Abstract: | Tissue-specific patterns of rat glutathione S-transferase expression have been demonstrated by in vitro translation of purified poly(A) RNAs and by protein purification. Poly(A) RNAs from six rat tissues including heart, kidney, liver, lung, spleen, and testis were used to program in vitro translation with the rabbit reticulocyte lysate system and 35S]methionine. The glutathione S-transferase subunits synthesized in vitro were purified from the translation products by affinity chromatography on S-hexylglutathione-linked Sepharose 6B columns. The affinity bound fractions were analyzed by Na dodecyl SO4-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography. A subunit of Mr = 22,000 detected in the in vitro translation products of poly(A) RNAs from heart, kidney, lung, spleen, and testis is missing from the translation products of liver poly(A) RNAs. This Mr = 22,000 subunit is present only in the anionic glutathione S-transferase fraction purified from rat heart, kidney, lung, spleen, and testis. Purified anionic glutathione S-transferase from rat liver does not contain this subunit. The relative specific activities toward a dozen different substrates also demonstrate the nonidentity between liver and kidney anionic glutathione S-transferases. In addition, among the glutathione S-transferase subunits expressed in the liver, some of them could not be detected in the other tissues investigated. Our results indicate that tissue-specific expression of rat glutathione S-transferases may occur pretranslationally. |