Abstract

Sequential chromatography of human milk whey on concanavalin A—Sepharose 4B followed by cholate—Sepharose 4B yielded a bile salt-activated lipase with 150-fold purification. The lipase was not retained by concanavalin A—Sepharose 4B but was retained by the cholate—Sepharose 4B, from which it was eluted with 2% sodium cholate. The affinity chromatography procedure on cholate—Sepharose 4B was based on the specific structural requirement of the enzyme for a 7-hydroxyl group of bile salt. Sodium deoxycholate, which lacks the 7-hydroxyl group, was effective in removing the nonspecifically bound proteins without affecting the binding of the enzyme. Bile salt-activated lipase showed a single band on urea-sodium dodecyl sulfate—polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent molecular weight of 125,000, and based on densitometric measurement accounted for 0.5–1.0% of the protein mass of human whole milk. A rabbit antiserum to the purified bile salt-activated lipase caused no inhibition of human milk lipoprotein lipase activity but completely inhibited bile salt-activated lipase activity.

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