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. 1978 Oct 1;175(1):227-38.
doi: 10.1042/bj1750227.

Studies on ram acrosin. Activation of proacrosin accompanying the isolation of acrosin from spermatozoa, and purification of the enzyme by affinity chromatography

Studies on ram acrosin. Activation of proacrosin accompanying the isolation of acrosin from spermatozoa, and purification of the enzyme by affinity chromatography

C R Brown et al. Biochem J. .

Abstract

1. A previously described, freeze-dried, partially purified ram acrosin preparation was fractionated on a column of Sepharose linked to the acrosin inhibitor p-(p'-aminophenoxypropoxy)benzamidine. Two acrosin fractions were obtained. 2. beta-Acrosin was homogeneous, quite stable at low pH and very stable when freeze-dried. Its molecular weight is about 38000, and it contains about six sugar residues per molecule, but no sialic acid. psi-Acrosin consisted of at least three unstable forms of acrosin. 3. When the entire purification process, starting from collection of semen, was carried out as rapidly as possible, the yield of beta-acrosin was increased and very little psi-acrosin was obtained. 4. In fresh ram semen the acrosin is present as the intra-acrosomal zymogen, proacrosin. After its extraction from spermatozoa autoproteolytic reactions convert proacrosin into beta-acrosin; psi-acrosin appears to be breakdown products of beta-acrosin. 5. When beta-acrosin was passed through a column of Sepharose linked to the non-inhibitory deamidinated analogue of the inhibitor it behaved as a hydrophobic protein. This is consistent with our view that acrosin (as zymogen) occurs in spermatozoa as a membrane-bound protein. 6. Success in the isolation of pure acrosin in high yield calls for an affinity adsorbent with the appropriate subsidiary hydrophobic properties.

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