HETEROGENEITY OF THE INHERITED GROUP-SPECIFIC COMPONENT OF HUMAN SERUM
Open Access
- 1 July 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 120 (1), 83-91
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.120.1.83
Abstract
Heterogeneity of the group-specific (Gc) components in normal human serum has been demonstrated by the use of a lithium borate buffer system in conventional vertical starch gel electrophoresis and by prolonged immunoelectrophoresis in agar gel. In both Gc 1-1 and Gc 2-2 phenotypes a protein component migrates ahead of the main band. Immunological evidence indicates that the faster migrating band contains Gc specificity. The possibility that the two electrophoretically distinct Gc components share a common polypeptide chain is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- ISOLATION AND PARTIAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE TWO PRINCIPAL INHERITED GROUP-SPECIFIC COMPONENTS OF HUMAN SERUMThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1963
- Polymorphism in the Serum Post-albumins of CattleNature, 1963
- DETERMINATION OF PHENOTYPES IN HUMAN GROUP-SPECIFIC COMPONENT (GC) SYSTEM BY STARCH GEL ELECTROPHORESIS1963
- Starch-Gel ImmunoelectrophoresisThe Journal of Immunology, 1959
- An improved procedure for starch-gel electrophoresis: further variations in the serum proteins of normal individualsBiochemical Journal, 1959
- Starch Gel Electrophoresis in a Discontinuous System of BuffersNature, 1957