Copper deficiency in the chick causes anatomical changes in lung that are characterized by an apparent thinning of the air-blood capillary network of tertiary bronchi. Although the net content of the elastin in lung was not changed significantly by nutritional copper deficiency, it was possible to demonstrate an increase in the lysine content and a decrease in the desmosine content of lung elastin from copper-deficient chicks compared to that from controls. Further, the content of soluble elastin was also increased two-to fourfold in lung from copper-deficient chicks. Subsequently, nutritional copper deficiency was used to facilitate the isolation of chick lung tropoelastin. This lung protein appeared to be similar in selected properties to tropoelastin isolated from aorta of copper-deficient chicks. In addition, data are presented that indicate elastin in avian lung is possibly subject to only limited turnover.
Evidence is presented for the presence of precursor to tropoelastin in chick arterial extracts. The precursor is approx. 100 000 daltons in size. It is suggested to be a precursor to tropoelastin (72 000 daltons). This protein may be observed in culture in vitro if appropriate precautions are taken to inhibit proteolysis. Once synthesized, it appears to be converted into tropoelastin within 10--20 min. The protein may also be detected in vivo. When 1-day-old cockerels were fed on a copper-deficient diet (less than 1 p.p.m. to inhibit cross-linking) containing epsilon-aminohexanoic acid (0.2%) to retard proteolysis and then injected wiht [3H]valine, extraction of arterial proteins 12h after injection resulted in detection of two major peaks of [3H]valine-labelled protein with pI values of pH 7.0 and 5.0 respectively. The protein that focused at pH 7.0 was estimated to be about 100 000 daltons in size and could be shown to be converted into a more basic protein with the properties of tropoelastin. It is speculated that the protein with pI 5.0 may be yet another extension peptide. The data appear to be in keeping with similar observations by ourselves and others that a proform of tropoelastin exists, and, in at least one step before conversion into tropoelastin, exists as a 100 000-dalton protein subunit.
Evidence is presented that indicates tropoelastin is derived from a soluble elastin with a molecular weight of 95000. Tropoelastin and its proposed precursor were isolated from the aortas of copper-deficient chicks. Although it is doubtful that the proposed precursor is an initial product of elastin translation, i.e., a proelastin, it is proposed to be at least a truncated form of proelastin that is converted to tropoelastin. The key to its isolation was the presence of alpha 1-antitrypsin at each step in the purification procedure. The first 11 amino acid residues at the NH2 terminal of the proposed tropoelastin precursor (GGVPGVAVPGGV) are the same as those for tropoelastin. Its amino acid composition is similar to that of tropoelastin, except for higher amounts of acidic amino acid residues. Further, the proposed precursor contains a limited number of aldehydic functions, presumably in the form of peptidyl allysine. This was taken as an indication that the proposed precursor serves as a substract for lysyl oxidase. Under the conditions used for the isolation, the precursor appeared to be in higher concentrations than tropoelastin in aorta extracts from copper-deficient chicks.
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