Abstract
Human urinary erythropoietin (Ep) has been purified using a simple five- step procedure to yield preparations with potencies of 80,000 U/mg in 25% yield. The five steps involve: (1) affinity chromatography on CM Affi-Gel Blue, (2) chromatofocusing, (3) wheat germ lectin (or hydroxylapatite) chromatography, (4) reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) using a phenyl column, and (5) preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Ep activity was determined at each stage using a highly sensitive and specific in vitro assay that measures [3H]-thymidine incorporation into erythroid cells from spleens of phenylhydrazine-treated mice. The step 5 material was also tested with the in vivo polycythemic mouse assay procedure and was found to have a similar potency to that obtained in the [3H]-thymidine in vitro assay. SDS-PAGE analysis of the step 5 material revealed a single 38.5-kd band that comigrated with Ep bioactivity. Homogeneity was confirmed by amino acid sequence analysis. Starting with urine containing approximately 13 U/mg of protein, the cumulative degrees of purification achieved with each step were: step 1,25-fold; step 2, 75-fold; step 3, 300-fold; step 4, 1,500-fold; and step 5, 5,000-fold. Corresponding overall recoveries after each step were: greater than 100%, 70%, 45%, 30%, and 25%. These recoveries could be obtained when as little as 5,000 U of starting urinary Ep were processed because of the introduction of Tween 20 and SDS into buffers used at various stages of the purification procedure. In addition, a rapid method for determining Ep purity which involves reverse-phase HPLC of trypsinized 125I-labeled Ep is presented. This allows the establishment of purity with far less material than is required for amino acid sequencing.
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