Rete Testis Fluid (RTF) Proteins: Purification and Characterization of RTF Albumin1

Abstract
A major 68-kDa protein in ram rete testis fluid (RTF) is shown to be chemically and immunologically indistinguishable from albumin in ovine serum. Data obtained with two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of RTF demonstrate the presence of additional proteins with a molecular mass of 68 kDa that do not react with antisera against sheep serum albumin. Biochemical characteristics of albumin preparations isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography from ovine serum and from RTF were compared. Albumin from both sources had the same apparent molecular mass of 68 kDa, the same isoelectric point of approximately 4.2, and neither bound specifically to Concanavalin A. Analysis of tryptic peptide maps, obtained with reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography, indicated no significant differences between digests of the two purified albumin preparations. Results indicate that RTF albumin and serum albumin are the same protein, which implies that RTF albumin may originate from serum. Albumin levels in RTF, collected from different rams and measured by radioimmunoassay, varied between 46 and 164 micrograms/ml, constituting between 11 and 17% of total RTF protein, while albumin levels in sheep plasma were 40,000 micrograms/ml. The protein composition of RTF is discussed in relation to the relative amounts of various components contributed by testis cells and the amounts derived from serum.

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