Abstract
Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) was purified from the supernatant fraction of rat liver to a homogeneous preparation by a specific elution with substrate. A specific antibody against the purified enzyme was prepared in rabbits and was shown to completely inhibit the enzyme activity and precipitate the enzyme protein of liver supernatant. With this antiserum, liver supernatants with varying specific G6PD activities obtained under several experimental conditions and supernatants from other tissues examined all formed single precipitin lines, which fused with each other in the Ouchterlony double-diffusion system. Three interconvertible microheterogeneous forms of G6PD in liver, supernatant were immunologically indistinguishable from each other. The G6PDs in participate fractions of liver were, however, distinct from the supernatant enzyme both in inhibition of the enzyme activity and in formation of precipitation by the specific antiserum. Liver supernatant G6PD, which was inactivated with various reagents or by heating, showed a simultaneous loss of ability to form precipitin line. Aggregation and disaggregation of the dehydrogenase to the tetramer and monomer, respectively, also resulted in loss of immunological reactivity. The increase in G6PD activity in the cytoplasm of carbon tetrachloride-treated or glucose casein-refed rat liver was accompanied by a proportional increase in the quantity of immunologically reactive G6PD protein.
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