A gene coding for the Tac protein (interleukin-2 receptor alpha-subunit, IL-2R alpha) of the interleukin-2 receptor was constructed by chemoenzymatic gene synthesis. The gene designed for mutagenesis codes for a receptor protein where all 10 methionines are substituted by alanine, valine, leucine, and isoleucine. In addition, aspartate at position 6 is substituted by glutamate. This desmethionine IL-2R alpha and the wild-type IL-2R alpha genes were integrated into a eukaryotic expression vector and transferred into different cell lines. The recipient cell lines express both wild-type and mutant receptor proteins on their cell surfaces which are recognized equally by different monoclonal antibodies. It was possible to establish cell lines with high level IL-2R alpha chain expression by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. The wild-type IL-2R alpha expressed in LTK- cells is a glycoprotein with an apparent molecular size of about 60 kDa and a typical low interleukin-2 binding affinity of KD = 12 nM. Despite the fact that 11 amino acids are altered, no significant difference in the mutant IL-2R alpha is observed, exhibiting the same molecular size and a low interleukin-2 binding affinity of KD = 26 nM.

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