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Technical Briefs |
Department of Clinical Biochemistry, The Medical School, Framlington Place, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH, United Kingdom
a author for correspondence: fax 44-0191-222-6227, e-mail h.k.datta@ncl.ac.uk
The vitamin D-binding protein, also known as group-specific
component (Gc) or Gc-globulin, is a 51.2-kDa polymorphic protein of the
2-macroglobulin fraction of human plasma
(1). In human population, three common alleles
(Gc1f, Gc1s, and Gc2) and
>120 rare variant alleles have been classified by isoelectric
focusing (2). Gc1f and Gc1s contain sialic acid
residues, whereas Gc2 does not (2). Gc-globulin may have an
important role in the activation of macrophages and in osteoclast
differentiation from monocytes and thus may control bone morphogenesis
and remodeling (3)(4)(5)(6)(7). In humans, deglycosylation of
Gc-globulin, involving stepwise removal of ß-galactose and sialic
acid from the trisaccharide, leaving N-acetyl-galactosamine
(GalNAc), produces a potent macrophage-activating factor (Gc-MAF)
(3). GalNAc is considered to have a crucial role in the
macrophage-activating and osteoclast-differentiating functions of
Gc-MAF because the removal of this sugar has been shown to be
associated with the loss or impaired function of macrophages
(8)(9). In osteopetrotic rat and mice models
(6)(7) and in a single human study
(4), indirect data suggested a defect in
lysophospholipid-inducible Gc-MAF, although direct estimation of this
factor in healthy and diseased states has not been performed.
Gc-MAF estimation has been hampered by the lack of a suitable detection system for determining the sterically exposed GalNAc, which is critical for the activating properties of Gc-MAF. Because no standard preparation of Gc-MAF (as opposed to Gc-globulin) is available, its presence must be inferred from its properties. We here describe a hybrid sandwich lectin-ELISA for the measurement of the sterically exposed GalNAc (10)(11) generated in vitro from Gc-globulin in the plasma of healthy subjects.
Blood was collected
References
The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:
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S. Ferrero, D. J. Gillott, P. Anserini, V. Remorgida, K. M. Price, N. Ragni, and J. G. Grudzinskas Vitamin D Binding Protein in Endometriosis Reproductive Sciences, May 1, 2005; 12(4): 272 - 277. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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