Abstract: | A rabbit antiserum against bovine pancreatic DNase A is used to study the immunological reaction of DNases I. As shown by double immunodiffusion, bovine pancreatic DNases A, B, C, and D are immunologically identical, so are DNases from bovine pancreas and parotid and from ovine pancreas. These DNases also behave similarly in immunotitration of DNase activity and all are tightly bound to the immunoaffinity medium, requiring an acidic buffer with 10% ammonium sulfate to dissociate. On the other hand, porcine pancreatic and malted barley DNases that do not form precipitin lines remain active in solution with the antibody; however, in spite of the lack of inhibition these DNases are retarded (but not tightly bound) in immunoaffinity chromatography, suggesting interaction with the antibody. In thin layer isoelectric focusing, the parotid DNase, purified with the immunoaffinity technique, shows only two major active components whose isoelectric points correspond to those of DNases A and C of bovine pancreas. As estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the molecular weight of parotid DNase is 34,000, approximately 3,000 more than that of the pancreatic enzyme. However, both parotid and pancreatic DNases have the same NH2-terminal leucine, an identical COOH-terminal amino acid sequence, nearly identical amino acid compositions, and almost the same peptide maps. The molecular weight difference is due to differences in the carbohydrate side chains. Results of peptide analyses indicate that parotid DNase contains two glycopeptides; pancreatic DNase has only one. In addition, both parotid glycopeptides contain glucosamine and galactosamine while the pancreatic glycopeptide has only glucosamine. |