Freeze-fracture study of water-soluble, standard proteins and of detergent-solubilized forms of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase |
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Authors: | M Le Maire J V M?ller T Gulik-Krzywicki |
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Abstract: | Conventional freeze-fracturing electron microscopy was used to study water-soluble proteins and different forms of Ca2+-ATPase-detergent complexes. Freeze-fracture images of solutions containing proteins larger than myoglobin showed the presence of distinct, randomly dispersed particles on smooth fracture surfaces. The distribution of sizes of these particles was closely to Gaussian, with a mean size which was correlated to the Stokes diameter. Monomeric Ca2+-ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum, solubilized by deoxycholate or a non-ionic detergent, showed a bimodal distribution of particle sizes. Even more complex distributions were found for dimeric and trimeric preparations of Ca2+-ATPase. The results can be interpreted on the assumption that the Ca2+-ATPase molecule is elongated, with an overall length of about 110 A and a width in its largest part of about 75 A. It is concluded on the basis of the presented results that freeze-fracture electron microscopy can be successfully used for morphological studies of protein molecules in solution. |
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