Abstract

C-protein is a myosin-associated protein of vertebrate striated muscle, and its function and properties have been extensively examined. However, there has been no report of C-protein of fish skeletal muscle so far. C-protein was identified in carp skeletal muscle by immunoassay using antibody against chicken C-protein, and the muscle-type specific C-protein was purified from carp ordinary and dark muscles for the first time. Although C-protein could be prepared from crude myosin by the reported procedure, C-protein degraded appreciably during the purification steps. Accordingly, C-protein was selectively extracted from the muscle with 0.15 M K-phosphate buffer (pH 5.8), and purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation, followed by AF-blue chromatography. Myosin free from the accessory proteins was obtained by diethylaminoethyl (DEAE) chromatography and used to assay the binding of C-protein with myosin. Ordinary muscle C-protein bound to ordinary muscle myosin in a saturable manner, but its maximum amount of binding was approximately twice that of dark muscle myosin. Similarly, dark muscle C-protein bound to dark muscle myosin much more than to ordinary muscle myosin. These results suggest that C-protein isoforms specifically bound with myosin isoforms originated from the same type of muscle.

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