Inhibition of nucleation and crystal growth of calcium carbonate by human lithostathine

Pancreatic juice is naturally supersaturated in calcium and bicarbonate ions. A mechanism controlling CaCO3 crystal formation and growth is therefore necessary to prevent duct clogging. The present study shows that lithostathine, a glycoprotein present in human pancreatic juice at a concentration in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gastroenterology (New York, N.Y. 1943) N.Y. 1943), 1992-10, Vol.103 (4), p.1277-1284
Hauptverfasser: Bernard, Jean-Paul, Adrich, Zygmunt, Montalto, Giuseppe, De Caro, Alain, De Reggi, Max, Sarles, Henri, Dagorn, Jean-Charles
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pancreatic juice is naturally supersaturated in calcium and bicarbonate ions. A mechanism controlling CaCO3 crystal formation and growth is therefore necessary to prevent duct clogging. The present study shows that lithostathine, a glycoprotein present in human pancreatic juice at a concentration in the range of 10 μmol/L, could be involved in such a control. Lithostathine in concentrations >1.5 μmol/L significantly delayed crystal nucleation and inhibited growth of preformed CaCO3 crystals from supersaturated solutions. Adsorption of lithostathine on crystals was shown by immunodetection. Albumin also adsorbed on CaCO3 crystals, but neither albumin nor other pancreatic secretory proteins inhibited crystal nucleation or growth. Lithostathine adsorbed to sites specifically inhibiting crystal growth with a dissociation constant (Kd) = 0.9 × 10−6 mol/L. The glycosylated aminoterminal undecapeptide generated by limited trypsin hydrolysis inhibited CaCO3 crystal growth with a Kd = 3.0 × 10−6 mol/L, similar to that of lithostathine. On the contrary, the carboxy-terminal polypeptide was inactive. A synthetic undecapeptide identical to the N-terminal end but not glycosylated was equally active. The activity disappeared upon digestion of the undecapeptide with V8 protease. The N-terminal undecapeptide of lithostathine is therefore essential to the inhibitory activity of the protein on CaCO3 crystal growth.
ISSN:0016-5085
1528-0012
DOI:10.1016/0016-5085(92)91516-7