Follicular 19 S thyroglobulin (molecular weight 660,000) from rat, human, and bovine thyroid tissues contains approximately 10-12 mol of phosphate/mol of protein. These phosphate residues can be radiolabeled when rat thyroid hemilobes, FRTL-5 rat thyroid cells, or bovine thyroid slices are incubated in vitro with [32P]phosphate. Thus labeled, the [32P]phosphate residues comigrate with unlabeled 19 S follicular thyroglobulin on sucrose gradients and gel filtration columns; are specifically immunoprecipitated by an antibody preparation to rat or bovine thyroglobulin as appropriate; and co-migrate with authentic 19 S thyroglobulin when subjected to analytic or preparative gel electrophoresis. Tunicamycin prevents approximately 50% of the phosphate from being incorporated into FRTL-5 cell thyroglobulin. Approximately one-half of the phosphate in FRTL-5 cell or bovine thyroglobulin can also be released by enzymatic deglycosylation and can be located in Pronase-digested peptides which contain mannose, are endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H but not neuraminidase-sensitive, and release a dually labeled oligosaccharide containing mannose and phosphate after endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H digestion. The remainder of the phosphate is in alkali-sensitive phosphoserine residues (3-4/mol of protein) and phosphotyrosine residues (approximately 2/mol of protein). This is evidenced by electrophoresis of acid hydrolysates of 32P-labeled thyroglobulin and by reactivity with antibodies directed against phosphotyrosine residues. The phosphoserine and phosphotyrosine residues do not appear to be randomly located through the thyroglobulin molecule since approximately 75-85% of the phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine residues were recovered in a approximately 15-kDa tryptic peptide or a approximately 24-kDa cyanogen bromide peptide, each almost devoid of carbohydrate. 31P nuclear magnetic resonance studies of bovine thyroglobulin confirm the presence and heterogeneity of the phosphate residues on thyroglobulin preparations.
Characterization of phosphate residues on thyroglobulin / Consiglio, E.; Acquaviva, A. M.; Formisano, S.; Liguoro, D.; Gallo, A.; Tassi, V.; Santisteban, P.; DE LUCA, Michele; Shifrin, S.; Yeh, H.; Kohn, L. D.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0021-9258. - STAMPA. - 262:(1987), pp. 10304-10314. [10.1016/S0021-9258(18)61113-5]
Characterization of phosphate residues on thyroglobulin
DE LUCA, Michele;
1987
Abstract
Follicular 19 S thyroglobulin (molecular weight 660,000) from rat, human, and bovine thyroid tissues contains approximately 10-12 mol of phosphate/mol of protein. These phosphate residues can be radiolabeled when rat thyroid hemilobes, FRTL-5 rat thyroid cells, or bovine thyroid slices are incubated in vitro with [32P]phosphate. Thus labeled, the [32P]phosphate residues comigrate with unlabeled 19 S follicular thyroglobulin on sucrose gradients and gel filtration columns; are specifically immunoprecipitated by an antibody preparation to rat or bovine thyroglobulin as appropriate; and co-migrate with authentic 19 S thyroglobulin when subjected to analytic or preparative gel electrophoresis. Tunicamycin prevents approximately 50% of the phosphate from being incorporated into FRTL-5 cell thyroglobulin. Approximately one-half of the phosphate in FRTL-5 cell or bovine thyroglobulin can also be released by enzymatic deglycosylation and can be located in Pronase-digested peptides which contain mannose, are endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H but not neuraminidase-sensitive, and release a dually labeled oligosaccharide containing mannose and phosphate after endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H digestion. The remainder of the phosphate is in alkali-sensitive phosphoserine residues (3-4/mol of protein) and phosphotyrosine residues (approximately 2/mol of protein). This is evidenced by electrophoresis of acid hydrolysates of 32P-labeled thyroglobulin and by reactivity with antibodies directed against phosphotyrosine residues. The phosphoserine and phosphotyrosine residues do not appear to be randomly located through the thyroglobulin molecule since approximately 75-85% of the phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine residues were recovered in a approximately 15-kDa tryptic peptide or a approximately 24-kDa cyanogen bromide peptide, each almost devoid of carbohydrate. 31P nuclear magnetic resonance studies of bovine thyroglobulin confirm the presence and heterogeneity of the phosphate residues on thyroglobulin preparations.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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