Effect of pepsin on partially purified pig gastric mucus and purified mucin

Abstract
Partially purified native-pig gastric mucus and purified pig gastric mucin, prepared by column chromatography and caesium chloride (CsCl) density-gradient ultracentrifugation, were subjected to pepsin digestion. The products of peptic digestion were chromatographed on Sepharose CL-2B, and fractions were assayed for carbohydrate by the periodic acid – Schiff reaction. The polymeric gastric mucin in the purified mucin samples was readily degraded by pepsin. In sharp contrast, the polymeric mucin in the partially purified mucus was relatively resistant to pepsin digestion. In 45 min, pepsin degraded 40% of the polymeric mucin in the purified samples, whereas it produced no significant degradation (in vitro. We conclude that under our experimental conditions, pepsin has little effect on partially purified mucus, and our findings indicate an inhibitor of peptic digestion is present in native gastric mucus. It is likely, but unproven, that this inhibitor is a noncovalently bound lipid present in the low-density fraction.

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