Abstract

A binding protein (BP) specific for gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was previously demonstrated in goldfish serum. In the present study the binding protein was isolated and further characterized. The GnRH-BP, partially purified from goldfish serum using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) under nondenaturing conditions, was concentrated in a single band, separate from all major components of serum proteins. The binding ability of the partially purified GnRH-BP was conserved; the isolated GnRH-BP specifically bound salmon GnRH and chicken GnRH-II, the native forms of GnRH present in goldfish, but not other forms of GnRH. The relative binding affinity of the partially purified GnRH-BP was [ d-Arg 6,Pro 9-NEt]-salmon GnRH > chicken GnRH-II ≥ salmon GnRH. The GnRH-BP, in raw serum or partially purified by PAGE, was specifically covalently labeled using 125I-[ d-Lys 6,Pro 9-NEt]-salmon GnRH and the bifunctional cross-linking reagent, disuccinimidyl suberate, and then subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE under reducing conditions. The location of the radiolabeled GnRH-BP on PAGE gels was determined by cutting gels into sections and counting the radioactivity, or by autoradiography; the molecular weight of the GnRH-BP was estimated to be 40 KD. The covalently labeled GnRH-BP extracted from SDS-PAGE was subjected to high pressure liquid chromatography, and it coeluted with a single protein peak of the GnRH-BP partially purified by PAGE under nonreducing conditions. These studies demonstrate that the GnRH-BP is a minor component of serum proteins in goldfish; it is a single nonglycoprotein of about 40 kDa.

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