Abstract

Rabbit antiserum produced against rat liver cytochrome H-450 was specific for cytochrome H-450. The antiserum did not react with hemolysate, microsomal and mitochondrial fractions of liver, and tissue extracts from heart, lung skeletal muscle, and testis of rat. With the monospecific antiserum, a rocket immunoelectrophoretic assay method was developed for the quantitation of the antigen with a sensitivity of 25 ng. By using rocket immunoelectrophoresis, the total amounts of the antigen found in liver, kidney, and brain of 20 rats were 33.6, 3.6, and 1.3 mg, respectively. It appears that the antigens in liver, kidney, and brain are immunologically identical. From immunological studies with subcellular fractions of rat liver, the antigen was found only in the postmicrosomal fraction. This indicates that the antigen is not a precursor or a proteolytic product of known cytochromes in mitochondria or microsomes. Therefore, cytochrome H-450 is a unique cytosolic protein found in brain, kidney, and liver.

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