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. 1971 Mar;121(5):781–789. doi: 10.1042/bj1210781

Release of intestinal surface-membrane glycoproteins associated with enzyme activity by brief digestion with papain

Gordon G Forstner 1
PMCID: PMC1176666  PMID: 5113492

Abstract

Rat intestinal surface-membrane glycoproteins were labelled by intraperitoneal injection of [1-14C]glucosamine 4h before the animals were killed. At this time, density-gradient centrifugation of disrupted brush borders indicated that glycoprotein radioactivity was distributed identically with sucrase, a plasma-membrane marker. Labelled brush borders were digested by papain for brief time-intervals known to release surface-enzyme particles without disruption of the unit membrane. Digestion for 5min released 90% of the surface sucrase, and almost one-half of the brush-border glycoprotein and label. On Sepharose 4B column chromatography most of the glycoprotein and label emerged as a single peak. This peak contained the most actively labelled glycoprotein in the brush border and was closely associated with maltase, sucrase, β-naphthylamidase and alkaline phosphatase. The peak was partially resolved on polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis into three bands. Each band contained a distinctive enzyme or enzyme pair, and was labelled by [1-14C]glucosamine. No periodic acid–Schiff-negative protein was observed in the peak material. Glycoproteins susceptible to brief digestion with papain are therefore closely linked to released surface-enzyme particles. Intestinal surface glycoproteins are heterogeneous with respect to molecular weight, electrophoretic mobility and function.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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