Puchkova L V, Vakharlovskiĭ V G, Gaĭtskhoki V S, Monakhov N K, Shvartsman A L
Genetika. 1982 May;18(5):703-12.
The radioimmunochemical study of ceruloplasmin-synthesizing polyribosomes was carried out using bioptic liver specimens obtained from fourteen homozygous patients with hepatolenticular degeneration (Wilson--Konovalov disease) and from eight control patients with various non-hereditary diseases. The measurement of binding of 125I-antibodies to the nascent polysome-bound ceruloplasmin chains demonstrated that in control patients this protein is only synthesized on membrane-bound polysomes, while free polysomes do not contribute to the synthesis of ceruloplasmin. The majority of homozygous carriers of Wilson--Konovalov mutation (eleven of fourteen) are characterized by the involvement of free, rather than membrane-bound polysomes, in the synthesis of ceruloplasmin. This shift of ceruloplasmin synthesis from membrane-bound to free polysomes seems to be accompanied by disturbances in the cotranslational proteolytic maturation of ceruloplasmin from its biosynthetic precursors. As a result of this defect, a putative of ceruloplasmin (preproceruloplasmin) was detected in the content of Golgi complex as well as in the serum of homozygous patients. This precursor of a molecular weight 84,000 was found neither in Golgi complex, nor in the serum of control subjects.