Protein-polysaccharides of pig laryngeal cartilage
- 30 April 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 103 (2) , 367-374
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1030367
Abstract
Protein-polysaccharides of chondroitin 4-sulphate were extracted with neutral calcium chloride from pig laryngeal cartilage that was not completely homogenized. The protein-polysaccharides were purified by precipitation with 9-aminoacridine. On zone electrophoresis in compressed glass fibre at pH 7. 2 it was separated into 2 fractions, although 2 distinct zones were not obtained. These fractions, which had already been shown to differ in their antigenic determinants, also differed considerably in amino acid composition, total protein, hexose and glucosamine contents. The fraction of higher mobility contained approx. 2 percent of protein and only traces of glucosamine. Serine and glycine accounted for over half the total amino acid residues, but aromatic, basic and sulphur-containing amino acids were not detected. The weight-average molecular weight, determined by sedimentation, was 230, 000. Assuming that there was the same sequence of neutral sugars at the linkage points as in PP-L fraction (protein-polysaccharide light fraction), the approximate molar ratio of hexose to serine suggested that most of the serine residues were linked to chondroitin sulphate chains. Sup- port for this was derived from the agreement between the weight-average molecular weight of the chondroitin sulphate-peptide after proteolysis, and the chain weight calculated from its serine content. The chain weight based on the serine content of the fraction of higher electrophoretic mobility was approximately similar. In contrast, the fraction of lower electrophoretic mobility resembled PP-L fraction in its amino acid composition, protein and glucosamine contents. The presence of glucosamine, together with the higher hexose content, suggested that this fraction contained some keratan sulphate. The relatively low molecular weight of the fraction of higher mobility enabled it to be extracted without complete disintegration of the cartilage. The unlikelihood of its being produced by autolytic enzymes is discussed.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
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