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Clinica Chimica Acta 1982-Feb

A tightly bound protein-porphyrin complex isolated from the plasma of a patient with variegate porphyria.

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M O Longas
M B Poh-Fitzpatrick

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Abstract

Free acid porphyrins were isolated from plasma of a patient with variegate porphyria. Part of the total porphyrin content--which included protoporphyrin IX, harderoporphyrin and uroporphyrin in a molar ratio of 1.2:1:0.5 and traces of pentacarboxylic porphyrin--was extractable with ethyl acetate/acetic acid as described previously [1]. Unextractable porphyrins remained in the precipitate formed after mixing the lower liquid layer and precipitate from the extraction procedure (Fig. 1, [1]) with excess ethyl acetate/acetic acid. A portion of this precipitate was hydrolyzed in 8 mol/l HCl; its porphyrins were extracted with N-butanol and analyzed by high pressure liquid chromatography; another portion was chromatographed on Sephadex G-150 with 1 mol/l MgCl2, and the major porphyrin-protein pool was hydrolyzed in 8 mol/l HCl, reacted separately with AgNO3 and Ag2SO4, and subjected to cellulose acetate and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The results support the hypothesis that a dicarboxylic porphyrin, a major portion of which was unextractable by standard procedures [1] and which appeared to be covalently bound to a protein of approximately 68 000 mol. wt. that moved with human serum albumin during cellulose acetate electrophoresis, is the preponderant porphyrin in this plasma.

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