Abstract
We purified from bovine serum a glycoprotein that promotes the survival of rat embryonic neurons cultured from septum and other brain regions. A 40,000-fold purification was achieved by using a combination of ammonium sulfate precipitation, Zn2+ affinity chromatography, Cibacron blue 3-GA dye affinity chromatography, ABx ion exchange chromatography, and preparative PAGE. The active protein had an apparent molecular weight of 50-60 kDa. The concentration required for half-maximal survival (EC50) was 12 ng/ml (~200 pM) for the final fraction. Amino acid sequencing after cyanogen bromide cleavage yielded two sequences that are homologous to regions of deduced sequence of the selenoprotein-P (SPP) family in bovine, rat, and human. Antibodies against a synthetic peptide within the bovine SPP sequence immunoprecipitated and inhibited the survival-promoting activity of a partially purified serum fraction. The purified protein supported neuronal survival more effectively than inorganic selenium. These results suggest that SPP or an SPP-like protein contributes to the neuronal survival-promoting activity of serum.
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Yan, J., & Barrett, J. N. (1998). Purification from bovine serum of a survival-promoting factor for cultured central neurons and its identification as selenoprotein-P. Journal of Neuroscience, 18(21), 8682–8691. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.18-21-08682.1998
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