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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Structural features of human tracheobronchial mucus glycoprotein.

Electron microscopy of platinum-shadowed preparations of human tracheobronchial mucins showed very flexible filamentous structures that frequently occurred in an intricate random-coiled pattern of filament(s) surrounding a dense core-like domain. The filament(s) associated with cores accounted for 70-80% of the mass of the mucin preparation, the remainder being accounted for by free filaments. On aggregation, the molecules formed a large interwoven network quite different from the massive rope-like structures characteristic of sheep submaxillary mucin aggregates [Rose, Voter, Sage, Brown & Kaufman (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3167-3172]. Mild sonication resulted in extensive fragmentation of the tracheobronchial mucin molecules and yielded short filaments of various lengths, free cores and some cores associated with short filaments. Mucin glycopeptide fragments obtained by proteolytic digestion were flexible, core-free, filaments. The glycopeptides obtained by Pronase digestion were shorter than those obtained by tryptic digestion. The intricate structures of human tracheobronchial mucin differ markedly from the extended filaments reported for sheep submaxillary and human ovarian-cyst mucins but agree with the roughly spherical expanded model proposed for mucins by Creeth & Knight [(1967) Biochem. J. 105, 1135-1145] on the basis of hydrodynamic measurements.[1]

References

  1. Structural features of human tracheobronchial mucus glycoprotein. Rose, M.C., Voter, W.A., Brown, C.F., Kaufman, B. Biochem. J. (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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