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. 1984 May 25;259(10):6622-9.

Studies on the biosynthesis of rabbit haptoglobin

  • PMID: 6725264
Free article

Studies on the biosynthesis of rabbit haptoglobin

V Chow et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Rabbit haptoglobin is a tetrameric protein consisting of two nonglycosylated alpha and two glycosylated beta chains, the latter being joined to the former and the former to each other by disulfide linkages. We describe here the results of studies that analyzed the biosynthetic pathway of rabbit haptoglobin by using cultured hepatocytes incubated with L-[35S]cysteine. The initial form of haptoglobin detected in hepatocytes exhibited Mr = 46,000, was glycosylated, and corresponded in migration to the initial species formed when the mRNA for rabbit haptoglobin was translated using the reticulocyte lysate system coupled with dog pancreatic microsomes. This one-chain intermediate was rapidly cleaved into a glycosylated form of the beta chain and into the mature alpha chain, these chains being joined by disulfide linkages. Dimerization also occurred rapidly, forming a tetrameric precursor of haptoglobin. Several other intracellular glycosylated forms of the beta chain were detected subsequently, representing intermediates formed during oligosaccharide processing prior to secretion of mature haptoglobin. Addition of tunicamycin (5 micrograms/ml) inhibited glycosylation of the initial form of haptoglobin detected, but subsequent proteolytic processing into alpha and beta chains still occurred. Our results showed that the pathway of biosynthesis of rabbit haptoglobin closely resembles that reported for rat haptoglobin ( Hanley , J. M., Haugen , T. H., and Heath, E. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 7858-7869).

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