Abstract

Eight major antifreeze polypeptides (AFP) were purified from the sera of Newfoundland ocean pout. Except for their approximately identical size (6,000 Dalton), these components were shown to be separate entities by their behaviour on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, ion exchange chromatography, gel permeation and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. They could also be divided into two cross-reactive, yet distinct, immunological groups. Amino acid analysis demonstrated that ocean pout AFP are different from all of the other antifreezes studied to date. The ocean pout AFP do not contain the abundance of alanine (60 mol%) found in winter flounder and shorthorn sculpin AFP nor the high half-cystine residues (8 mol%) observed in sea raven AFP. It is suggested that ocean pout AFP represent a new type of macromolecular antifreeze.

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