Identification of “Big”Human Placental Lactogen in Placenta and Serum1

Abstract
Because of increasing evidence for the heterogeneity of polypeptide hormones, studies of the molecular species of human placental lactogen (hPL) were initiated. When extracts of freshly delivered human placentas were passed over Sephadex G-100 in 0.05 .MU. ammonium carbonate, 3 immunoreactive peaks were detected. In addition to a peak corresponding to native hPL and one in the void volume, a consistent peak which eluted before hPL was present. The latter represented 2-25% of total hormonal activity and could be rerun without significant conversion to hPL. In 8 .MU. urea, the peak continued to behave as a large molecular weight form on both Sephadex chromatography and on polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis. Extraction procedures at both neutral and alkaline pH produced similar quantities of the larger material. [125I]iodo-hPL was not converted to the larger form by the conditions of extraction or analysis. These properties are consistent with a larger molecular weight, non-aggregated form of hPL. In comparison with the native hormone, the displacement curves for the larger form were parallel in radioimmunoassay studies. Sera obtained from pregnant women during various stages of gestation also showed consistent evidence for a large molecular weight form of the hormone. These observations provide direct evidence, both in placental tissue and in serum, for big hPL.

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