McDonald T P, Clift R, Cottrell M, Long M D
Biochem Med Metab Biol. 1987 Jun;37(3):335-43. doi: 10.1016/0885-4505(87)90045-4.
A thrombocytopoiesis-stimulating factor (TSF or thrombopoietin) was previously purified by a six-step purification procedure. However, the exact quantity of TSF that was recovered, through the various purification procedures, was unknown because of the absence of a method for establishing a unit of measure of TSF. In the present work dose-response relationships on both the crude TSF preparations and on the more highly purified TSF were determined. TSF units were calculated from the dose-response curves. A unit of TSF is defined as the amount of material (mg) that is required to increase the percentages 35S incorporation into platelets of immunothrombocythemic mice by 50% above the baseline. The results of determining the TSF units on the crude TSF preparation indicated that 0.11 unit (U) of TSF/mg protein was present. Results showed that the specific activity of TSF can be increased to about 3.6 U/mg by a single purification procedure using Sephadex G-75 column chromatography. Increased specific activities were obtained by additional purification steps, i.e., DEAE-cellulose column chromatography, SE-HPLC, DEAE-HPLC, and SDS-PAGE. The purified product appears to have a specific activity of about 11,000 U/mg of protein with 0.00003% of the protein and 1.1% of the TSF recovered from the starting material. Establishing a unit of measure for TSF will allow calculations of its degree of purity, provide a method for quantitation of recoveries of activities after various purification procedures, and allow comparisons of results from different experiments and different laboratories.