Molecular Basis for the Temperature-Dependent Insolubility of Cryoglobulins. XII. Anomalous Nobility of Monoclonal Cryoimmunoglobulin Heavy Chains Accompanying Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis in Sodium Dooecyl Sulfate

Abstract
When subjected -to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), the fully reduced and alkylated heavy chains Isolated from three monoclonal IgG1 cryolmmunoglobullns exhibited various degrees of retardation in mobility when compared to noncryoglobuHn references. The anomalous electrophoretfc mobility was not correlated with the thermal magnitude of cryopreclpitatfon of the Individual proteins. High sensitivity analytical gel filtration In 5 M guanldine-HCl failed to distinguish heavy chains of the cryolmmunoglobullns from noncryoglobulin references, suggesting that the proteins possess equivalent molecular weights. Other possible causes for the anomalous mobility such as atypical amino add and carbohydrate composition, charge and quantitative SDS binding do not appear to be likely. It remains possible that the shape and/or charge of the SDS-proteln complexes are unique. Examination of the gel electrophoretlc nubility in SDS of fully reduced and alkylated Fab components suggests that the Fd portion of these proteins may be abnormal. The gel electrophoresis anomaly is the only atypical structural feature thus detected which is shared by these three monoclonal cryoimnunoglobulins.