Determination of the hydroxyapatite-nucleating region of bone sialoprotein |
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Authors: | HA Goldberg KJ Warner MJ Stillman GK Hunter |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Dentistry, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada. hagoldbe@julian.uwo.ca |
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Abstract: | Bone sialoprotein (BSP) was shown to be a potent nucleator of hydroxyapatite (HA) in a steady-state agarose gel system (Hunter and Goldberg, 1993, PNAS 90: 8562). Nucleation of HA was also demonstrated with the homopolymer poly-glutamic acid but not with poly-aspartic acid or osteopontin. Since BSP contains contiguous sequences of glutamic acid, it is reasonable to suggest that the HA-nucleating activity of BSP resides within these regions. Purified porcine BSP was treated with trypsin and digests fractionated by gel filtration. In addition to small peptides (P3-5), two peptides of 38 kDa (P1) and 25 kDA (P2) were recovered, and after characterization assigned to the regions within BSP encompassing residues 133-272 (P1) and 42-125 (P2). Each of these peptides contained one of the two glutamic acid-rich regions of porcine BSP. In the steady-state agarose gel system, BSP, P1 and P2 induced HA formation, whereas the pooled small BSP-derived peptides (P3-5) did not. Analysis by circular dichroism spectroscopy revealed that the homopolymer poly-L-glutamic acid assumes a helical structure, while poly-L-aspartic acid does not. These findings suggest that the nucleating activity does not require intact molecules, that the nucleation of HA and BSP appears to require glutamic acid-rich sequences in a helical conformation and that there are two domains in porcine BSP that are each capable of nucleating HA. |
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