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Disulfide‐bonded dimerization of fibronectin in vitro
Author(s) -
VARTIO Tapio,
KUUSELA Pentti
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1991.tb16413.x
Subject(s) - fibronectin , chemistry , dithiothreitol , biochemistry , urea , amino acid , thiol , dimer , biophysics , stereochemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry , extracellular matrix , biology
Human plasma fibronectin was denatured with 8 M urea and reduced with dithiothreitol. Dialysis or dilution of the solution led to formation of fibronectin dimers which migrated in non‐reducing SDS/PAGE similarly to untreated control protein. When the redimerized fibronectin was reduced and re‐electrophoresed it formed a doublet of α and β chains of equal intensity indicating that it was a heterodimer. Low concentrations (< 1 nM) of Fe 3+ enhanced the redimerization of fibronectin, suggesting that metal ions may mediate oxidative reactions in the formation of the disulfides. Consequently, redimerization of fibronectin was completely prevented by deferoxamine, an iron chelator. Dimerization of fibronectin took place most effectively at pH ≥ 8.8 but decreased strongly at lower pH, representing more unfavourable conditions for the action of the thiolate anion in the thiol/disulfide exchage reaction. Redimerized fibronectin, however, lost many of its binding properties to macromolecular ligands, suggesting that the disulfide bonding did not entirely regenerate the proper conformation of the protein. Pulse/chase experiments of fibroblast cultures showed that the initially monomeric fibronectin was rapidly and quantitatively dimerized under conditions representing natural pH and environment. SDS/PAGE analysis of the dialyzed urea‐denatured/reduced thrombin and plasmin digests of fibronectin revealed that the NH 2 ‐terminal 30‐kDa fragment and other fragements that contained intrachain disulfides quantitatively regained their non‐reduced electrophoretic mobility. The results show that the dimerization and formation of intrachain disulfides of fibronectin may occur, in part, spontaneously, based on the amino acid sequence information of the protein. However, complete disulfide formation may also need other factors, present only in living cells, as suggested by pulse/chase experiments in fibroblasts.

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