Abstract
When it is incompletely saturated with iron, transferrin may exist in four molecular forms: apotransferrin, monoferric (A) transferrin (with iron occupying only the A site of the protein), monoferric (B) transferrin, and diferric transferrin. By combining electrophoresis in urea-polyacrylamide gels with crossed immunoelectrophoresis using specific antihuman transferin antiserum, it is possible to display and estimate the concentration of each of these four forms in normal human serum. The distribution of iron between the binding sites of transferrin is neither random nor determined by the relative binding strengths of transferrin's two sites. Rather, the more weakly binding and acid-labile B site of the protein is predominantly occupied.
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Copyright © 1979 by The American Society of Hematology
1979
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