Abstract

A soluble calcium-binding protein has been isolated from the red skeletal muscle of the electric eel ( Electrophorus electricus). The purification procedure involved ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 in the presence of 45Ca 2+, and chromatography on QAE-Sephadex. This procedure resulted in the isolation of a protein which was homogeneous upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The calcium-binding protein was found to be a typical parvalbumin by the following criteria: (1) molecular weight of 11 000; (2) pl of 4.7; (3) 1.9 mol Ca 2+ bound per mol protein; K d of approx. 10 −7 M; (4) no detectable phosphorus; (5) amino acid composition included nine residues of phenylalanine, single arginine, and no tyrosine or tryptophan; (6) ε max at 259 nm; (7) 260 nm:280 nm absorbance ratio of 4.78. Only one parvalbumin could be detected in muscle. Immunoprecipitation assay revealed that the parvalbumin was a major soluble component of skeletal muscle (0.10 mg/mg soluble protein), but could not be detected in liver, kidney, brain, spleen, heart or electroplax. Comparison of the parvalbumin with a calcium-binding protein previously isolated from electroplax revealed that the two proteins were different as judged by a variety of chemical criteria. These results suggest that during embryological development of electroplax the parvalbumin is lost and that it is not required for the function of electric tissue.

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