scholarly journals Immunoblot analysis of glutaminase peptides in intact and solubilized mitochondria isolated from various rat tissues

1987 ◽  
Vol 242 (3) ◽  
pp. 743-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
R A Shapiro ◽  
W G Haser ◽  
N P Curthoys

Antibodies were prepared against isolated rat renal glutaminase and affinity-purified against the 65 kDa peptide contained in the purified rat brain glutaminase. The affinity-purified IgGs were then used to compare the glutaminase immunoreactive peptides contained in samples that had been subjected to SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose. The purified brain glutaminase and isolated brain mitochondria contain 68 and 65 kDa peptides that exhibit nearly equivalent immunostaining. Partial proteolysis of the isolated 68 and 65 kDa peptides with Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase produced an identical pattern of immunoreactive proteolytic fragments. However, digestion of the two peptides with chymotrypsin resulted in similar, but slightly different, patterns. The pattern of immunostaining was unaltered even when the brain mitochondria were solubilized with Triton X-100 and stored for 2 days at 4 degrees C. A very similar pattern was observed when intact renal mitochondria were subjected to immunoblot analysis. However, when renal mitochondria were solubilized, the 68 kDa peptide was rapidly degraded to the 65 kDa form. At 4 degrees C this reaction occurs with apparent first-order kinetics and a t1/2 of 35 min. Degradation of the 65 kDa form of the renal glutaminase occurs with much slower kinetics, but is nearly complete after 24 h. Solubilization of mitochondria isolated from various zones of the kidney indicated that the responsible endogenous proteinase was localized primarily in the cortex. Mitochondria isolated from intestinal or renal papillary tissue contain four glutaminase immunoreactive peptides (Mr 68,000, 65,000, 61,000 and 58,000). The smallest of these peptides is identical in size with the single immunoreactive peptide observed in liver tissue.

1985 ◽  
Vol 227 (3) ◽  
pp. 719-725 ◽  
Author(s):  
M R Hyman ◽  
P M Wood

Acetylene brings about a progressive inactivation of ammonia mono-oxygenase, the ammonia-oxidizing enzyme in Nitrosomonas europaea. High NH4+ ion concentrations were protective. The inactivation followed first-order kinetics, with a rate constant of 1.5 min-1 at saturating concentrations of acetylene. If acetylene was added in the absence of O2, the cells remained active until O2 was re-introduced. A protective effect was also demonstrated with thiourea, a reversible non-competitive inhibitor of ammonia oxidation. Incubation of cells with [14C]acetylene was found to cause labelling of a single membrane polypeptide. This ran on dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis with an Mr value of 28 000. It is concluded that acetylene is a suicide substrate for the mono-oxygenase. The labelling experiment provides the first identification of a constituent polypeptide of ammonia mono-oxygenase.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chem Int

The kinetics of oxidation of methyl orange by vanadium(V) {V(V)} has been investigated in the pH range 2.3-3.79. In this pH range V(V) exists both in the form of decavanadates and VO2+. The kinetic results are distinctly different from the results obtained for the same reaction in highly acidic solution (pH < 1) where V(V) exists only in the form of VO2+. The reaction obeys first order kinetics with respect to methyl orange but the rate has very little dependence on total vanadium concentration. The reaction is accelerated by H+ ion but the dependence of rate on [H+] is less than that corresponding to first order dependence. The equilibrium between decavanadates and VO2+ explains the different kinetic pattern observed in this pH range. The reaction is markedly accelerated by Triton X-100 micelles. The rate-[surfactant] profile shows a limiting behavior indicative of a unimolecular pathway in the micellar pseudophase.


Parasitology ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Howard ◽  
J. W. Barnwell

SUMMARYPlasmodium knowlesi malaria-infected erythrocytes were radio-iodinated and several non-ionic, anionic and zwitterionic detergents were compared in their capacity to extract the labelled membrane proteins. The use of these detergents for antigen identification was tested by immunoprecipitation, after addition of Triton X-100 to some detergent extracts, using hyperimmune monkey antiserum and protein A-Sepharose. 125I-labelled antigens were specifically immunoprecipitated with all detergents tested, including the anionic detergents sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), deoxycholate and cholate; the zwitterions Zwittergent-312 and -314, CHAPS and Empigen BB, as well as several non-ionic detergents. The SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of 125I-labelled antigens varied after extraction with different detergents, there being no consistent pattern for detergents of a particular class. A total of 14 125I-labelled antigens were identified, 11 of them using Triton X-100. Some minor antigens identified with Triton X-100 were immunoprecipitated in greater amount after extraction in other detergents. Most importantly, two antigens Mr 200000 and 180000 were detected only after extraction with deoxycholate or SDS.


1986 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-22
Author(s):  
M. Kallajoki ◽  
I. Virtanen ◽  
J. Suominen

The surface membrane glycoprotein composition of human spermatozoa has been studied by introducing radioactive label into galactosyl (Gal) and N-acetylgalactosaminyl (GalNAc) residues by using the galactose oxidase/NaB3H4 method. Triton X-100 extracts and Triton X-100-resistant cytoskeletal residues were subjected to analysis by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The distribution of the radiolabel in sperm cells was studied by light-microscopic auto-radiography. The grains were evenly distributed on the cells by the labelling methods used. The Triton X-100 treatment did not affect sperm morphology at the light-microscopic level, but in transmission electron microscopy the plasma membrane covering the acrosome was removed totally, together with most of the acrosomal membranes and acrosomal contents. Plasma membrane residues were, however, always found in the postacrosomal region. Borohydride alone without oxidative pretreatment labelled two polypeptides of molecular weights (Mr) 48,000 and 43,000 in the Triton X-100-soluble fraction. When the Gal/GalNAc residues were labelled by galactose oxidase pretreatment 120,000, 105,000, 78,000 and 68,000 Mr glycoproteins were revealed. When additional neuraminidase treatment was used to remove terminal sialic acid residues, the total labelling intensity was increased two- to fivefold and additional 36,000 and 20,000 Mr glycoproteins were revealed. The Triton X-100-resistant cytoskeletal residue contained 53–75% of the total radioactivity bound in sperm cells. When these components were analysed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, all the major bands found in the Triton X-100-soluble fraction were detected and also some radioactivity was incorporated into the major bands visualized by protein staining. In the present study we describe several human sperm glycoproteins, which seem to be distributed evenly on the sperm cells. Detergent extraction, producing cytoskeletal models, appeared to leave most of the glycoproteins detectable in the extraction residues also with the apparent enrichment of a single 68,000 Mr glycoprotein.


1980 ◽  
Vol 192 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
I R Cottingham ◽  
C I Ragan

L-3-Glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.99.5) was purified from pig brain mitochondria by extraction with deoxycholate, ion-exchange chromatography and (NH4)2SO4 fractionation in cholate, and preparative isoelectric focusing in Triton X-100. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that the purified enzyme consists of a single subunit of mol.wt. 75 000. The enzyme contains non-covalently bound FAD and low concentrations of iron and acid labile sulphide. No substrate reducible e.p.r. signals were detected. The conditions of purification, particularly the isoelectric focusing step, lead to considerable loss of FAD and possibly iron-sulphur centres. It is therefore not possible to decide with certainty whether the enzyme is a flavoprotein or a ferroflavoprotein. The enzyme catalyses the oxidation of L-3-glycerophosphate by a variety of electron acceptors, including ubiquinone analogues. A number if compounds known to inhibit ubiquinone oxidoreduction by other enzymes of the respiratory chain failed to inhibit L-3-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, except at very high concentrations.


1987 ◽  
Vol 244 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
J M Jacobs ◽  
N J Jacobs

The protoporphyrinogen-oxidizing enzyme from Triton X-100 extracts of the mitochondrial and etioplast fractions of etiolated barley was purified by using ion-exchange and hydroxyapatite chromatography. The purified enzyme from both organelle fractions exhibited a Km of 5 microM and was labile to mild heat and acidification. The pH optimum (5-6) and the substrate-specificity (mesoporphyrinogen was oxidized as rapidly as protoporphyrinogen) revealed properties very different from the protoporphyrinogen-oxidizing enzyme of rat liver or yeast mitochondria, which is specific for protoporphyrinogen as substrate. The purest fractions showed a polypeptide band corresponding to an Mr of approx. 36,000 on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. This is the first purification and characterization of the enzyme from a plant, and indicates no readily detectable differences between the enzyme isolated from mitochondrial or etioplast fractions, although only the latter organelle has the capacity for both haem and chlorophyll synthesis.


1978 ◽  
Vol 176 (1) ◽  
pp. 283-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
J G Heathcote ◽  
C H J Sear ◽  
M E Grant

1. Isolated rat lens capsules synthesized hydroxy[3H]proline-containing polypeptides when incubated with [3H]proline. 2. The collagenous polypeptides synthesized during a 2 h incubation were analyzed by both gel-filtration chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and shown to have an apparent mol.wt. of approx. 180,000. 3. No evidence was obtained for conversion of these polypeptides into a lower-molecular-weight species in experiments where capsules were labelled for 2 h and chased with non-radioactive proline for up to 22 h. However, a time-dependent incorporation of the 180,000-mol.wt. species into a larger collagenous component was observed and this could be prevented by the inclusion of beta-aminopropionitrile in the incubation medium. 4. The radioactive components synthesized by the capsules correspond to subunits of the intact lens capsule and the direct incorporation of the polypeptide of mol.wt. 180,000 into deoxycholate-insoluble basement membrane was demonstrated.


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