Abstract

The structural relationships and intermolecular organization among the proteins associated with pulmonary surfactant are largely unknown. We studied the pulmonary-surfactant-associated proteins in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid obtained from a patient with the clinical syndrome of alveolar proteinosis. The major proteins with Mr values of 32,000-36,000 and 62,000 formed thiol-dependent complexes (Mr greater than 400,000) with intermolecular disulphide bonds present in the collgenase-sensitive domains of these proteins. In contrast, other proteins, which were collagenase-insensitive, formed thiol-dependent oligomers that were not covalently linked to the major proteins. The associations of these proteins in the surfactant of a normal individual were similar. By amino acid analysis, two-dimensional peptide mapping and bacterial-collagenase digestion the 32,000-36,000-Mr and 62,000-Mr proteins were nearly identical. Differences in CNBr cleavage products suggested that the larger of the proteins was formed by non-disulphide, covalent, cross-links in the collagenase-sensitive domains of the 32,000-36,000-Mr proteins. Thus the evidence suggested that the lipid-associated proteins of Mr 32,000-36, 000 contained both disulphide and non-disulphide cross-links in the collagen-like N-terminal region of the proteins and form higher-Mr complexes. This organization may support the three-dimensional conformation of surfactant in the alveolar space.

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