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  • Title: Lectin-binding proteins in central-nervous-system myelin. Binding of glycoproteins in purified myelin to immobilized lectins.
    Author: Quarles RH, McIntyre LJ, Pasnak CF.
    Journal: Biochem J; 1979 Nov 01; 183(2):213-21. PubMed ID: 534494.
    Abstract:
    The capacities of immature and mature rat brain myelin, bovine myelin and human myelin to be agglutinated by soya-bean agglutinin, Ricinus communis agglutinin, wheatgerm agglutinin, and Lotus tetragonolobus agglutinin were examined. The first two lectins, which are specific for galactose and N-acetylgalactosamine, strongly agglutinated immature and mature rat myelin, weakly agglutinated bovine myelin, but did not affect human myelin. The other myelin and lectin combinations resulted in very weak or no agglutination. [(3)H]Fucose-labelled glycoproteins of purified adult rat brain myelin were solubilized with sodium dodecyl sulphate and allowed to bind to concanavalin A-Sepharose and each of the other lectins mentioned above, which had been immobilized on agarose. About 60% of the radioactive fucose was in glycoproteins that bound to concanavalin A-Sepharose and these glycoproteins could be eluted with solutions containing methyl alpha-d-mannoside and sodium dodecyl sulphate. Periodate/Schiff staining or radioactive counting of analytical gels showed that most of the major myelin-associated glycoprotein (apparent mol.wt. approx. 100000) bound to the concanavalin A, whereas the glycoproteins that did not bind were mostly of lower molecular weight. Preparative polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the glycoprotein fraction that was eluted with methyl alpha-d-mannoside yielded a relatively pure preparation of the myelin-associated glycoprotein. Similar results were obtained with each of the other lectins, i.e. the myelin-associated glycoprotein was in the fraction that bound to the immobilized lectin. Double-labelling experiments utilizing [(3)H]fucose-labelled glycoproteins from adult myelin and [(14)C]fucose-labelled glycoproteins from 14-day-old rat brain myelin did not reveal any difference in the binding of the mature and immature glycoproteins to any of the immobilized lectins. The results in this and the preceding paper [McIntyre, Quarles & Brady (1979) Biochem. J.183, 205-212] suggest that the myelin-associated glycoprotein is one of the principal receptors for concanavalin A and other lectins in myelin, and that this property can be utilized for the purification of this glycoprotein.
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