Two very similar small anionic, amphipathic proteins, a phospholipid-binding apoprotein (anionic polypeptide fraction [APF]) and a calcium-binding polypeptide (CBP), are found abundantly in bile and all types of gallstones. The often disparate properties among various preparations of APF/CBP could r
A calcium-binding protein in bile and gallstones
β Scribed by Michael F. Kestell; John Sekijima; Sum P. Lee; Han Z. Park; Michelle Long; Eric W. Kaler
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 826 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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β¦ Synopsis
Calcium salts are often present in the center of all types of gallstones. Matrix proteins are known to be essential for biomineralization and may therefore also be important in the formation and growth of gallstones. Other researchers have described an anionic peptide fraction of a biliary lipoprotein complex in bile and a low-molecular weight acidic glycoprotein present in gallstones. Our goal was to determine whether such a protein was present in bile and whether this protein has any calcium-binding properties. We identified a pigment-associated, highly acidic protein that precipitates from bile on addition of CaCl2 0.5 mol/L. In addition, the protein is selectively concentrated in cholesterol and pigment stones. We have, therefore, confirmed the findings of these other researchers, and we have extended the study of this protein's interactions with calcium. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrates a single band (molecular weight < or = 14 kD) that reacts positively with cationic stains. The protein was shown to inhibit the precipitation of CaCO3 from a supersaturated solution. The capacity to bind calcium was further confirmed by autoradiography with 45Ca++ and by a membrane adsorption-binding assay. Calcium-induced aggregation was demonstrated by equilibrium dialysis and by quasielastic light scattering studies. Protein measured by Lowry's assay method and amino acid analysis constitutes only 2% to 4% of the harvested material. We speculate that a substantial lipid component may also be present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We have previously isolated from 13 cholesterol gallstones a low molecular weight acidic bili-protein that inhibited the precipitation of calcium carbonate in uitro. We now report the isolation of a similar protein from seven black pigment gallstones. Cholesterol was removed from the stones by Soxhl
Many studies have demonstrated that gallbladder bile (but not hepatic bile) of animals or patients with cholesterol gallstones contains higher protein concentrations than does gallbladder bile of control patients without stones or with pigment stones. The underlying defect has not been elucidated. T
## Abstract We have purified a prominent 110βkDa protein (p110) from 1.6 M NaCl extracts of rat liver nuclei that appears to bind Ca^2+^. p110 was originally identified by prominent blue staining with βStainsβAllβ in sodium dodecyl sulfateβpolyacrylamide gels and was observed to specifically bind r