Abstract

A 340 000-dalton component “C-III” was found when Triton X-100-containing extracts of ileal mucosa were incubated with human or porcine intrinsic factor vitamin B-12 preparations. It was not formed when abnormal human intrinsic factor, unable to attach to the intrinsic factor receptor, was used. Prolonged storage promoted the transfer of vitamin B-12 to it from the vitamin B-12-intrinsic factor receptor species C-I and C-II. The component was also present in ileal extracts prepared with or without detergent and it bound vitamin B-12 directly. Immunologically and by electrofocusing it could be classified as a cobalophilin but its molecular dimensions were larger than described for cobalophilin. It thus represents a novel vitamin B-12 binding protein, possibly a macromolecular acceptor of vitamin B-12 which accepts vitamin B-12 bound via intrinsic factor to the ileal intrinsic factor receptor. In the presence of EDTA or at low pH, vitamin B-12-intrinsic factor did not bind to any of the receptor species and under the same conditions it could all be dissociated from the receptor complexes but not from C-III. The dissociated receptor was able to recombine with vitamin B-12-intrinsic factor and it appeared to bind free and vitamin B-12-bound intrinsic factor in vivo.

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