Fractionation of a hyaluronic acid preparation in a density gradient. Some properties of the hyaluronic acid

Abstract
1. Hyaluronic acid was isolated from ox synovial fluid by sedimentation equilibrium in a caesium chloride density gradient (Silpananta, Dunstone & Ogston, 1967). The product was almost free from chondroitin sulphate and from protein. 2. Its composition did not differ significantly from that of the carbohydrate part of the protein-containing material isolated by filtration. Its physicochemical properties and molecular configuration were similar, except for its viscosity, which showed markedly reduced concentration-dependence and shear-dependence. This suggests that the associated protein tends to form links between molecules of hyaluronic acid. 3. The accurate measurement of viscosity at very low velocity gradient, by use of the damping of oscillations in a Couette viscometer, is described. 4. A method is described for measuring, approximately, the thermodynamic non-ideality of a solute from the shape of its schlieren curve at sedimentation equilibrium in a density gradient. 5. A value for the partial specific volume of hyaluronic acid in dilute salt solution was calculated from its isopycnic density in a caesium chloride gradient.