Members of the Ly-6/uPAR protein family share one
or several repeat units of the Ly-6/uPAR domain that is
defined by a distinct disulfide bonding pattern between
8 or 10 cysteine residues. The Ly-6/uPAR protein family
can be divided into two subfamilies. One comprises GPI-anchored
glycoprotein receptors with 10 cysteine residues. The other
subfamily includes the secreted single-domain snake and
frog cytotoxins, and differs significantly in that its
members generally possess only eight cysteines and no GPI-anchoring
signal sequence. We report the purification and structural
characterization of human SLURP-1 (secreted mammalian Ly-6/uPAR
related protein 1) from blood and urine peptide libraries.
SLURP-1 is encoded by the ARS (component B)-81/s locus,
and appears to be the first mammalian member of the Ly-6/uPAR
family lacking a GPI-anchoring signal sequence. A phylogenetic
analysis based on the SLURP-1 primary protein structure
revealed a closer relationship to the subfamily of cytotoxins.
Since the SLURP-1 gene maps to the same chromosomal region
as several members of the Ly-6/uPAR subfamily of glycoprotein
receptors, it is suggested that both biologically distinct
subfamilies might have co-evolved from local chromosomal
duplication events.