Abstract

The topography of the external surface of the Balb/c mouse erythrocyte has been investigated and compared to the human erythrocyte by using a series of protein radiolabeling probes. After sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the pattern of Coomassie Blue stained proteins was very similar for mouse and human erythrocyte ghosts, as was the distribution of radioactivity in protein bands after lactoperoxidase catalyzed radioiodination. The mouse erythrocyte glycoproteins identified by periodic-acid-Schiff and 'Stains-All' reagents, sialic acid analysis of gel slices, binding of 125I-wheat germ agglutinin and 125I-concanavalin A to the gels, and glycoprotein radiolabeling techniques, differed markedly from the sets of proteins labeled by radioiodination, and also differed from the human erythrocyte glycoproteins. Instead of the PAS I to PAS IV series of sialoglycoproteins characteristic of human erythrocytes, the mouse erythrocyte possesses a broad band of sialoglycoproteins with several peaks ranging in mol wt from 65,000 to 32,000. The same group of sialoglycoproteins were labeled by the periodate/B3H4-technique specific for terminal sialic acid, and the galactose oxidase/B3H4-method (plus neuraminidase) specific for galactosyl/N-acetylgalactosaminyl residues penultimate to sialic acid. These results emphasize the necessity to employ a variety of protein radiolabeling probes based on different labeling specificities, to study the membrane topography of cells which are poorly understood compared to the human erythrocyte membrane.

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