Heterogeneity in human acid beta-glucosidase revealed by cellulose-acetate electrophoresis |
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Authors: | M C Sa Miranda J M Aerts R A Pinto J A Magalhaes J A Barranger J M Tager A W Schram |
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Institution: | Instituto de Genética Médica, Porto, Portugal. |
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Abstract: | Cellulose-acetate gel electrophoresis, a technique commonly used for the separation of human acid hydrolases, was applied to study heterogeneity in acid beta-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.45). With this technique, three forms of beta-glucosidase were distinguishable in extracts of several tissues. The most anodic beta-glucosidase activity (band 3) represents the broad-specificity beta-glucosidase that is not deficient in Gaucher disease and is not inhibited by conduritol B-epoxide (CBE). The beta-glucosidase activity was deficient in Gaucher disease. A third beta-glucosidase activity with an intermediate mobility (band 2) was also inhibited by CBE and deficient in Gaucher disease. Band 1 and band 2 beta-glucosidase thus represent different forms of glucocerebrosidase. By adding phosphatidylserine and sphingolipid activator protein (SAP-2), monomeric glucocerebrosidase could be completely converted into a form that comigrated with band 2 beta-glucosidase of tissue extracts. The addition of phosphatidylserine only also resulted in a changed mobility of the monomeric enzyme, but the migration in this case differed from that of band 2 beta-glucosidase of tissue extracts. The electrophoretic profile of beta-glucosidase activity of tissue extracts changed upon ethanol/chloroform extraction: the two glucocerebrosidase forms were converted into a band with a mobility identical to that of band 1 beta-glucosidase. Our findings indicate that the interaction of glucocerebrosidase with phospholipid and SAP-2 has major effects on the mobility of the enzyme in the cellulose-acetate gel electrophoresis system. The findings with the cellulose-acetate gel electrophoretic system are discussed in relation to the heterogeneity in glucocerebrosidase observed with sucrose density gradient analysis, immunochemical methods and isoelectric focussing studies. |
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