16 research outputs found

    The 30 S lobster skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channel (ryanodine receptor) has functional properties distinct from the mammalian channel proteins.

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    The 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (Chaps)-solubilized ryanodine receptor (RyR) of lobster skeletal muscle has been isolated by rate density centrifugation as a 30 S protein complex. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of the purified 30 S receptor revealed a single high molecular weight protein band with a mobility intermediate between those of the mammalian skeletal and cardiac M(r) 565,000 RyR polypeptides. Immunoblot analysis showed no or only minimal cross-reactivity with the rabbit skeletal and canine cardiac RyR polypeptides. By immunofluorescence the lobster RyR was localized to the junctions of the A-I bands. Following planar lipid bilayer reconstitution of the purified 30 S lobster RyR, single channel K+ and Ca2+ currents were observed which were modified by ryanodine and optimally activated by millimolar concentrations of cis (cytoplasmic) Ca2+. Vesicle-45Ca2+ flux measurements also indicated an optimal activation of the lobster Ca2+ channel by millimolar Ca2+, whereas 45Ca2+ efflux from mammalian skeletal and cardiac muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles is optimally activated by micromolar Ca2+. Further, mammalian muscle SR Ca2+ release activity is modulated by Mg2+ and ATP, whereas neither ligand appreciably affected 45Ca2+ efflux from lobster SR vesicles. These results suggested that lobster and mammalian muscle express immunologically and functionally distinct SR Ca2+ release channel protein complexes

    Preparation and use of the poly-L-lysine-gold probe: a differential marker of glomerular anionic sites.

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    The conditions required for the production of a polylysine-coated gold (PL-G) complex, which shows optimal sensitivity for the demonstration of tissue anionic sites, expressed under different conditions of pH have been investigated. Problems encountered with this complex have been compared with those found with other methods of conjugation of polylysine to colloidal gold. The performance of a bovine serum albumin (BSA)-stabilized PL-G complex was examined against other PL-G conjugates, including complexes that are commercially available, for the detection of heterogeneous glomerular anionic site populations, expressed at pH 2.5 and pH 7.0
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