Abstract

A highly sensitive microassay method and a microscale purification system were developed to isolate the residual acid beta-galactosidase in GM1-gangliosidosis fibroblasts. The sensitivity of the microassay system, composed of a 96-well microplate and a microplate fluorometer, was 100-fold higher than that of the conventional system and the response was linear in the pmole range. Acid beta-galactosidase was characterized as a thiol enzyme which was inactivated by a mercuric compound. This enzyme was completely adsorbed on an Hg-agarose column and was easily eluted from the column by 10 mM 2-mercaptoethanol. The microscale purification system using Con A-Sepharose, PAT-Sepharose, and Hg-agarose column chromatography achieved 565- and 7,970-fold purifications of acid beta-galactosidase with an overall yields of 44% and 45% from normal and GM1-gangliosidosis fibroblasts, respectively. The purified enzyme fractions did not contain any other lysosomal enzyme activities except for a small amount of beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase activity.

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