Affinity purification of a rat-brain junctional protein, connexin 43

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Abstract

Immunocytochemical investigations have previously shown that antibodies specific for mammal connexins labeled in situ rat and mouse brain gap junctions. However brain gap-junction proteins have neither been identified with certainty, nor purified. By immunoblotting, anti-peptide antibodies directed against rat heart connexin 43 (CX43) detect a major protein of 41 kDa in rat brain homogenates. The specificity of these antibodies made it possible to establish an affinity-chromatography purification procedure of the 41-kDa protein. Purified antibodies specific for the sequence SAEQNRMGQ (residues 314-322) of rat heart CX43 were covalently bound to a protein-A-Sepharose-CL-4B matrix. Rat brain homogenates were recycled through the immunomatrix and the material specifically bound to the matrix was then competitively eluted with the peptide SAEQNRMGQY. Analysis by SDS/PAGE of eluates demonstrated that they contain a 41-kDa protein associated with low amounts of high-molecular-mass proteins. By immunoblotting, these proteins were shown to be specifically recognized by antibodies directed against residues 5-17, 55-56 and 314-322 of rat heart CX43. The NH2-terminal partial sequence for the 41-kDa protein was determined by microsequencing and shown to be similar to α1 connexins. This is the first successful purification of a junctional protein from brain tissue and provides direct evidence that the 41-kDa protein is a CX43 gene product.

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APA

Dupont, E., El Aoumari, A., Fromaget, C., Briand, J. P., & Gros, D. (1991). Affinity purification of a rat-brain junctional protein, connexin 43. European Journal of Biochemistry, 200(1), 263–270. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1991.tb21075.x

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