Abstract

The interaction of heparin with transferrin (Tf; bovine and rat) and the isolated iron-binding lobes of bovine Tf were investigated. Affinity chromatography of rat Tf on heparin-agarose showed that interaction depended on both the iron content of Tf and the pH of the medium. Both the iron-free and iron-saturated forms of Tf were strongly bound by the column at pH 5.6, but only the iron-free form revealed significant affinity at pH 7.4. Desialylation of Tf moderately promoted interaction, treatment with cyclohexanedione moderately reduced interaction, and succinylation abolished it altogether. In the presence of heparin, iron release from the N-terminal lobe of native bovine Tf was accelerated and from the C-terminal lobe it was slightly reduced. The heparin effect remained qualitatively the same on each lobe after their separation by tryptic digestion and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The affinity of native bovine Tf for heparin was very close to that of its isolated N-terminal lobe, thus suggesting that it is this portion of the molecule that binds to the glycosaminoglycan. It is concluded that the consequences for iron-binding strength of the two transferrin lobes are diagonally opposite when Tf is bound to heparin as opposed to its natural cell-surface receptor.

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