Publication | Open Access
Separation and some properties of the major proteins of the human erythrocyte membrane
158
Citations
32
References
1972
Year
Protein SecretionGlycobiologyMajor ProteinsMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyProtein PurificationMembrane TransportBioanalysisChemical PropertiesProteomicsGlycosylationProtein ChemistryBiochemistryMembrane SystemProtein TransportCell BiologySequential Extraction ProceduresHuman Erythrocyte MembraneNatural SciencesFractionation ProcedureCellular BiochemistryMedicineCarbohydrate-protein Interaction
A fractionation procedure is described which allows the isolation of three major human erythrocyte membrane proteins. Their isolation involves three sequential extraction procedures followed by gel filtration in 1% sodium dodecyl sulphate and preparative gel electrophoresis. All three proteins can be isolated from a single preparation. One of the proteins is the erythrocyte sialoglycoprotein, for which no C- or N-terminal residues were found. The other two proteins, which have not previously been isolated, have subunit molecular weights of 74000 and 93000 and contain 9 and 7% carbohydrate respectively. These glycoproteins have blocked N-terminal residues and show similarities in their chemical properties. Preparations derived from blood-group O erythrocytes contain no N-acetylgalactosamine, but similar preparations from blood-group A erythrocytes do contain this sugar. These three proteins cannot easily be solubilized by gentle aqueous procedures and represent about half of the erythrocyte ;ghost' protein. They carry a large proportion of the cell-surface carbohydrate.
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