Abstract

A new matrix for affinity chromatography using pteroylglutamic acid coupled to an epoxy-activated matrix via hexanediamine resulted in negligible ligand leakage and permitted the purification of soluble and membrane-associated folate-binding proteins from human leukemia cells contained in a human spleen. Two species of membrane-associated folate-binding proteins were purified from the solubilized membrane fraction of the tissue using 2 M guanidine-HCl to elute the proteins from the affinity matrix. The higher molecular weight binding protein had an M r of approximately 310 000 and the smaller species had an M r of approximately 28 000 by gel filtration. By SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the smaller species of membrane-associated protein had a molecular weight of 35 500, but the molecular weight of the larger membrane-associated species could not be determined by this method because of the high concentration of residual Triton X-100 in the sample which interfered with the silver staining of the gel. Two folate-binding proteins, which by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoreis had molecular weights of 34 500 and 32 000, were purified from the 44 000× g supernatant fraction of the tissue homogenate by acid elution from the affinity matrix. Despite the different cell components from which the soluble and membrane-associated folate-binding proteins were purified, the amino acid compositions were similar, especially with respect to the apolar amino acids. All these forms of folate-binding proteins had higher affinity for oxidized than for reduced folates, and very low affinity for 5-formyltetrahydrofolate and methotrexate. Although these proteins cross-react with one antiserum raised previously to a folate-binding protein from other human leukemia cells, they do not cross-react with the folate-binding proteins purified from two other sources of human leukemia cells, from human placenta, or from the human KB cell line.

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