Gel Filtration of Plasma from Rabbits Injected with Honomeric DES-AB 125I-Fibrin and 131I–Fibrinogen

1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Kröhnke ◽  
I. Hahn ◽  
W. Krell ◽  
G. Müller-Berghaus

We intended to study the chromatographic behaviour of soluble des-AB fibrin prepared in vitro and injected into rabbits. To prepare des-AB 1251-fibrin, purified rabbit 125I-fibrinogen was clotted by thrombin and the formed clot dissolved in Tris-buffered 3 M urea. Gel filtration of des-AB fibrin in urea through sepharose-CL 6B columns equilibrated with buffered 3 M. urea revealed monomeric fibrin. Rabbits received 131I-fibrinogen and 5 min later monomeric des-AB 125I-fibrin in urea. 30 min after injection blood was drawn and the plasma obtained filtered through sepharose-CL 6B columns eguilibrated with buffered plasma. At 20°C as well as at 37°C des-AB 125I-fibrin was eluted in the void volume in front of the 131I-fibrinogen peak. The data demonstrate that monomeric des-AB 125I-fibrin in urea injected into rabbits remains soluble in plasma. Possibly, monomerJ fibrin is converted to circulating soluble high-molecular weight fibrin aggregates or fibrin monomer changes its molecular configuration, thus showing a different gel filtration behaviour.(Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft).

1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. von Hugo ◽  
R. Hafter ◽  
A. Stemberger ◽  
H. Graeff

Crosslinked high molecular weight derivatives of fibrin (fibrinoligomers) were observed during intravascular coagulation. It was the purpose of this study to investigate the complex formation of fibrin oligomers with fibrinogen and fibrinmonomer. Fibrinogen coupled to agarose (Fg-ag) as well as fi-brinmonomer coupled to agarose (Fm-ag) was used as substrate. Soluble oligomers of fibrin were produced by incubating fibrinogen with thrombin, calcium-chloride, cystein and F XIII. They were separated from fibrinogen by gel filtration. Γ-dimers were demonstrated in fractions from the void volume and the shoulder prior to the fibrinogen peak. These fractions were subjected to affinity chromatography. Crosslinked oligomers of fibrin were not adsorbed on Fg-ag, yet adsorption occured on Fm-ag. This indicates that fibrin oligomers have no affinity to fibrinogen, yet readily form complexes with fibrin. This could mean that in vivo they compete with fibrinogen for the fibrinmonomer part of soluble fibrin monomer complexes, and hence have a tendency to increase in size.


1988 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Nagakura ◽  
T. Onda ◽  
Y. likura ◽  
T. Endo ◽  
H. Nagakura ◽  
...  

High molecular weight neutrophil chemotactic activity has been identified in resected human nasal polyps, inferior turbinates, and nasal secretions following antigen challenge. The estimated molecular weight, by gel filtration chromatography, was approximately 600,000. However, a heterogeneity of molecular weight in some patients was recognized. Our results suggest a possible role for high molecular weight-neutrophil chemotactic activity in the pathogenesis of hypersensitivity in the human nasal cavity.


1992 ◽  
Vol 118 (5) ◽  
pp. 1015-1026 ◽  
Author(s):  
M G Waters ◽  
D O Clary ◽  
J E Rothman

We have used an in vitro Golgi protein transport assay dependent on high molecular weight (greater than 100 kD) cytosolic and/or peripheral membrane proteins to study the requirements for transport from the cis- to the medial-compartment. Fractionation of this system indicates that, besides the NEM-sensitive fusion protein (NSF) and the soluble NSF attachment protein (SNAP), at least three high molecular weight protein fractions from bovine liver cytosol are required. The activity from one of these fractions was purified using an assay that included the second and third fractions in a crude state. The result is a protein of 115-kD subunit molecular mass, which we term p115. Immunodepletion of the 115-kD protein from a purified preparation with mAbs removes activity. Peptide sequence analysis of tryptic peptides indicates that p115 is a "novel" protein that has not been described previously. Gel filtration and sedimentation analysis indicate that, in its native state, p115 is a nonglobular homo-oligomer. p115 is present on purified Golgi membranes and can be extracted with high salt concentration or alkaline pH, indicating that it is peripherally associated with the membrane. Indirect immunofluorescence indicates that p115 is associated with the Golgi apparatus in situ.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 802-813 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Lieska ◽  
H Y Yang ◽  
R D Goldman

IFAP-300K is a 300,000-mol-wt intermediate filament-associated protein previously identified in the baby hamster kidney fibroblastic cell line (BHK-21) by a monoclonal antibody (Yang H.-Y., N. Lieska, A. E. Goldman, and R. D. Goldman, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 100: 620-631). In the present study, this molecule was purified from the high salt/detergent-insoluble cytoskeletal preparation of these cells. Gel filtration on Sephacryl S-400 in the presence of 7.2 M urea allowed separation of the high molecular weight fraction from the structural intermediate filament (IF) subunits desmin and vimentin, designated 54K and 55K, respectively, and other low molecular weight polypeptides. DE-52 cellulose chromatography of the high molecular weight fraction using a linear NaCl gradient in 8 M urea yielded a pure 300,000-mol-wt species which was confirmed to be IFAP-300K by immunological and peptide mapping criteria. Two-dimensional PAGE of native BHK IF preparations followed by immunoblot analysis demonstrated the inability of the IFAP-300K-immunoreactive material to enter the first dimensional gel except as a 200,000-mol-wt doublet which presumably represented a major proteolytic derivative of IFAP-300K. The molecule's pl of 5.35, as determined by chromatofocusing, and its amino acid composition were extremely similar to those of BHK cell vimentin/desmin despite their non-identity. Ultrastructurally, IFAP-300K preparations in low salt buffers existed as particles composed of one or two elliptical units measuring 16 X 20 nm. In physiological salt buffers, the predominant entities were large, elongated aggregates of the elliptical units, which were able to be decorated by using the immunogold technique with monoclonal anti-IFAP-300K. Compared with the morphology of homopolymer vimentin IF, in vitro recombination studies using column-purified vimentin and IFAP-300K demonstrated the additional presence of aggregates similar in appearance to IFAP-300K at points of contact between IFs. Antibody decoration and immunogold labeling of these recombined preparations using rabbit antidesmin/vimentin and monoclonal anti-IFAP-300K confirmed the identity of the inter-filament, amorphous material as IFAP-300K. The presence of IFAP-300K at many points of intersection and lateral contact between IFs, as well as at apparent inter-filament "bridges," in these recombined specimens was identical to that seen both in situ and in native IF preparations. No such co-sedimentation was found in vitro between actin and IFAP-300K. No effects of IFAP-300K upon the kinetics of IF polymerization were detected by turbidimetric measurements.


1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.G. Neri Serneri ◽  
G.F. Gensini ◽  
R. Abbate ◽  
D. Prisco ◽  
C. Mugnaini ◽  
...  

The increased turnover of fibrinogen and decreased platelet survival observed in many patients with history of myocardial infarction (MIP) and in patients with chronic cerebrovascular disorders (CVP) (Neri Serneri et al 1970, Harker and Slichter 1972) could suggest a hypercoagulable state. We investigated 28 MIP, 23 CVP and 31 controls for circulating high molecular weight fibrinogen complexes (HMWFC) by gel-filtration (agarose 4%, 100–200 m, column 1.5 × 90 cm, buffer Tris-Cl-citrate pH 7.6, flow 13 ml/hour, recording of OD at 280 um) of plasma beta-alanine precipitate. HMWFC are eluted in a peak at an alution volume corresponding to the void volume of the column, at which volume globular proteins of MW over 1 million are eluted. HMWFC concentration was in the controls 2.98±1.52% of the fibrinogen eluted, in MIP 8.27±2.9 % (P<0.0l) and in CVP 7.48±1.9 % (P<0.01). When HMWFC concentration was higher than 6-7%, PAA electrophoresis of the eluted complexes (after mercaptoethanol reduction) allowed to detect gamma-gamma dimers, so indicating the cross-linkage of HMWFC. Heparin treatment (12,500 U × 2) markedly lowered the concentration of HMWFC and made gamma-gamma dimers undetectable. These results indicate that in MIP and in CVP a hypercoagulability frequently exists.


1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Müller-Berghaus ◽  
J-C Bernhard ◽  
I Mahn

In two consecutive steps, thrombin cleaves the fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen producing des-A fibrin and des-AB fibrin. Labeled des-A fibrin was prepared by batroxobin and labeled des-AB fibrin by clotting of 125I-fibrinogen with thrombin. Fibrin solubilized in buffered urea was mixed with plasma containing 131I-fibrinogen (fibrin:fibrinogen ratio = 1:20). These fibrinfibrinogen mixtures were applied to sepharose CL- 6B columns eq ui librated with buffered plasma (0.0025 M EDTA, 0.1 M NaCl, 0.05 M tris, 0.005 M EACA, 2 AT U hirudin/ml, 500 KIU a protinin/ml, 0.003 M NaN3, pH 7.4). Plasma was used as an equilibration and elution medium to prevent precipitation of fibrin in the columns. At 20°C, labeled des-A fibrin as well as des-AB fibrin were eluted in the void volume as high-molecular weight aggregates (peak A) and separated from m onomeric labeled fibrinogen (peak B). At 37°C, however, des- A fibrin was eluted at the same position as monomeric fibrinogen (peak B), whereas des-AB fibrin was eluted in the void volume as at 20°C. Rechromatography of isolated fractions of peak A and peak B at different temperatures showed that monomeric fibrin isolated at 37°C formed high molecular weight material at 20°C, and high-molecular weight fibrin isolated at 20°C dissociated at 37 ° C. The results suggest that des-A fibrin solubilized in plasma in the absence of calcium ismonomeric at 37°C but forms high-molecular weight aggregates at lower temperature, whereas des-AB fibrin is oligomeric at 20°C as well as at 37°C.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (11) ◽  
pp. 1391-1395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yousef Matuk

In view of the electron microscopic evidence that silver does not penetrate cellular barriers, the distribution of radioactive silver in rat blood and subcellular fractions of liver, kidneys, spleen, and forebrain was studied. It was found that 24 h after a single intraperitoneal injection high levels of radioactivity were reached which decreased at different rates in the various tissues studied. In plasma, liver, and kidneys there was an initial rapid loss of radioactivity which was followed by a slower rate of loss. In the blood, forebrain, and spleen the loss of radioactivity was linear and somewhat slower than in the other three tissues. The cytosols of the liver and kidneys contained 60% while those of the forebrain and spleen contained 30% of the total radioactivity found in the tissue homogenates. Gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 showed that all cytosols contained two peaks of radioactivity; a high molecular weight peak which eluted just after the void volume and a low molecular weight peak. The amount of radioactivity in both peaks was, however, much lower in the chromatographic peaks of the forebrain and spleen than that found in those of the liver and kidneys. Furthermore, the spleen had a comparatively very small low molecular weight radioactive peak. In vitro experiments with liver cytosol showed similar results to those found in vivo in that the high molecular weight radioactive peak could be removed by heat. It is concluded that silver does enter cells and that silver thionein exists in the cytosols of forebrain, spleen, kidney, and liver.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
pp. 2070-2080 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Tsukita ◽  
S Tsukita

A unique high molecular weight protein (240,000 mol wt) has been purified from isolated desmosomes of bovine muzzle epidermis, using low-salt extraction at pH 9.5-10.5 and gel-filtration followed by calmodulin-affinity column chromatography. This protein was shown to bind to calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner, so we called it desmocalmin here. Desmocalmin also bound to the reconstituted keratin filaments in vitro in the presence of Mg2+, but not to actin filaments. By use of the antibody raised against the purified desmocalmin, desmocalmin was shown by both immunoelectron and immunofluorescence microscopy to be localized at the desmosomal plaque just beneath the plasma membrane. Judging from its isoelectric point and antigenicity, desmocalmin was clearly distinct from desmoplakins I and II, which were identified in the desmosomal plaque by Mueller and Franke (1983, J. Mol. Biol., 163:647-671). In the low-angle, rotary-shadowing electron microscope, the desmocalmin molecules looked like flexible rods approximately 100-nm long consisting of two polypeptide chains lying side by side. The similar rodlike structures were clearly identified in the freeze-etch replica images of desmosomes. Taken together, these findings indicate that desmocalmin could function as a key protein responsible for the formation of desmosomes in a calmodulin-dependent manner (Trinkaus-Randall, V., and I.K. Gipson, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 98:1565-1571).


1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Asbeck ◽  
van de J. Loo

Human citrated plasmas were mixed with purified 131I-fibrinogen and 131I-fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) or 125I-fibrin degradation products (fdp). After incubation with small amounts of thrombin (0.01–0.02 imits/ml Pl.), these mixtures were gel filtrated on Biogel A5m columns and the elution patterns of the 131I- and -labelled materials were determined.In control experiments without thrombin incubation, no complex formation between fibrinogen, FDP or fdp in citrated plasmas could be detected. This was even true for fdp with a higher molecular weight than fibrinogen.After thrombin incubation, up to 11% fibrin-monomer complexes were formed. Irrespective of their molecular weights, labelled fdp were not incorporated into these complexes.Only large FDP – presumably derivative X – did partially copolymerize with fibrin-monomer complexes in citrated plasmas.


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