGCAGGATCACGGGATCCATGCTGCCCAGCTTG; SEQ ID NO: 19) was used to introduce GGATCC (SEQ ID NO: 20) immediately before the start codon. Following primer extension, the phage was used to transform E. coli strain JM109. Plaques were selected and single stranded DNA was sequenced. A restriction fragment containing the mutated region was subcloned into pBR-APP. For the insertion of the stop codons, oligonucleotide primers [CAGTACACATCCATCTGATGACATCATGGCGTGGTG (SEQ ID NO: 21) and CGCCATCTCTCCAGTGATGAATGCAGCAGAACGGA (SEQ ID NO: 22)] and the M13mp19 vector were used to introduce two sequential TGA stop codons. Using the method of Summers and Smith (Summers et al., Tex. Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 1555, 1987), baculoviruses incorporating these APP cDNAs were generated using selection by immunoblot analysis with 22C11, and recovered by infecting Sf9 cells (Invitrogen). Four days after treatment of Sf9 cells with the viruses, cells were homogenized and suspended in buffer A. After the solubilization of the pellet with buffer B, the supernatant (100 μg) was mixed overnight with 22C11-coated protein G-Sepharose in buffer C plus 2% BSA at 4° C. on a shaker. After centrifugation, the precipitated beads were incubated with purified G o  (1 μg) in buffer C supplemented with 1.1 mM MgCl 2  and 2% BSA for 8-24 h at 4° C. on a shaker. After washing four times with ice-cold buffer C, the centrifugation precipitate was subjected to SDS-PAGE, electroblotting, and immunodetection with the first antibodies (1 μg/ml of 22C11; 10 μg/ml of anti-Alz 90; 1/1000 dilution of 1C1; 1/500 dilution of 4G5; 0.1 μg/ml of αGO1) and the second goat anti-mouse or anti-rabbit IgGs conjugated with HRP. (Immunodetection of 1C1 and 4G5, both of which are mouse IgM (κ), was accomplished using as second antibody a mixture of HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG, rabbit anti-mouse IgM and rabbit anti-mouse κ antibodies.) 
     The three APP constructs prepared as described above are compared in the schematic diagram of FIG. 3b. The polypeptides encoded by all three constructs retain the entire transmembrane and extracellular domains of APP; while ΔN (SEQ ID NO: 23) lacks all of the peptide 20 residues as well as the sequence on the carboxy terminal side of the peptide 20 region, AC (SEQ ID NO: 24) retains the peptide 20 sequence and is missing only the latter sequence. 
     Sf9 cells were infected, using standard methods, by recombinant baculoviruses encoding full length APP 695  cDNA (SEQ ID NO: 9), APP 1-656  cDNA (AN; SEQ ID NO: 23), or APP 1-676  cDNA (ΔC; SEQ ID N0: 24). In uninfected Sf9 cells, no immunoreactivity for anti-APP or anti-G o  antibodies was detected (data not shown). The membranes of Sf9 cells infected with the baculoviruses encoding APP 695  (SEQ ID NO: 9), AN (SEQ ID NO: 23), and ΔC (SEQ ID NO: 24) genes (referred to as Sf9-APP 695 , Sf9-ΔN, and Sf9-ΔC, respectively) were found to express, respectively, 130-, 120- and 130-kDa proteins reactive with antibody 22C11 (FIG. 3d, right side). The Sf9-APP 695  cells expressed APP at ≈0.1% of the total membrane protein. When the membranes of the three types of infected cells were immunoprecipitated with antibody Anti-Alz 90 (Boehringer Mannheim), a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for an epitope corresponding to to residues 551-608 of APP (SEQ ID NO: 25; a section of APP that is within the extracellular domain), 130-kDa, 120-kDa, and 130-kDa proteins were recognized in Sf9-APP 695 , Sf9-ΔN, and Sf9-ΔC cells, respectively (FIG. 3c, top panel). Membranes from all three types of infected cells showed approximately equivalent reactivity to the antibody, indicating that at least this portion of the extracellular domain was intact on each of the three and that all three cell types express approximately equal amounts of recombinant protein. When the antibody used was 1C1, a mouse monoclonal prepared against a peptide corresponding to residues 677-695 of APP (SEQ ID NO: 13), only Sf9-APP 695  membranes were reactive, indicating that the region corresponding to the C-terminal portion of the cytoplasmic domain is missing from both ΔN (SEQ ID NO: 23) and ΔC (SEQ ID NO: 24) (FIG. 3c, middle panel). When the antibody used was 4G5, a mouse monoclonal antibody raised against a peptide corresponding to residues 657-676 of APP (SEQ ID NO: 1; the peptide 20 region of the cytoplasmic domain), 130 kDa bands from both Sf9-APP 695  and Sf9-ΔC membranes reacted with the antibody, but Sf9-ΔN membranes did not, a demonstration that ΔN (SEQ ID NO: 23) but not ΔC (SEQ ID NO: 24) lacks the peptide 20 region of APP (FIG. 3c, bottom panel). These experiments clearly indicate that the expressed proteins are recombinant APP 1-695  (SEQ ID NO: 9), APP 1-656  (SEQ ID NO: 23), and APP 1-676  (SEQ ID NO: 24), respectively, as designed. 
     The 22C11-precipitates from these Sf9 membranes expressing various forms of APP were exposed to purified G o , reprecipitated with 22C11, and subjected to immunoblot analysis using anti-G o  α antibody αGO1 (FIG. 3d, left four lanes) and by 22C11 (right four lanes). αGO1 (Morishita et al., Eur. J. Biochem. 174:87-94, 1988) was provided by Dr. Tomiko Asano; similar results were obtained when antibody GC/2 was substituted. The control lanes are 22C11-precipitate exposed to G o  in the absence of Sf9 membranes. Approximately 1/10-1/20 (0.05-0.1 μg/tube) of the reconstituted G o  was precipitated, together with a comparable amount (≈0.1 μg/tube) of APP. Easily detectable amounts of G o  α were present in the final precipitate when G o  was mixed with 22C11-precipitates from Sf9-ΔC or Sf9-APP695 membranes, but essentially no G o  α was found in the final precipitate from Sf9-ΔN membranes. Thus, formation of an APP-G o  complex requires the peptide 20 region, residues 657-676 (SEQ ID NO: 1). 
     In the experiment illustrated in FIG. 3e, 22C11-precipitates from Sf9-APP 695  membranes (100 μg protein each) were incubated with activated G o  (lanes 2 and 4) or unactivated G o  (lanes 1 and 3); the final precipitates (left panel) and supernatants (right panel) were analyzed by simultaneous immunoblotting with 22C11 and αGO1 antibodies. Activation of G o  was carried out by incubating G o  in 20 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, 2 mM MgCl 2 , and 1 μM GTPγS overnight at room temperature. When G o  was incubated with GTPγS, no G o  α associated with the APP-22C11 complex (FIG. 3e), suggesting that the activation state of the G protein regulates APP-G o  association. 
     This study suggests that APP functions as a receptor coupled to G o  through the G o  -activator cytoplasmic domain His 657  -Lys 676  (SEQ ID NO: 1). APP has a point mutation in at least one form of familial Alzheimer&#39;s disease (Goate et al., Nature 349:704-706, 1991). A structural alteration of APP is therefore thought to be one cause of Alzheimer&#39;s disease, although it remains unknown how the mutation might produce the disease. One novel possibility suggested by this study is that the cytoplasmic, C-terminal fragment of APP is pathogenic. It has been suggested (Abraham et al., Biotechnology 7:147-153, 1989; Shivers et al., EMBO J. 7:1365-1370, 1988; Kametani et al., Biomedical Research 10:179-183, 1989) that the residual C-terminal portion of APP may remain in the cell membrane after abnormal cleavage of APP to produce β/A4 protein in Alzheimer&#39;s disease neurons. By analogy with the oncogenic transformation of c-erb B into v-erb B, such a structural alteration of APP may alter its function and prompt APP to constitutively activate G o . This hypothesis is consistent with the study (Yanker et al., Science 245:417-420, 1989) indicating that recombinant expression of the C-terminal 105-residue portion of APP in neuronal cells evokes cell death, and with the reports that G o  activity is linked to neuronal growth cone motility (Strittmatter et al., BioEssays 13:127-134, 1990), axon and dendrite formation (Granneman et al., J. Neurochemistry 54:1995-2001, 1990), and memory (Guillen et al., EMBO J. 9:1449-1455, 1990). This study suggests that Alzheimer&#39;s disease is a disorder of an APP-G o  signalling system caused by structural alterations of APP. 
     EXAMPLE 1 
     The screening method of the invention can be carried out as follows: 
     The assay used can be a very simple cell-free assay employing a first polypeptide consisting essentially of the couplone, or G o  -binding portion, of APP (SEQ ID NO: 1) and a second polypeptide consisting essentially of an APP-binding portion of G o . This APP-binding portion of G o  may be the 15-residue segment identified as the anticouplone portion of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 3), or it may be one or both of the two flanking regions, residues 1-3 (SEQ ID NO: 4) and residues 19-36 (SEQ ID NO: 5) of G o . Alternatively, longer portions, or all, of APP and/or G o  can be used, or the appropriate portions of APP and/or G o  can be linked to other polypeptides to form hybrid polypeptides with characteristics (such as altered immunoreactivity or enzymatic activity) that would improve detection of the endpoint of the assay. The assay is carried out by contacting the APP-based polypeptide with the G o  -based polypeptide in the presence of a candidate compound, in parallel with a control assay containing no candidate compound, and determining whether the candidate compound inhibits co-immunoprecipitation of the first and second polypeptides (using either an antibody specific for the first polypeptide or an antibody specific for the second polypeptide). Alternatively, activation of the second (G o ) polypeptide may be the measured criterion: if so, the second polypeptide must include the GTP-binding region of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 10), and GTP or an appropriate non-hydrolyzable analog thereof (such as GTPγS or Gpp(NH)p) must be included in the assay. The assay may also be carried out using phospholipid vesicles prepared by standard methods (e.g., as described by Nishimoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264:14029-14038, 1989), provided that the first (APP) polypeptide includes a region of hydrophobic amino acids [such as all (SEQ ID NO: 8) or a portion (e.g., SEQ ID NO: 7) of the transmembrane region of APP) that permit it to be anchored in the phospholipid bilayer. Alternatively, the assay may be carried out using intact cells or red cell ghosts which contain APP and G o , or appropriate portions thereof. The cells may express the first and second polypeptides naturally or by virtue of genetic engineering, or the polypeptides may be introduced directly into the cells or ghosts by standard means. 
     EXAMPLE 2 
     The progress of Alzheimer&#39;s disease may be halted or reversed by treating a patient with a compound which diminishes the activation of neural G o  by truncated APP. Such a compound may be identified in a screening assay as described above, or may consist essentially of a polypeptide containing the amino acid sequence of (a) the couplone region of APP (SEQ ID NO: 1), (b) the anticouplone region of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 3), or (c) the APP-associating region(s) of G o  (SEQ ID NO: 4 and/or 5), or a combination of (b) and (c). Such polypeptides may be produced in quantity by standard recombinant means, or by standard synthetic techniques. To minimize proteolytic degradation in vivo, the carboxy and amino termini may be derivatized (e.g., with ester or amide groups), some or all of the amino acids may be replaced with D-amino acids, or particularly sensitive peptide linkages may be substituted with non-peptide bonds using standard methodology. To improve penetration of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the polypeptides may be altered to increase lipophilicity (e.g., by esterification to a bulky lipophilic moiety such as cholesteryl) or to supply a cleavable &#34;targetor&#34; moiety that enhances retention on the brain side of the barrier (Bodor et al., Science 257:1698-1700, 1992). Alternatively, the polypeptide may be linked to an antibody to the transferrin receptor, in order to exploit that receptor&#39;s role in transporting iron across the blood-brain barrier, as taught by Friden et al., Science 259:373-377, 1993. It is expected that an intravenous dosage equivalent to approximately 1 to 100 μmoles of the polypeptide of the invention per kg per day, or an intrathecally administered dosage of approximately 0.1 to 50 μmoles per kg per day, will be effective in blocking activation of G o  in an Alzheimer&#39;s patient. If the polypeptide is sufficiently protected from proteolytic degradation, as described above, it may also be administered orally in appropriately higher doses. Alternatively, the compound may be incorporated into a slow-release implant to ensure a relatively constant supply of the therapeutic to the patient&#39;s brain. 
     Other embodiments are within the claims which follow. 
     
         __________________________________________________________________________SEQUENCE LISTING(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 30(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 1:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 20(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 1:HisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArg151015HisLeuSerLys20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 2:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1910(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 2:TGTGGCAGGGAAGGGGCCACCATGGGATGTACGCTGAGCGCAGAGGAGAGA51MetGlyCysThrLeuSerAlaGluGluArg1510GCCGCCCTCGAGCGGAGCAAGGCGATTGAGAAAAACCTAAAAGAAGAT99AlaAlaLeuGluArgSerLysAlaIleGluLysAsnLeuLysGluAsp152025GGCATCAGCGCCGCCAAAGACGTGAAATTACTCCTGCTGGGGGCTGGA147GlyIleSerAlaAlaLysAspValLysLeuLeuLeuLeuGlyAlaGly303540GAATCAGGAAAAAGCACCATTGTGAAGCAGATGAAGATCATCCATGAA195GluSerGlyLysSerThrIleValLysGlnMetLysIleIleHisGlu455055GATGGCTTCTCTGGGGAAGACGTGAAGCAGTACAAGCCTGTGGTCTAC243AspGlyPheSerGlyGluAspValLysGlnTyrLysProValValTyr606570AGCAACACCATCCAGTCTCTGGCGGCCATTGTCCGGGCCATGGACACT291SerAsnThrIleGlnSerLeuAlaAlaIleValArgAlaMetAspThr75808590TTGGGCGTGGAGTATGGTGACAAGGAGAGGAAGACGGACTCCAAGATG339LeuGlyValGluTyrGlyAspLysGluArgLysThrAspSerLysMet95100105GTGTGTGACGTGGTGAGTCGTATGGAAGACACTGAACCGTTCTCTGCA387ValCysAspValValSerArgMetGluAspThrGluProPheSerAla110115120GAACTTCTTTCTGCCATGATGCGACTCTGGGGCGACTCGGGGATCCAG435GluLeuLeuSerAlaMetMetArgLeuTrpGlyAspSerGlyIleGln125130135GAGTGCTTCAACCGATCTCGGGAGTATCAGCTCAATGACTCTGCCAAA483GluCysPheAsnArgSerArgGluTyrGlnLeuAsnAspSerAlaLys140145150TACTACCTGGACAGCCTGGATCGGATTGGAGCCGGTGACTACCAGCCC531TyrTyrLeuAspSerLeuAspArgIleGlyAlaGlyAspTyrGlnPro155160165170ACTGAGCAGGACATCCTCCGAACCAGAGTCAAAACAACTGGCATCGTA579ThrGluGlnAspIleLeuArgThrArgValLysThrThrGlyIleVal175180185GAAACCCACTTCACCTTCAAGAACCTCCACTTCAGGCTGTTTGACGTC627GluThrHisPheThrPheLysAsnLeuHisPheArgLeuPheAspVal190195200GGGGGCCAGCGATCTGAACGCAAGAAGTGGATCCACTGCTTTGAGGAT675GlyGlyGlnArgSerGluArgLysLysTrpIleHisCysPheGluAsp205210215GTCACGGCCATCATCTTCTGTGTCGCACTCAGCGGCTATGACCAGGTG723ValThrAlaIleIlePheCysValAlaLeuSerGlyTyrAspGlnVal220225230CTCCACGAGGACGAAACCACGAACCGCATGCACGAGTCTCTCATGCTC771LeuHisGluAspGluThrThrAsnArgMetHisGluSerLeuMetLeu235240245250TTCGACTCCATCTGTAACAACAAGTTTTTCATTGATACCTCCATCATC819PheAspSerIleCysAsnAsnLysPhePheIleAspThrSerIleIle255260265CTCTTCCTCAACAAGAAAGACCTCTTTGGCGAGAAGATTAAGAAGTCA867LeuPheLeuAsnLysLysAspLeuPheGlyGluLysIleLysLysSer270275280CCCTTGACCATCTGCTTTCCCGAATACCCAGGCTCCAACACCTATGAA915ProLeuThrIleCysPheProGluTyrProGlySerAsnThrTyrGlu285290295GATGCAGCTGCCTACATCCAAACACAGTTTGAAAGCAAAAACCGCTCA963AspAlaAlaAlaTyrIleGlnThrGlnPheGluSerLysAsnArgSer300305310CCCAACAAAGAAATTTACTGTCACATGACTTGTGCCACAGACACGAAT1011ProAsnLysGluIleTyrCysHisMetThrCysAlaThrAspThrAsn315320325330AATATCCAGGTGGTATTCGACGCCGTCACCGACATCATCATTGCCAAC1059AsnIleGlnValValPheAspAlaValThrAspIleIleIleAlaAsn335340345AATCTCCGGGGCTGCGGCTTGTACTGACCTCTTGTCCTGTATAGCAACCTATTT1113AsnLeuArgGlyCysGlyLeuTyr350GACTGCTTCATGGACTCTTTGCTGTTGATGTTGATCTCCTGGTAGCATGACCTTTGGCCT1173TTGTAAGACACACAGCCTTTCTGTACCAAGCCCCTGTCTAACCTACGACCCCAGAGTGAC1233TGACGGCTGTGTATTTCTGTAGAATGCTGTAGAATACAGTTTTAGTTGAGTCTTTACATT1293TAGAACTTGAAAGGATTTTAAAAAACAAAACAAAAACCATTTCTCATGTGCTTTGTAGCT1353TTAAAAGAAAAAAGGAAAACTCACCATTTAATCCATATTTCCTTTTTATTTTGAAGTTTA1413AAAAAAAAATGTCTGTACCCACACCCTCCCCCTTCCCCACCTCAGCAGAACTGGGGCTGG1473CACACAGAGGCAGTGCTGGGCCTGGCGCCTCCCAGGGCTTCTGTGCAGCCCATGGCTGGT1533GGGAACATGTCAGGCTAGTCTGTCTAGAAGGCCACTGGCCACTGTACCCACCCTTCCCCA1593TGCCTGTGGGCTGCCCAGACACCTCATATACCACCAGGCAGTGGCAGCTCCGCCCTGCTC1653AGCCATGCGACTCCAAACACACTCAAAGTTTGCGTAGAAAAAGCACAGCTCTGGCAGGGG1713TAGCTGCCACAGACAACGCTCATCACCTATAGAAATCCAGCCCTATAGAAGCAATTCACC1773CAGCCCCTTCCTACACTCCCTTTGTGTTGTTAACTTTTTGGTTTTTCTGGTCCTAGTGAG1833TGCCTCCCATGCATACCTGACCAGCTCTGCCAGTGTCTGGGGTCTGGGGAACAGGGGTTG1893TGTGGTTTGGTTTTTGG1910(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 3:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 15(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 3:AspAlaValThrAspIleIleIleAlaLysAsnLeuArgGlyCys151015(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 4:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 3(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 4:MetGlyCys(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 5:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 18(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 5:IleGluLysAsnLeuLysGluAspGlyIleSerAlaAlaLysAspVal151015LysLeu(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 6:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 47(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 6:LysLysLysGlnTyrThrSerIleHisHisGlyValValGluValAsp151015AlaAlaValThrProGluGluArgHisLeuSerLysMetGlnGlnAsn202530GlyTyrGluAsnProThrTyrLysPhePheGluGlnMetGlnAsn354045(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 7:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 10(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 7:ThrValIleValIleThrLeuValMetLeu1510(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 8:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 24(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 8:GlyAlaIleIleGlyLeuMetValGlyGlyValValIleAlaThrVal151015IleValIleThrLeuValMetLeu20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 9:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 2085(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 9:ATGCTGCCCGGTTTGGCACTGCTCCTGCTGGCCGCCTGGACGGCTCGG48MetLeuProGlyLeuAlaLeuLeuLeuLeuAlaAlaTrpThrAlaArg151015GCGCTGGAGGTACCCACTGATGGTAATGCTGGCCTGCTGGCTGAACCC96AlaLeuGluValProThrAspGlyAsnAlaGlyLeuLeuAlaGluPro202530CAGATTGCCATGTTCTGTGGCAGACTGAACATGCACATGAATGTCCAG144GlnIleAlaMetPheCysGlyArgLeuAsnMetHisMetAsnValGln354045AATGGGAAGTGGGATTCAGATCCATCAGGGACCAAAACCTGCATTGAT192AsnGlyLysTrpAspSerAspProSerGlyThrLysThrCysIleAsp505560ACCAAGGAAGGCATCCTGCAGTATTGCCAAGAAGTCTACCCTGGACTG240ThrLysGluGlyIleLeuGlnTyrCysGlnGluValTyrProGlyLeu65707580CAGATCACCAATGTGGTAGAAGCCAACCAACCAGTGACCATCCAGAAC288GlnIleThrAsnValValGluAlaAsnGlnProValThrIleGlnAsn859095TGGTGCAAGCGGGGCCGCAAGCAGTGCAAGACCCATCCCCACTTTGTG336TrpCysLysArgGlyArgLysGlnCysLysThrHisProHisPheVal100105110ATTCCCTACCGCTGCTTAGTTGGTGAGTTTGTAAGTGATGCCCTTCTC384IleProTyrArgCysLeuValGlyGluPheValSerAspAlaLeuLeu115120125GTTCCTGACAAGTGCAAATTCTTACACCAGGAGAGGATGGATGTTTGC432ValProAspLysCysLysPheLeuHisGlnGluArgMetAspValCys130135140GAAACTCATCTTCACTGGCACACCGTCGCCAAAGAGACATGCAGTGAG480GluThrHisLeuHisTrpHisThrValAlaLysGluThrCysSerGlu145150155160AAGAGTACCAACTTGCATGACTACGGCATGTTGCTGCCCTGCGGAATT528LysSerThrAsnLeuHisAspTyrGlyMetLeuLeuProCysGlyIle165170175GACAAGTTCCGAGGGGTAGAGTTTGTGTGTTGCCCACTGGCTGAAGAA576AspLysPheArgGlyValGluPheValCysCysProLeuAlaGluGlu180185190AGTGACAATGTGGATTCTGCTGATGCGGAGGAGGATGACTGCGATGTC624SerAspAsnValAspSerAlaAspAlaGluGluAspAspCysAspVal195200205TGGTGGGGCGGAGCAGACACAGACTATGCAGATGGGAGTGAAGACAAA672TrpTrpGlyGlyAlaAspThrAspTyrAlaAspGlySerGluAspLys210215220GTAGTAGAAGTAGCAGAGGAGGAAGAAGTGGCTGAGGTGGAAGAAGAA720ValValGluValAlaGluGluGluGluValAlaGluValGluGluGlu225230235240GAAGCCGATGATGACGAGGACGATGAGGATGGTGATGAGGTAGAGGAA768GluAlaAspAspAspGluAspAspGluAspGlyAspGluValGluGlu245250255GAGGCTGAGGAACCCTACGAAGAAGCCACAGAGAGAACCACCAGCATT816GluAlaGluGluProTyrGluGluAlaThrGluArgThrThrSerIle260265270GCCACCACCACCACCACCACCACAGAGTCTGTGGAAGAGGTGGTTCGA864AlaThrThrThrThrThrThrThrGluSerValGluGluValValArg275280285GTTCCTACAACAGCAGCCAGTACCCCTGATGCCGTTGACAAGTATCTC912ValProThrThrAlaAlaSerThrProAspAlaValAspLysTyrLeu290295300GAGACACCTGGGGATGAGAATGAACATGCCCATTTCCAGAAAGCCAAA960GluThrProGlyAspGluAsnGluHisAlaHisPheGlnLysAlaLys305310315320GAGAGGCTTGAGGCCAAGCACCGAGAGAGAATGTCCCAGGTCATGAGA1008GluArgLeuGluAlaLysHisArgGluArgMetSerGlnValMetArg325330335GAATGGGAAGAGGCAGAACGTCAAGCAAAGAACTTGCCTAAAGCTGAT1056GluTrpGluGluAlaGluArgGlnAlaLysAsnLeuProLysAlaAsp340345350AAGAAGGCAGTTATCCAGCATTTCCAGGAGAAAGTGGAATCTTTGGAA1104LysLysAlaValIleGlnHisPheGlnGluLysValGluSerLeuGlu355360365CAGGAAGCAGCCAACGAGAGACAGCAGCTGGTGGAGACACACATGGCC1152GlnGluAlaAlaAsnGluArgGlnGlnLeuValGluThrHisMetAla370375380AGAGTGGAAGCCATGCTCAATGACCGCCGCCGCCTGGCCCTGGAGAAC1200ArgValGluAlaMetLeuAsnAspArgArgArgLeuAlaLeuGluAsn385390395400TACATCACCGCTCTGCAGGCTGTTCCTCCTCGGCCTCGTCACGTGTTC1248TyrIleThrAlaLeuGlnAlaValProProArgProArgHisValPhe405410415AATATGCTAAAGAAGTATGTCCGCGCAGAACAGAAGGACAGACAGCAC1296AsnMetLeuLysLysTyrValArgAlaGluGlnLysAspArgGlnHis420425430ACCCTGAAGCATTTCGAGCATGTGCGCATGGTGGATCCCAAGAAAGCC1344ThrLeuLysHisPheGluHisValArgMetValAspProLysLysAla435440445GCTCAGATCCGGTCCCAGGTTATGACACACCTCCGTGTGATTTATGAG1392AlaGlnIleArgSerGlnValMetThrHisLeuArgValIleTyrGlu450455460CGCATGAATCAGTCTCTCTCCCTGCTCTACAACGTGCCTGCAGTGGCC1440ArgMetAsnGlnSerLeuSerLeuLeuTyrAsnValProAlaValAla465470475480GAGGAGATTCAGGATGAAGTTGATGAGCTGCTTCAGAAAGAGCAAAAC1488GluGluIleGlnAspGluValAspGluLeuLeuGlnLysGluGlnAsn485490495TATTCAGATGACGTCTTGGCCAACATGATTAGTGAACCAAGGATCAGT1536TyrSerAspAspValLeuAlaAsnMetIleSerGluProArgIleSer500505510TACGGAAACGATGCTCTCATGCCATCTTTGACCGAAACGAAAACCACC1584TyrGlyAsnAspAlaLeuMetProSerLeuThrGluThrLysThrThr515520525GTGGAGCTCCTTCCCGTGAATGGAGAGTTCAGCCTGGACGATCTCCAG1632ValGluLeuLeuProValAsnGlyGluPheSerLeuAspAspLeuGln530535540CCGTGGCATTCTTTTGGGGCTGACTCTGTGCCAGCCAACACAGAAAAC1680ProTrpHisSerPheGlyAlaAspSerValProAlaAsnThrGluAsn545550555560GAAGTTGAGCCTGTTGATGCCCGCCCTGCTGCCGACCGAGGACTGACC1728GluValGluProValAspAlaArgProAlaAlaAspArgGlyLeuThr565570575ACTCGACCAGGTTCTGGGTTGACAAATATCAAGACGGAGGAGATCTCT1776ThrArgProGlySerGlyLeuThrAsnIleLysThrGluGluIleSer580585590GAAGTGAAGATGGATGCAGAATTCCGACATGACTCAGGATATGAAGTT1824GluValLysMetAspAlaGluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyrGluVal595600605CATCATCAAAAATTGGTGTTCTTTGCAGAAGATGTGGGTTCAAACAAA1872HisHisGlnLysLeuValPhePheAlaGluAspValGlySerAsnLys610615620GGTGCAATCATTGGACTCATGGTGGGCGGTGTTGTCATAGCGACAGTG1920GlyAlaIleIleGlyLeuMetValGlyGlyValValIleAlaThrVal625630635640ATCGTCATCACCTTGGTGATGCTGAAGAAGAAACAGTACACATCCATT1968IleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuLysLysLysGlnTyrThrSerIle645650655CATCATGGTGTGGTGGAGGTTGACGCCGCTGTCACCCCAGAGGAGCGC2016HisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArg660665670CACCTGTCCAAGATGCAGCAGAACGGCTACGAAAATCCAACCTACAAG2064HisLeuSerLysMetGlnGlnAsnGlyTyrGluAsnProThrTyrLys675680685TTCTTTGAGCAGATGCAGAAC2085PhePheGluGlnMetGlnAsn690695(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 10:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 16(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 10:LysLeuLeuLeuLeuGlyAlaGlyGluSerGlyLysSerThrIleVal151015(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 11:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 10(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 11:MetLeuProGlyLeuAlaLeuLeuLeuLeu1510(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 12:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 10(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 12:AspAlaGluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyr1510(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 13:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 19(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 13:MetGlnGlnAsnGlyTyrGluAsnProThrTyrLysPhePheGluGln151015MetGlnAsn(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 14:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 19(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 14:HisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArgHis151015LeuSerLys(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 15:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 18(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 15:GlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArgHisLeu151015SerLys(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 16:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 15(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 16:HisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGlu151015(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 17:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 26(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 17:LysGlnTyrThrSerIleHisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAla151015ValThrProGluGluArgHisLeuSerLys2025(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 18:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 30(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 18:ThrValIleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuHisHisGlyValValGlu151015ValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArgHisLeuSerLys202530(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 19:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 36(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 19:CCACGCAGGATCACGGGATCCATGCTGCCCAGCTTG36(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 20:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 6(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 20:GGATCC6(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 21:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 36(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 21:CAGTACACATCCATCTGATGACATCATGGCGTGGTG36(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 22:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 35(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 22:CGCCATCTCTCCAGTGATGAATGCAGCAGAACGGA35(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 23:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 656(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 23:MetLeuProGlyLeuAlaLeuLeuLeuLeuAlaAlaTrpThrAlaArg151015AlaLeuGluValProThrAspGlyAsnAlaGlyLeuLeuAlaGluPro202530GlnIleAlaMetPheCysGlyArgLeuAsnMetHisMetAsnValGln354045AsnGlyLysTrpAspSerAspProSerGlyThrLysThrCysIleAsp505560ThrLysGluGlyIleLeuGlnTyrCysGlnGluValTyrProGlyLeu65707580GlnIleThrAsnValValGluAlaAsnGlnProValThrIleGlnAsn859095TrpCysLysArgGlyArgLysGlnCysLysThrHisProHisPheVal100105110IleProTyrArgCysLeuValGlyGluPheValSerAspAlaLeuLeu115120125ValProAspLysCysLysPheLeuHisGlnGluArgMetAspValCys130135140GluThrHisLeuHisTrpHisThrValAlaLysGluThrCysSerGlu145150155160LysSerThrAsnLeuHisAspTyrGlyMetLeuLeuProCysGlyIle165170175AspLysPheArgGlyValGluPheValCysCysProLeuAlaGluGlu180185190SerAspAsnValAspSerAlaAspAlaGluGluAspAspCysAspVal195200205TrpTrpGlyGlyAlaAspThrAspTyrAlaAspGlySerGluAspLys210215220ValValGluValAlaGluGluGluGluValAlaGluValGluGluGlu225230235240GluAlaAspAspAspGluAspAspGluAspGlyAspGluValGluGlu245250255GluAlaGluGluProTyrGluGluAlaThrGluArgThrThrSerIle260265270AlaThrThrThrThrThrThrThrGluSerValGluGluValValArg275280285ValProThrThrAlaAlaSerThrProAspAlaValAspLysTyrLeu290295300GluThrProGlyAspGluAsnGluHisAlaHisPheGlnLysAlaLys305310315320GluArgLeuGluAlaLysHisArgGluArgMetSerGlnValMetArg325330335GluTrpGluGluAlaGluArgGlnAlaLysAsnLeuProLysAlaAsp340345350LysLysAlaValIleGlnHisPheGlnGluLysValGluSerLeuGlu355360365GlnGluAlaAlaAsnGluArgGlnGlnLeuValGluThrHisMetAla370375380ArgValGluAlaMetLeuAsnAspArgArgArgLeuAlaLeuGluAsn385390395400TyrIleThrAlaLeuGlnAlaValProProArgProArgHisValPhe405410415AsnMetLeuLysLysTyrValArgAlaGluGlnLysAspArgGlnHis420425430ThrLeuLysHisPheGluHisValArgMetValAspProLysLysAla435440445AlaGlnIleArgSerGlnValMetThrHisLeuArgValIleTyrGlu450455460ArgMetAsnGlnSerLeuSerLeuLeuTyrAsnValProAlaValAla465470475480GluGluIleGlnAspGluValAspGluLeuLeuGlnLysGluGlnAsn485490495TyrSerAspAspValLeuAlaAsnMetIleSerGluProArgIleSer500505510TyrGlyAsnAspAlaLeuMetProSerLeuThrGluThrLysThrThr515520525ValGluLeuLeuProValAsnGlyGluPheSerLeuAspAspLeuGln530535540ProTrpHisSerPheGlyAlaAspSerValProAlaAsnThrGluAsn545550555560GluValGluProValAspAlaArgProAlaAlaAspArgGlyLeuThr565570575ThrArgProGlySerGlyLeuThrAsnIleLysThrGluGluIleSer580585590GluValLysMetAspAlaGluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyrGluVal595600605HisHisGlnLysLeuValPhePheAlaGluAspValGlySerAsnLys610615620GlyAlaIleIleGlyLeuMetValGlyGlyValValIleAlaThrVal625630635640IleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuLysLysLysGlnTyrThrSerIle645650655(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 24:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 676(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 24:MetLeuProGlyLeuAlaLeuLeuLeuLeuAlaAlaTrpThrAlaArg151015AlaLeuGluValProThrAspGlyAsnAlaGlyLeuLeuAlaGluPro202530GlnIleAlaMetPheCysGlyArgLeuAsnMetHisMetAsnValGln354045AsnGlyLysTrpAspSerAspProSerGlyThrLysThrCysIleAsp505560ThrLysGluGlyIleLeuGlnTyrCysGlnGluValTyrProGlyLeu65707580GlnIleThrAsnValValGluAlaAsnGlnProValThrIleGlnAsn859095TrpCysLysArgGlyArgLysGlnCysLysThrHisProHisPheVal100105110IleProTyrArgCysLeuValGlyGluPheValSerAspAlaLeuLeu115120125ValProAspLysCysLysPheLeuHisGlnGluArgMetAspValCys130135140GluThrHisLeuHisTrpHisThrValAlaLysGluThrCysSerGlu145150155160LysSerThrAsnLeuHisAspTyrGlyMetLeuLeuProCysGlyIle165170175AspLysPheArgGlyValGluPheValCysCysProLeuAlaGluGlu180185190SerAspAsnValAspSerAlaAspAlaGluGluAspAspCysAspVal195200205TrpTrpGlyGlyAlaAspThrAspTyrAlaAspGlySerGluAspLys210215220ValValGluValAlaGluGluGluGluValAlaGluValGluGluGlu225230235240GluAlaAspAspAspGluAspAspGluAspGlyAspGluValGluGlu245250255GluAlaGluGluProTyrGluGluAlaThrGluArgThrThrSerIle260265270AlaThrThrThrThrThrThrThrGluSerValGluGluValValArg275280285ValProThrThrAlaAlaSerThrProAspAlaValAspLysTyrLeu290295300GluThrProGlyAspGluAsnGluHisAlaHisPheGlnLysAlaLys305310315320GluArgLeuGluAlaLysHisArgGluArgMetSerGlnValMetArg325330335GluTrpGluGluAlaGluArgGlnAlaLysAsnLeuProLysAlaAsp340345350LysLysAlaValIleGlnHisPheGlnGluLysValGluSerLeuGlu355360365GlnGluAlaAlaAsnGluArgGlnGlnLeuValGluThrHisMetAla370375380ArgValGluAlaMetLeuAsnAspArgArgArgLeuAlaLeuGluAsn385390395400TyrIleThrAlaLeuGlnAlaValProProArgProArgHisValPhe405410415AsnMetLeuLysLysTyrValArgAlaGluGlnLysAspArgGlnHis420425430ThrLeuLysHisPheGluHisValArgMetValAspProLysLysAla435440445AlaGlnIleArgSerGlnValMetThrHisLeuArgValIleTyrGlu450455460ArgMetAsnGlnSerLeuSerLeuLeuTyrAsnValProAlaValAla465470475480GluGluIleGlnAspGluValAspGluLeuLeuGlnLysGluGlnAsn485490495TyrSerAspAspValLeuAlaAsnMetIleSerGluProArgIleSer500505510TyrGlyAsnAspAlaLeuMetProSerLeuThrGluThrLysThrThr515520525ValGluLeuLeuProValAsnGlyGluPheSerLeuAspAspLeuGln530535540ProTrpHisSerPheGlyAlaAspSerValProAlaAsnThrGluAsn545550555560GluValGluProValAspAlaArgProAlaAlaAspArgGlyLeuThr565570575ThrArgProGlySerGlyLeuThrAsnIleLysThrGluGluIleSer580585590GluValLysMetAspAlaGluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyrGluVal595600605HisHisGlnLysLeuValPhePheAlaGluAspValGlySerAsnLys610615620GlyAlaIleIleGlyLeuMetValGlyGlyValValIleAlaThrVal625630635640IleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuLysLysLysGlnTyrThrSerIle645650655HisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArg660665670HisLeuSerLys675(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 25:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 58(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 25:AlaAspSerValProAlaAsnThrGluAsnGluValGluProValAsp151015AlaArgProAlaAlaAspArgGlyLeuThrThrArgProGlySerGly202530LeuThrAsnIleLysThrGluGluIleSerGluValLysMetAspAla354045GluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyrGluVal5055(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 26:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 56(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 26:ValIleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuLysLysLysGlnTyrThrSer151015IleHisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGlu202530ArgHisLeuSerLysMetGlnGlnAsnGlyTyrGluAsnProThrTyr354045LysPhePheGluGlnMetGlnAsn5055(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 27:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 695(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 27:MetLeuProGlyLeuAlaLeuLeuLeuLeuAlaAlaTrpThrAlaArg151015AlaLeuGluValProThrAspGlyAsnAlaGlyLeuLeuAlaGluPro202530GlnIleAlaMetPheCysGlyArgLeuAsnMetHisMetAsnValGln354045AsnGlyLysTrpAspSerAspProSerGlyThrLysThrCysIleAsp505560ThrLysGluGlyIleLeuGlnTyrCysGlnGluValTyrProGlyLeu65707580GlnIleThrAsnValValGluAlaAsnGlnProValThrIleGlnAsn859095TrpCysLysArgGlyArgLysGlnCysLysThrHisProHisPheVal100105110IleProTyrArgCysLeuValGlyGluPheValSerAspAlaLeuLeu115120125ValProAspLysCysLysPheLeuHisGlnGluArgMetAspValCys130135140GluThrHisLeuHisTrpHisThrValAlaLysGluThrCysSerGlu145150155160LysSerThrAsnLeuHisAspTyrGlyMetLeuLeuProCysGlyIle165170175AspLysPheArgGlyValGluPheValCysCysProLeuAlaGluGlu180185190SerAspAsnValAspSerAlaAspAlaGluGluAspAspCysAspVal195200205TrpTrpGlyGlyAlaAspThrAspTyrAlaAspGlySerGluAspLys210215220ValValGluValAlaGluGluGluGluValAlaGluValGluGluGlu225230235240GluAlaAspAspAspGluAspAspGluAspGlyAspGluValGluGlu245250255GluAlaGluGluProTyrGluGluAlaThrGluArgThrThrSerIle260265270AlaThrThrThrThrThrThrThrGluSerValGluGluValValArg275280285ValProThrThrAlaAlaSerThrProAspAlaValAspLysTyrLeu290295300GluThrProGlyAspGluAsnGluHisAlaHisPheGlnLysAlaLys305310315320GluArgLeuGluAlaLysHisArgGluArgMetSerGlnValMetArg325330335GluTrpGluGluAlaGluArgGlnAlaLysAsnLeuProLysAlaAsp340345350LysLysAlaValIleGlnHisPheGlnGluLysValGluSerLeuGlu355360365GlnGluAlaAlaAsnGluArgGlnGlnLeuValGluThrHisMetAla370375380ArgValGluAlaMetLeuAsnAspArgArgArgLeuAlaLeuGluAsn385390395400TyrIleThrAlaLeuGlnAlaValProProArgProArgHisValPhe405410415AsnMetLeuLysLysTyrValArgAlaGluGlnLysAspArgGlnHis420425430ThrLeuLysHisPheGluHisValArgMetValAspProLysLysAla435440445AlaGlnIleArgSerGlnValMetThrHisLeuArgValIleTyrGlu450455460ArgMetAsnGlnSerLeuSerLeuLeuTyrAsnValProAlaValAla465470475480GluGluIleGlnAspGluValAspGluLeuLeuGlnLysGluGlnAsn485490495TyrSerAspAspValLeuAlaAsnMetIleSerGluProArgIleSer500505510TyrGlyAsnAspAlaLeuMetProSerLeuThrGluThrLysThrThr515520525ValGluLeuLeuProValAsnGlyGluPheSerLeuAspAspLeuGln530535540ProTrpHisSerPheGlyAlaAspSerValProAlaAsnThrGluAsn545550555560GluValGluProValAspAlaArgProAlaAlaAspArgGlyLeuThr565570575ThrArgProGlySerGlyLeuThrAsnIleLysThrGluGluIleSer580585590GluValLysMetAspAlaGluPheArgHisAspSerGlyTyrGluVal595600605HisHisGlnLysLeuValPhePheAlaGluAspValGlySerAsnLys610615620GlyAlaIleIleGlyLeuMetValGlyGlyValValIleAlaThrVal625630635640IleValIleThrLeuValMetLeuLysLysLysGlnTyrThrSerIle645650655HisHisGlyValValGluValAspAlaAlaValThrProGluGluArg660665670HisLeuSerLysMetGlnGlnAsnGlyTyrGluAsnProThrTyrLys675680685PhePheGluGlnMetGlnAsn690695(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 28:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 2274(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 28:GCTGTGGCAGGGAAGGGGCCACCATGGGATGTACGCTGAGCGCAGAGGAG50MetGlyCysThrLeuSerAlaGluGlu15AGAGCCGCCCTCGAGCGGAGCAAGGCGATTGAGAAAAACCTCAAAGAA98ArgAlaAlaLeuGluArgSerLysAlaIleGluLysAsnLeuLysGlu10152025GATGGCATCAGCGCCGCCAAAGACGTGAAATTACTCCTGCTGGGGGCT146AspGlyIleSerAlaAlaLysAspValLysLeuLeuLeuLeuGlyAla303540GGAGAATCAGGAAAAAGCACCATTGTGAAGCAGATGAAGATCATCCAT194GlyGluSerGlyLysSerThrIleValLysGlnMetLysIleIleHis455055GAAGATGGCTTCTCTGGGGAAGACGTGAAGCAGTACAAGCCTGTGGTC242GluAspGlyPheSerGlyGluAspValLysGlnTyrLysProValVal606570TACAGCAACACCATCCAGTCTCTGGCGGCCATTGTCCGGGCCATGGAC290TyrSerAsnThrIleGlnSerLeuAlaAlaIleValArgAlaMetAsp758085ACTTTGGGCGTGGAGTATGGTGACAAGGAGAGGAAGACGGACTCCAAG338ThrLeuGlyValGluTyrGlyAspLysGluArgLysThrAspSerLys9095100105ATGGTGTGTGACGTGGTGAGTCGTATGGAAGACACTGAACCGTTCTCT386MetValCysAspValValSerArgMetGluAspThrGluProPheSer110115120GCAGAACTTCTTTCTGCCATGATGCGACTCTGGGGCGACTCGGGGATC434AlaGluLeuLeuSerAlaMetMetArgLeuTrpGlyAspSerGlyIle125130135CAGGAGTGCTTCAACCGATCTCGGGAGTATCAGCTCAATGACTCTGCC482GlnGluCysPheAsnArgSerArgGluTyrGlnLeuAsnAspSerAla140145150AAATACTACCTGGACAGCCTGGATCGGATTGGAGCCGGTGACTACCAG530LysTyrTyrLeuAspSerLeuAspArgIleGlyAlaGlyAspTyrGln155160165CCCACTGAGCAGGACATCCTCCGAACCAGAGTCAAAACAACTGGCATC578ProThrGluGlnAspIleLeuArgThrArgValLysThrThrGlyIle170175180185GTAGAAACCCACTTCACCTTCAAGAACCTCCACTTCAGGCTGTTTGAC626ValGluThrHisPheThrPheLysAsnLeuHisPheArgLeuPheAsp190195200GTCGGGGGCCAGCGATCTGAACGCAAGAAGTGGATCCACTGCTTTGAG674ValGlyGlyGlnArgSerGluArgLysLysTrpIleHisCysPheGlu205210215GATGTCACGGCCATCATCTTCTGTGTCGCACTCAGCGGCTATGACCAG722AspValThrAlaIleIlePheCysValAlaLeuSerGlyTyrAspGln220225230GTGCTCCACGAGGACGAAACCACGAACCGCATGCACGAATCCCTGAAG770ValLeuHisGluAspGluThrThrAsnArgMetHisGluSerLeuLys235240245CTCTTCGACAGCATCTGCAACAACAAGTGGTTCACAGACACATCTATT818LeuPheAspSerIleCysAsnAsnLysTrpPheThrAspThrSerIle250255260265ATCCTGTTTCTCAACAAGAAGGACATATTTGAGGAGAAGATCAAGAAG866IleLeuPheLeuAsnLysLysAspIlePheGluGluLysIleLysLys270275280TCCCCACTCACCATCTGCTTTCCTGAATACACACGCCCCAGTGCCTTC914SerProLeuThrIleCysPheProGluTyrThrGlyProSerAlaPhe285290295ACAGAAGCTGTGGCTCACATCCAAGGGCAGTATGAGAGTAAGAATAAG962ThrGluAlaValAlaHisIleGlnGlyGlnTyrGluSerLysAsnLys300305310TCAGCTCACAAGGAAGTCTACAGCCATGTCACCTGTGCCACGGACACC1010SerAlaHisLysGluValTyrSerHisValThrCysAlaThrAspThr315320325AACAACATCCAATTCGTCTTTGATGCCGTGACAGATGTCATCATCGCC1058AsnAsnIleGlnPheValPheAspAlaValThrAspValIleIleAla330335340345AAAAACCTACGGGGCTGTGGACTCTACTGAGCCCTGGCCTCCTACCC1105LysAsnLeuArgGlyCysGlyLeuTyr350AGCCTGCCACTCACTCCTCCCCTGGACCCAGAGCTCTGTCACTGCTCAGATGCCCTGTTA1165ACTGAAGAAAACCTGGAGGCTAGCCTTGGGGGCAGGAGGAGGCATCCTTTGAGCATCCCC1225ACCCCACCCAACTTCAGCCTCGTGACACGTGGGAACAGGGTTGGGCAGAGGTGTGGAACA1285GCACAAGGCCAGAGACCACGGCATGCCACTTGGGTGCTGCTCACTGGTCAGCTGTGTGTC1345TTACACAGAGGCCGAGTGGGCAACACTGCCATCTGATTCAGAATGGGCATGCCCTGTCCT1405CTGTACCTCTTGTTCAGTGTCCTGGTTTCTCTTCCACCTTGGTGATAGGATGGCTGGCAG1465GAAGGCCCCATGGAAGGTGCTGCTTGATTAGGGGATAGTCGATGGCATCTCTCAGCAGTC1525CTCAGGGTCTGTTTGGTAGAGGGTGGTTTCGTCGACAAAAGCCAACATGGAATCAGGCCA1585CTTTTGGGGCGCAAAGACTCAGACTTTGGGGACGGGTTCCCTCCTCCTTCACTTTGGATC1645TTGGCCCCTCTCTGGTCATCTTCCCTTGCCCTTGGGCTCCCCAGGATACTCAGCCCTGAC1705TCCCATGGGGTTGGGAATATTCCTTAAGACTGGCTGACTGCAAAGGTCACCGATGGAGAA1765ACATCCCTGTGCTACAGAATTGGGGGTGGGACAGCTGAGGGGGCAGGCGGCTCTTTCCTG1825ATAGTTGATGACAAGCCCTGAGAATGCCATCTGCTGGCTCCACTCACACGGGCTCAACTG1885TCCTGGGTGATAGTGACTTGCCAGGCCACAGGCTGCAGGTCACAGACAGAGCAGGCAAGC1945AGCCTTGCAACTGCAGATTACTTAGGGAGAAGCATCCTAGCCCCAGCTAACTTTGGACAG2005TCAGCATATGTCCCTGCCATCCCTAGACATCTCCAGTCAGCTGGTATCACAGCCAGTGGT2065TCAGACAGGTTTGAATGCTCATGTGGCAGGGGGCCCGGTACCCAGCTTTTGTTCCCTTTA2125GTGAGGGTTAATTGCGCGCTTGGGCTAATCATGGTCATAGCTGTTGGGCGTTGCTGGCGT2185TTTTCCATAGGCTCCGCCCCCTGACGAGATCACAAAAATCGACGCTCAAGTCAGAGGTGG2245CGAAACCGACAGACTATAAGATACCAGGC2274(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 29:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 18(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 29:AspValGlyGlyGlnArgSerGluArgLysLysTrpIleHisCysPhe151015GluAsp(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 30:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 12(B) TYPE: amino acid(C) STRANDEDNESS:(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 30:ThrSerIleIleLeuPheLeuAsnLysLysAspLeu1510__________________________________________________________________________