MOLECULAR ASSOCIATION OF HEMOCYANIN PRODUCED BY X-RAYS AS OBSERVED IN THE ULTRACENTRIFUGE
Open Access
- 20 November 1946
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 30 (2) , 83-99
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.30.2.83
Abstract
1. When normal, monodisperse hemocyanin (60.5S) from Limulus Rolyphemus was irradiated in neutral buffer with x-rays, several new, more rapidly sedimenting ultracentrifugal components (86S, 107S, 122S) were produced, with a corresponding loss in the amount of the unaffected protein. The amount of the effect was roughly proportional to the amount of irradiation. 2. The new resolvable components apparently represented an association of the primary particles into aggregates of 2, 3, and 4 primary particles respectively. 3. The proportional amount of hemocyanin affected decreased almost to the vanishing point as the concentration of the protein was raised to high levels. 4. The absolute effect, i.e. the total number of particles affected in a given volume, increased with the concentration of hemocyanin, at least for concentrations below 15 per cent. 5. The presence of 33 per cent horse serum during irradiation inhibited the effect on the hemocyanin almost completely, with hemocyanin concentrations of both 0.8 and 14 per cent. 6. The presence of 2.8 per cent egg albumin during irradiation lowered the effect by about 70 per cent in the case of dilute preparations (0.8 per cent hemocyanin), but by only about 25 per cent in the case of 14 per cent solutions. 7. A lowering of the solution's oxygen tension during irradiation enhanced the effect, almost doubling it in some cases. 8. The probable theoretical significance of these and other observations are discussed in the text.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Ultracentrifuge. Practical Aspects of the Ultracentrifugal Analysis of Proteins.Chemical Reviews, 1942
- INFLUENCE OF EXTRANEOUS PROTEIN AND VIRUS CONCENTRATION ON THE INACTIVATION OF THE RABBIT PAPILLOMA VIRUS BY X-RAYSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1941
- The Inactivation of Bacteriophages by X-Rays—Influence of the MediumProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1941
- The effect of X-rays on enzymesBiochemical Journal, 1940
- Reaction of Variola Vaccine Virus to Roentgen RaysScience, 1939
- The effect of ultraviolet radiation and of soft X-rays on the sedimentation behaviour and light absorption of purified human serum albuminBiochemical Journal, 1939
- ULTRACENTRIFUGATION STUDIES ON THE ELEMENTARY BODIES OF VACCINE VIRUSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1938
- AN IMPROVED AIR-DRIVEN TYPE OF ULTRACENTRIFUGE FOR MOLECULAR SEDIMENTATIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1937
- A HIGH SPEED VACUUM CENTRIFUGE SUITABLE FOR THE STUDY OF FILTERABLE VIRUSESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1936
- The Reduction of Oxygen to Hydrogen Peroxide by the Irradiation of Its Aqueous Solution with X-RaysThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1934