1. Large peptides of bovine and guinea pig myelin basic proteins produced by limited peptic hydrolysis.
- Author
-
Martenson RE, Kramer AJ, and Deibler GE
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Amino Acids analysis, Animals, Brain Chemistry, Cattle, Chromatography, Gel, Chromatography, Ion Exchange, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Guinea Pigs, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Pepsin A, Peptide Fragments analysis, Species Specificity, Myelin Basic Protein
- Abstract
Bovine and guinea pig myelin basic proteins were cleaved with pepsin at pH 3.0 or pH 6.0 (enzyme/substrate, 1:500, w/w), and the peptides were isolated and identified. At pH 3.0 cleavage of the bovine protein occurred principally at three sites: Phe-Phe (88-89), Phe-Phe (42-43), and Leu-Asp (36-37). Minor cleavages occurred at Leu-Ser (110-111), Phe-Ser (113-114), and Ile-Phe (152-153). A study of the time course of the hydrolysis showed that the reaction was biphasic; nearly all of the protein was cleaved at Phe-Phe (88-89) before significant cleavages at other sites occurred. At pH 6.0 cleavage of the bovine protein occurred almost exclusively at a single site, the Phe-Phe bond at position 88-89, resulting in bisection of the protein. Treatment of the guinea pig protein with pepsin under the same conditions resulted in the production of peptides which were identical with those of the bovine protein in chromatographic and electrophoretic properties and in N-terminal and C-terminal residues but which differed slightly in amino acid composition.
- Published
- 1975
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