Abstract

When dialysed rat serum which contains a single, low molecular weight binder for vitamin B12, rat transcobalamin II (rat TC-II), was labelled in vitro with 57Co-vitamin B12 and then incubated at 30 degrees C (pH 7-5) with vesicles of highly purified plasma membranes separated from microsomal fractions of rat liver by density gradient centrifugation, the 57Co-vitamin B12-rat TC-II complex bound to high affinity sites on the vesicles via a specific (binding after correction for 'non-specific' binding in the presence of a large excess of the non-radioactive complex), saturable, and reversible interaction. The apparent affinity constant for the binding reaction was 5-5 X 10(9) M-1. Using the same incubation conditions, free vitamin B12 also bound to the vesicles of plasma membranes via a specific, saturable, but apparently irreversible interaction. Preincubation of the membranes with free vitamin B12 did not interfere with the subsequent binding of the vitamin B12-rat TC-II complex to the membranes; however, preincubation with the vitamin B12-rat TC-II complex did interfere, to some extent, with the subsequent binding of free vitamin B12. Dialysed rat serum, perhaps the free rat TC-II in the dialysed serum, also inhibited the binding of the vitamin B12-rat TC-II complex to the plasma membranes. The relationship of the binding sites identified in this report to the absorption of vitamin B12 by rat liver, and thus their physiological significance remains unknown until further work is done, perhaps using intact hepatocytes.

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