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JBC, Vol. 253, Issue 12, 4116-4119, Jun, 1978
M. M. Bhargava, I. Listowsky and I. M. Arias
Several lines of evidence indicate that ligandin consists of two different
subunits. The protein dissociates into two components that are detected by
electrophoresis in a discontinuous sodium dodecyl sulfate system, or in
acid-urea gels, and by isoelectric focusing in the presence of urea. The
apparent molecular weights of the two polypeptides are 25,000 and 22,000.
Alkylated or succinylated ligandins also exhibit subunit heterogeneity and
resolved into two bands in these electrophoretic systems. Cross-linked
ligandin showed only one band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis
indicating that the two subunits are part of a heterodimeric protein rather
than monomers of two different proteins. No dansylated terminal amino acids
were detected suggesting that the NH2-terminal residues of both chains are
blocked. One mole of arginine or phenylalanine was released per mole of
ligandin after digestion with carboxypeptidase B or A, respectively.
Tryptic maps of succinylated ligandin were consistent with identical
disposition of arginine residues in both chains, but several additional
tryptic peptides were obtained with native ligandin as compared to the
predicted number if both subunits were identical. These observations are
consistent with the possibility that both subunits contain common sequences
and that a small peptide of about 25 to 30 amino acid residues is cleaved
from the COOH-terminal of the larger subunit to produce the smaller
subunit.
Studies on subunit structure and evidence that ligandin is a heterodimer
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