Author:
Regoeczi Erwin,Chindemi Paul A.,Bolyos Maria,Hu Wei-Li
Abstract
Rat albumin, immunoglobulin G, transferrin, and aglycotransferrin were prepared for the comparison of their sites of degradation in rats. Iodotyramine-cellobiose was used as the residualizing label and a tyrosine-iodinated portion of the corresponding protein was used as the marker of extracellular undegraded protein. Each protein yielded a distinct distribution (or map) of catabolic activity throughout the body when expressed as percent dose accumulated per gram of tissue. The maps for albumin and transferrin were broadly comparable, whereas those for immunoglobulin G and aglycotransferrin were markedly different. As a whole entity, the liver appeared to top the list of organs/tissues contributing to the degradation of albumin and transferrin. Additional experiments aimed at facilitating the interpretation of results with residualizing labels were carried out with denatured albumin, asialofetuin, and human asialotransferrin type 3. These showed that various types of cells retained the label for markedly different periods of time. We feel, therefore, that the technique is more suited for making comparative measurements than for obtaining degradation rates as absolute values in a given anatomical location.Key words: aglycotransferrin, albumin, immunoglobulin G, protein catabolism, transferrin.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
1 articles.
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