Thymic hormone-like restoration by human prealbumin of azathioprine sensitivity of spleen cells from thymectomized mice.

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RESUMO

Gel filtration of fresh human serum revealed that over 95% of the thymic-hormone-like activity was present in the fraction representing the total albumin and prealbumin. Further studies demonstrated that the activity resided in the prealbumin fraction; albumin was inactive. Prealbumin was isolated from Cohn fraction IV-1 of pooled human plasma by extraction with aqueous buffer, fractionation with (NH4)2SO4, gel filtration on Sephadex G-150, and preparative disc gel electrophoresis. The final product was homogeneous by analytical gel electrophoresis was 40,000 times more active than the starting material in an azathioprine-sensitive rosette assay. Physical and chemical characterization studies showed that the isolated product was identical to authentic human plasma prealbumin. Isolation of the prealbumin fraction from sera of adult thymectomized mice revealed that the rosette activity was substantially lower than that isolated from sera of normal mice, suggesting a thymic dependence of the prealbumin activity. In vitro and in vivo bioassays of the fraction obtained prior to the final step of the purification procedure support the conclusion that prealbumin exhibits thymic hormone-like activity.

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