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Protein Components of the Purified Sodium Channel from Rat Skeletal Muscle Sarcolemma

Overview
Journal J Neurochem
Specialties Chemistry
Neurology
Date 1983 May 1
PMID 6300333
Citations 37
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Abstract

Sensitive detection systems have been used to study the protein components of the sodium channel purified from rat skeletal muscle sarcolemma. This functional, purified sodium channel contains at least three subunits on 7-20% gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: a large glycoprotein which migrates anomalously in the high-molecular-weight range, a 45,000 molecular weight polypeptide, and a third protein often seen as a doublet at 38,000. The large glycoprotein runs as a diffuse band and stains very poorly with Coomassie blue, but is adequately visualized with silver staining or iodination followed by autoradiography. This glycoprotein exhibits anomalous electrophoretic behavior in SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The apparent molecular weight of the center of the band varies from approximately 230,000 on 13% acrylamide gels to approximately 130,000 on 5% gels; on 7-20% gradient gels a value of 160,000 is found. Plots of relative migration versus gel concentration suggest an unusually high apparent free solution mobility. Lectin binding to purified channel peptides separated by gel electrophoresis indicates that the large glycoprotein is the only subunit that binds either concanavalin A or wheat germ agglutinin, and this component has high binding capacity for both lectins. The smaller channel components run consistently at 45,000 and 38,000 molecular weight in a variety of gel systems and do not appear to be glycosylated.

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