scholarly journals LABELING WITH 14C AMINO ACIDS OF ALBUMIN-LIKE PROTEIN BY RAT LIVER RIBONUCLEOPROTEIN PARTICLES

1963 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 471-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra von der Decken

Ribonucleoprotein particles were prepared by treatment of rat liver microsomes with detergents and high concentrations of KCl. They were active in incorporating 14C amino acids into protein when incubated with cell sap together with ATP, GTP, and a system to regenerate the triphosphates. The albumin of the incubation mixture, soluble at 105,000 g, and that of the fraction released by ultrasonication of the particles were studied by immunoelectrophoresis in agar gel. When the ribonucleoprotein particles were incubated with cell sap the immunological precipitation lines formed with antiserum to rat serum albumin were highly radioactive as tested by autoradiography. After zone electrophoresis on cellulose acetate, two immunologically reactive albumins were obtained which differed in their electrophoretic mobility from rat serum albumin. Labeled albumin, when purified on DEAE-cellulose columns, retained its radioactivity as tested by autoradiography following immunoelectrophoresis. On cellulose acetate this purified albumin showed an electrophoretic mobility higher than that of rat serum albumin.

1973 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yukio Ikehara ◽  
Henry C. Pitot

The polysomes involved in albumin and serine dehydratase synthesis were identified and localized by the binding to rat liver polysomes of anti-rat serum albumin and anti-serine dehydratase [125I]Fab dimer and monomer. Techniques were developed for the isolation of undegraded free and membrane-bound polysomes and for the preparation of [125I]Fab monomers and dimers from the IgG obtained from the antisera to the two proteins, rat serum albumin and serine dehydratase. The distribution of anti-rat serum albumin [125I]Fab dimer in the polysome profile is in accordance with the size of polysomes that are expected to be synthesizing albumin. By direct precipitation, it has been demonstrated that nascent chains isolated from the membrane-bound polysomes by puromycin were precipitated by anti-rat serum albumin-IgG at a level of 5–6 times those released from free polysomes. Anti-rat serum albumin-[125I]Fab dimer reacted with membrane-bound polysomes almost exclusively compared to the binding of nonimmune, control [125I]Fab dimer; a significant degree of binding of anti-rat serum albumin-[125I]Fab to free polysomes was also obtained. The [125I]Fab dimer made from normal control rabbit serum does not react with polysomes from liver at all and this preparation will not interact with polysomes extracted from tissues that do not synthesize rat serum albumin. Both anti-serine dehydratase-[125I]Fab monomer and dimer react with free and bound polysomes from livers of animals fed a chow diet or those fed a high 90% protein diet and given glucagon. In the latter instance, however, it is clear that the majority of the binding occurs to the bound polysomes. Furthermore, the specificity of this reaction may be further shown by the use of kidney polysomes that do not normally synthesize serine dehydratase. When these latter polysomes are isolated, even after the addition of crude and purified serine dehydratase, no reaction with anti-serine dehydratase-Fab fragments could be demonstrated. These results indicate that the reaction of the Fab fragments are specific for polysomes that synthesize rat serum albumin or rat liver serine dehydratase. Furthermore, they demonstrate that even with this high degree of specificity, some polysomes in the fraction labeled "free" are in the process of synthesizing rat serum albumin while bound polysomes to a significant, if not major, degree are the site of the synthesis of rat liver serine dehydratase.


1975 ◽  
Vol 146 (2) ◽  
pp. 389-393 ◽  
Author(s):  
P S Quinn ◽  
M Gamble ◽  
J D Judah

1. Two methods are described for the preparation of ‘proalbumin’ in good yields from rat liver. 2. One of the methods does not depend on the use of specific antisera. 3. The product from both methods is identical as judged by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel, isoelectric focusing on pH gradients, ion-exchange chromatography and quantitative immunoelectrophoresis. The protein also appears to be radiochemically pure by these criteria. 4. The protein is free from serum albumin as judged by isoelectric focusing and co-chromatography on ion-exchange columns. It is judged to be free from other proteins by these same criteria and by specific precipitation with antibody. 5. It is converted into serum albumin by limited tryptic hydrolysis. The albumin so produced has the same N-terminal (glutamic acid) and C-terminal (alanine) amino acids as reported for rat serum albumin. 6. A hexapeptide is liberated from the N-terminal end of ‘proalbumin’ simultaneously. It contains three arginine, one phenylalanine, one valine and one glycine residues.


1971 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Spira ◽  
A. Gordon ◽  
J. Gross

ABSTRACT The 3–8S iodocompounds of the rat thyroid were separated by means of electrodialysis on polyacrylamide gel columns into a dialyzable fraction (D) and non-dialyzable fraction (ND). The non-dialyzable fraction consisted of 4 peaks, one of which had the electrophoretic mobility of rat serum albumin. All 4 iodoproteins of the non-dialyzable fraction were shown in vitro to incorporate 3H-Leucine. The dialyzable fraction consisted of 6 iodine containing peaks, all of which incorporated 3H-Leucine. The half life and relative iodine pool size of each compound were determined and compared to the 19S thyroglobulin fraction.


1972 ◽  
Vol 247 (12) ◽  
pp. 3858-3863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theodore Peters ◽  
James C. Peters

1986 ◽  
Vol 40b ◽  
pp. 55-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peder C. Frandsen ◽  
Rolf Brodersen ◽  
Toshiaki Nishida ◽  
Curt R. Enzell ◽  
Synnøve Liaaen-Jensen ◽  
...  

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