Abstract

Rabbit antibodies to partially purified nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase precipitated the enzyme, which remained fully active in the insoluble complexes. Precipitation of antigen-excess soluble complexes with sheep anti-rabbit γ globulin increased the sensitivity of the immunoassay. With this double-antibody assay, the enzymes from chicken erythrocytes, liver, kidney, and thymus showed nearly identical reactivity. Goose, pheasant, and turkey enzymes were highly cross-reactive with the chicken form; pigeon liver enzyme was markedly less reactive. There was no cross-reactivity with fish, amphibian, or mammalian enzymes. The specificity of the antiserum was increased by absorption of antibodies to nonenzyme proteins. The absorbed serum still precipitated the enzyme; in complement fixation assays, it reacted with an antigen that behaved like the enzyme. This antigen was detectable in whole chromatin and in the proteins extracted from chromatin by high salt or urea concentrations. Its immunological reactivity survived exposure to 0.5 m urea, but was reduced by exposure to 6.0 m urea plus 0.4 m guanidine. The enzyme was present as an inactive, partially denatured protein in nonhistone chromatin proteins prepared with these reagents.

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