| Literature DB >> 3202839 |
A J Caride1, J P Gorski, J T Penniston.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the erythrocyte membrane Ca2+ pump is exposed primarily to the cytoplasm: proteases, substrates and polyclonal antibodies all interact with the enzyme from the cytoplasmic side. In this study, the pump's accessibility from outside the cell was investigated with monoclonal antibodies. When cultures of hybridoma cells producing antibodies against the Ca2+ pump were screened for binding of the antibodies to intact red cells, only 7% of the cultures gave a positive reaction (a total of eight cultures). The small number of positives confirms the relative inaccessibility of the Ca2+ pump from outside the red cell. From the eight positive cultures we isolated one stable clone which produced an antibody (1B10) that reacted both with purified Ca2+ pump and with the outside of intact red cells. Immunoprecipitation experiments and binding assays with inside-out vesicles showed that 1B10 reacted only against the erythrocyte Ca2+ pump from the extracellular face of the red cell. 1B10 had no observable effect on the Ca2+ efflux from resealed red cells. Digestion of intact red cells with glycosidases, trypsin or papain had minimal effect on the binding of the antibody to intact red cells. However, digestion with pronase, subtilisin or alpha-chymotrypsin nearly eliminated the binding, indicating that 1B10 was directed against a protein determinant of the ATPase which is exposed on the outside of the red cell.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3202839 PMCID: PMC1135277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857