- Purification and characterization of high molecular weight forms of inhibin from bovine follicular fluid.
Purification and characterization of high molecular weight forms of inhibin from bovine follicular fluid.
High molecular mass forms [95 kilodaltons (kDa)] of bovine inhibin-A as well as the known forms of intermediate (55 kDa) and low (32 kDa) mass were purified from bovine follicular fluid by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose, immunoaffinity chromatography using a monoclonal antibody directed against bovine 32-kDa inhibin-A, gel permeation HPLC on TSK-gel, and reverse phase HPLC. The 95-kDa inhibin-A had similar suppressive activity on FSH secretion from cultured rat anterior pituitary cells as the 55- and 32-kDa inhibins. There is, however, a possibility that the inhibin activity detected with larger forms may be due to that of the 32-kDa form that results from proteolytic processing during incubation with rat pituitary cells. Both sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting analysis using monoclonal antibodies specific for 32-kDa inhibin alpha- or beta A-subunits revealed that the 95-kDa inhibin preparation contained two forms of inhibin (105 and 95 kDa), which were composed of either a 50- or a 40-kDa alpha-subunit linked by a disulfide bond(s) to a 55-kDa beta A-subunit. Amino-terminal sequence analysis showed that the 50-kDa alpha-subunit and the 55-kDa beta A-subunit were generated by removal of a signal peptide from each corresponding primary translation product [the first NH2-terminal 17 residues of the inhibin alpha-subunit (residues 1-360) and the first 20 residues of the inhibin beta A-subunit (residues 1-425)] and suggested that the 40-kDa alpha-subunit was formed by proteolytic processing of the 50-kDa alpha-subunit. On the basis of our findings, we propose that in bovine follicular fluid, the larger 105-kDa form of inhibin is processed successively to form the lowest molecular mass form, 32 kDa inhibin, through the smaller 95- and 55-kDa forms.