Abstract

We purified angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) from pig and human lung and plasma for comparison of some physicochemical properties between the endothelial membrane-bound form and the soluble form of the enzyme. After affinity chromatography on Sepharose CL-4B/lisinopril, gel-filtration HPLC on Superose 12 achieved homogeneity for both forms as assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Whatever the source of ACE, the molecular weight was 300 ± 40 kDa after calibration of Superose 12 with standard globular proteins and 172 ± 4 kDa by SDS-PAGE, with or without reduction, a result suggesting interactions between the glycopolypeptide chain and the chromatographic gel possibly related to the overall shape and sugar content of the enzyme. Ion-exchange HPLC analysis on TSK-DEAE showed that the membrane-bound and soluble forms of ACE are not isoenzymes, although isoelectrofocusing did show that the isoelectric point of soluble ACE was lower than those of tissue ACE, suggesting a different glycosylation. No significant difference between porcine and human ACE appeared. HPLC methods seem to be of particular interest for the purification of ACE with a high yield and for the analysis of its putative differently glycosylated isoforms.

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