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. 1987 Aug 15;262(23):11339-44.

Structural properties of porcine submaxillary gland apomucin

  • PMID: 3611111
Free article

Structural properties of porcine submaxillary gland apomucin

A E Eckhardt et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Porcine submaxillary gland mucin was deglycosylated with a mixture of pure glycosidases to give apomucin containing less than 1% carbohydrate. The resulting apomucin freed of glycosidases was found to contain nine amino acids: threonine, serine, glutamic acid, proline, glycine, alanine, valine, isoleucine, and arginine. Serine, threonine, glycine, and alanine comprise 77% of the composition. The molecular weight of apomucin was 96,500 as determined by gel filtration in guanidine hydrochloride. Its Stokes radius was greater than 68.6 A, a far larger value than expected for a globular protein with Mr = 96,500. Circular dichroism spectroscopy of apomucin suggests that it contains 42% aperiodic or "other" structure, 40% beta-turns, 10% antiparallel pleated sheet, and 8% helical structures. The predicted secondary structure of a 50-residue peptide from ovine submaxillary gland mucin resembles the circular dichroism predictions, being dominated by turns that would lead to an extended nonglobular structure. Analysis for the secondary structure of a 36-residue tryptic peptide derived from porcine submaxillary gland apomucin predicts a similar structure. It is concluded that apomucin is likely devoid of traditional secondary structure and serves as a scaffold upon which oligosaccharides are added in O-glycosidic linkage. When sufficient sialic acid is present in the oligosaccharides, native highly viscous mucin containing about two-thirds carbohydrate by weight is obtained.

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