1. A protein(s) of rat liver (precipitated from soluble extracts of the microsomal fraction by anti-albumin) yields albumin after limited hydrolysis by trypsin. 2. Evidence that the product of limited tryptic hydrolysis is albumin, is based upon ion-exchange chromatography, electrofocusing and peptide `mapping'. 3. The albumin `precursor' is recognized by anti-albumin and is apparently not distinguished from albumin by anti-albumin. 4. A small peptide is liberated from the presumptive albumin precursor during limited tryptic hydrolysis. This peptide is labelled by arginine, but not by leucine, lysine or methionine. 5. These results support our previous suggestion based on kinetic evidence that the albumin-like protein(s), in the anti-albumin precipitate from rat liver, is an albumin precursor.
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August 1973
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Research Article|
August 01 1973
Biosynthesis of serum albumin in rat liver. Evidence for the existence of ‘proalbumin’
J. D. Judah;
J. D. Judah
1Departments of Experimental Pathology and of Clinical Haematology, University College Hospital Medical School, London WC1E 6JJ, U.K.
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Margaret Gamble;
Margaret Gamble
1Departments of Experimental Pathology and of Clinical Haematology, University College Hospital Medical School, London WC1E 6JJ, U.K.
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J. H. Steadman
J. H. Steadman
1Departments of Experimental Pathology and of Clinical Haematology, University College Hospital Medical School, London WC1E 6JJ, U.K.
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
© 1973 London: The Biochemical Society
1973
Biochem J (1973) 134 (4): 1083–1091.
Citation
J. D. Judah, Margaret Gamble, J. H. Steadman; Biosynthesis of serum albumin in rat liver. Evidence for the existence of ‘proalbumin’. Biochem J 1 August 1973; 134 (4): 1083–1091. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1341083
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