Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Ridley Building, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, U.K.
Abstract
1. The mucoprotein from pig gastric mucus has been purified by equilibrium centrifugation in a CsCl gradient. 2. This procedure removes the non-covalently bound protein, which is closely associated with the mucoprotein and not easily removed from it by gel filtration. 3. The purified mucoprotein is separable by gel filtration into a high-molecular-weight mucoprotein A (mol.wt. 2.3×106) and a low-molecular-weight mucoprotein B/C (mol.wt. 1.15×106). 4. These two mucoproteins have the same chemical analysis namely fucose 11.3%, galactose 26%, glucosamine 19.5%, galactosamine 8.3% and protein 13.6%. 5. Mucoprotein A contains 3.1% ester sulphate. 6. These mucoproteins are isolated without enzymic digestion and have a higher protein content than the blood-group-substance mucoproteins from proteolytic digestion of gastric mucus. Detailed amino acid analysis shows that the extra protein in the non-enzymically digested material is composed of amino acids other than serine and threonine. 7. Mucoproteins A and B/C contain respectively 130 and 9 half-cystine residues per molecule of which about 78 and 6 residues are involved in disulphide linkages. 8. Cleavage of these disulphide linkages by mercaptoethanol splits both mucoproteins into four equally sized subunits of mol.wt. 5.2×105for mucoprotein A and 2.8×104for mucoprotein B/C. 9. The sole N-terminal amino acid of mucoprotein A is aspartic acid, whereas mucoprotein B/C has several different N-terminal amino acid residues.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
145 articles.
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