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Endocrinology, Vol 135, 624-635, Copyright © 1994 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
GR Bousfield and DN Ward
Department of Biological Sciences, Wichita State University, Kansas 67260.
We reconstituted ovine (o) LH alpha from its amino- and carboxyl- terminal fragments obtained as follows. oLH alpha was nicked at Arg46- Ser47 with Arg-C protease. Nicked oLH alpha disulfide bonds were broken by sulfitolysis, and its N-terminal peptide and C-terminal glycopeptide were separated by Sephacryl S-200 chromatography. Both fragments were mixed, reduced, and reoxidized. Reoxidation products were chromatographed on Sephacryl S-200, and an alpha-monomer fraction was recovered. The putative nicked alpha-monomer fraction was reassociated with native oLH beta, and the resulting oLH derivative was isolated by S-200 chromatography with a reduced yield of 11% (intact subunits yield, 67% oLH). This preparation was 2.6% as active as oLH in a LH receptor binding assay. Two additional oLH derivatives were prepared. Cleavage at alpha Arg46-Ser47 alone, followed by reassociation with native oLH beta, produced Arg-C-nicked oLH alpha:oLH beta (14% yield) that was 3.3% as active as native oLH. Reduction-reoxidation of Arg-C- nicked oLH alpha followed by reassociation with oLH beta produced reduced reoxidized-Arg-C-nicked oLH alpha:oLH beta (11% yield) that was 1.8% as active as oLH. These results indicated that the nicked oLH alpha monomer had been reconstituted from its N- and C-terminal fragments.
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