Abstract

Synthetic peptides based on the native human sequence of surfactant protein B have been used to generate polyclonal monospecific antibodies against specific segments of the native SP-B protein. Circular dichroism analysis of the synthetic peptides shows they have a dominant helical content in structure promoting environments and tensiometric measurements indicate these peptides lower surface tension at air—water interfaces implying that they contain amphipathic alpha helical motifs. Antibodies directed against the C-terminal segment of SP-B react with the native protein in the oxidized and reduced state. Antibodies directed against the N-terminal sequence of SP-B react with the native protein only in the reduced state suggesting that this domain has a conformation dependent on disulfide bond formation.

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