Physiology of bone: Mineral compartment proteins as candidates for environmental perturbation by lead

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Abstract

Termine et al. first demonstrated that sequential dissociative extraction and fractionation procedures with protease inhibitors could provide a convenient approach for the study of mineral compartment constituents. The primary extraction regimen used 4 M guanidine HCl to remove most of the protein from the nonmineralized phase of bone. Subsequently, EDTA-guanidine was used to remove the mineral-phase components. These methods discriminate on the basis of physical-chemical association with a mineral phase rather than on the specific gene products of a particular cell. In the present discussion emphasis is directed at a group of divalent cation binding proteins isolated from the mineral compartment of bone. The localization, synthesis, and chemical characteristics of osteonectin, bone sialoproteins I and II, and bone acidic glycoprotein-75 are discussed and offered as possible sites for perturbation by the environment with lead exposure.

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Sauk, J. J., & Somerman, M. J. (1991). Physiology of bone: Mineral compartment proteins as candidates for environmental perturbation by lead. In Environmental Health Perspectives (Vol. 91, pp. 9–16). https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.91919

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