Abstract

Purified, homodimeric creatine kinases from chicken were subjected to two-dimensional gel analysis under dissociating conditions. Each of the subunits M-creatine kinase and B-creatine kinase was resolved into a basic and an acidic subspecies with very similar mobilities in the sodium dodecylsulfate dimension. The M-creatine kinase subspecies were found in myogenic cells, fast muscle, slow muscle and the B-creatine kinase subspecies were present in heart, gizzard and brain. The creatine kinase subunits were identified in these tissues by a variety of methods like immunoreplicas of two-dimensional gels, immunoprecipitations, or coelectrophoresis with purified creatine kinase and all gave the same results. In the course of myogenic development in vitro the subspecies were synthesized coordinately and no indication was found for a differential regulation of any of the subspecies of the creatine kinase subunits. No radioactive phosphorus was incorporated into either one of the subspecies, hence phosphorylation could be ruled out as the source of heterogeneity. Furthermore, peptide mapping analysis of partial proteolytic digests did not reveal differences among the subspecies of the same subunit. Not only chicken but also rat creatine kinase displayed this type of heterogeneity. All subspecies were observed after translation of chicken RNA in a cell-free protein-synthesizing system. The heterogeneity probably might best be explained by the existence of multiple, but closely related genes for the creatine kinase subunits.

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