Abstract
A procedure is described for obtaining large amounts of basal lateral plasma membranes from the rat duodenal epithelium. The yield is approximately 50%, and the purification factor is 18; preparations from 25 rats routinely contain 100 mg of protein. The procedure depends on mild homogenization with a nitrogen cavitation bomb, followed by removal of brush borders by sedimentation in a weak centrifugal field. Basal lateral membranes in the resulting supernatant are partially purified by differential centrifugation in a medium which approximates their equilibrium density, and then further purified by equilibrium density gradient centrifugation in a high capacity zonal rotor. Brush border membranes may be isolated from the 450 x g pellet. Since both brush border and basal lateral membranes may be isolated from the same homogenate, this preparative procedure is suitable for such analytical purposes as determinations of distribution of enzyme activities between the two surfaces of the epithelium. The large scale of the isolation procedure makes it an appropriate starting point for purification of specific basal lateral membrane components.
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