Torres A R, Krueger G G, Peterson E A
Anal Biochem. 1985 Feb 1;144(2):469-76. doi: 10.1016/0003-2697(85)90143-5.
A protein that was initially known only as a minor spot in two-dimensional electrophoresis patterns of serum obtained from certain psoriasis patients, particularly those with a pustular component to their disease, has been purified by two stages of ion-exchange displacement chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel at different pH levels, followed by elution chromatography on hydroxylapatite. The purification was followed by examining the column fractions directly by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The capacity of the displacement system, which utilized carboxymethyldextrans as displacers, was very high; 6 ml of dialyzed serum applied to a 7-ml column in the initial stage resulted in a very substantial enrichment of the target protein. The second displacement stage yielded a highly purified product, contaminated only by A-1 lipoprotein. The latter was removed by hydroxylapatite chromatography. The purified protein was subsequently identified as Gc-2 globulin, a vitamin D-binding protein, by immunological procedures. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of ion-exchange displacement chromatography in focusing resolving power on the relatively narrow range of affinities represented by the target protein and its immediate neighbors in a chromatogram, as well as the applicability of the system to the isolation of a protein known only by its position in a two-dimensional electrophoretic pattern.