Abstract

Gallbladder mucin may promote cholesterol gallstone formation by accelerating cholesterol monohdrate crystal nucleation in supersaturated bile. In this study, peptides were isolated from the mucin protein core by protease digestion and molecularsieve high-performance liquid chromatography. Tryptic peptides were purified by anion exchange or reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography, and amino acid compositions were determined. Tryptic peptides were (a) nonglycosylated, (b) selectively enriched in serine, glutamic acid plus glutamine, and glycine, and (c) depeleted in threonine and proline compared with native gallbladder mucin. Bilirubin derivatized with Woodward's reagent K covalently bound to purified mucin. Tryptic digestion of the mucin-bilirubin complex yielded lowmolecular-weight nonglycosylated peptides with covalently bound bilirubin. These data indicate that the mucin protein core contains at least two distinct domains. One domain is rich in threonine and proline and contains the majority of covalently bound carbohydrate. A second domain, possibly internally located, is nonglycosylated, enriched in serine, glutamic acid plus glutamine, and glycine, and binds hydrophobic ligands such as bilirubin and 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate. Hydrophobic domains on the mucin protein core may contribute to the pathogenesis of cholesterol cholelithiasis.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call