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Featured researches published by Abdul Waheed.


Biochemical Genetics | 1985

Immunological characterization of human acid phosphatase gene products

Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten; Volkmar Gieselmann; K von Figura

The immunological cross-reactivity of heterogeneous acid phosphatase isozymes from different human tissues has been studied using monospecific antisera prepared against four homogeneous acid phosphatases. The enzyme characterized as tartrate-inhibitable, prostatic acid phosphatase is also found to be present in leukocytes, kidney, spleen, and placenta. The tartrate-inhibitable (liver) lysosomal enzyme is also found in kidney, fibroblasts, brain, placenta, and spleen, but it is not detectable in erythrocytes and prostate. In several tissues, 10–20% of the tartrate-inhibitable enzyme is not precipitated by any of the antisera used; an exceptionally high amount (54%) of such an enzyme is present in human brain. Antiserum against a low molecular weight tartrate-resistant liver enzyme (14 kDa) does not cross-react with the erythrocyte enzyme. (10–20 kDa). All other tissues except placenta, prostate, and fibroblast cells show a cross-reactivity with the 14-kDa acid phosphatase antiserum. Thus, the low molecular weight human liver acid phosphatase is distinct from the erythrocyte enzyme, and there are also at least three different tartrate-inhibitable acid phosphatases in human tissues. Chromosomal assignments have been made for only two of the (at least) five acid phosphatases that are present in adult human tissues.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Structural and immunochemical characterization of human urine arylsulfatase A purified by affinity chromatography

Piotr M. Laidler; Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

Arylsulfatase A (aryl-sulfate sulfohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.1) was isolated from an ammonium sulfate precipitate of urinary proteins using two different affinity chromatography methods. One method involved the use of concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity chromatography at an early stage of purification, followed by preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The other procedure employed arylsulfatase subunit affinity chromatography as the main step and resulted in a remarkably efficient purification. The enzyme had a specific activity of 63 U/mg. The final preparation of arylsulfatase A was homogeneous on the basis of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 7.5, and by immunochemical analysis. However, when an enzyme sample obtained by either method of purification was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing or non-reducing conditions, peptide subunits, of 63.5 and 54.5 kDa, were observed. Immunological tests with 125I-labeled enzyme established the presence of a common protein component in both of the electrophoretically separable peptide subunits of human urine arylsulfatase. The amino acid analysis of homogeneous human urine arylsulfatase A showed only a few differences between it and the human liver enzyme. However, immunological cross-reactivity studies using rabbit anti-human urine arylsulfatase revealed immunological difference between the human urine and liver arylsulfatase A enzymes.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1980

Chemical characterization and substrate specificity of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A

Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

Rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A (aryl-sulfate sulfohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.1) is a glycoprotein containing 4.6% carbohydrate in the form of 25 residues of mannose, seven residues of N-acetylglucosamine, and three residues of sialic acid per enzyme monomer of molecular weight 140 000. Each monomer consists of two equivalent polypeptide chains. The protein has a relatively high content of proline, glycine and leucine, and the amino acid composition of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A is similar to that of other known liver sulfatases. Rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A catalyzes the hydrolysis of a wide variety of sulfate esters, although it appears possible that cerebroside sulfate is a physiological substrate for the enzyme because the Km is very low (0.06 mM). The turnover rate for hydrolysis of nitrocatechol sulfate or related synthetic substrates is much higher than the rate with most naturally occurring sulfate esters such as cereroside sulfate, steroid sulfates, L-tyrosine sulfate or glucose 6-sulfate. However, the turnover rate with ascorbate 2-sulfate is comparable to the rates measured using most synthetic substrates. These results are discussed in relationship to several previously described sulfatase enzymes which were claimed to have unique specificities.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1978

A spectrophotometric determination of sulfate ion and its application in studies of substrate purity and of aryl sulfatase a kinetics

Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract A simple, rapid, and sensitive procedure for the study of sulfatase kinetics using nonchromogenic substrates is described. The procedure utilizes the dye potassium rhodizonate which forms a complex with barium ions resulting in a pink color. The extent of reduction of the pink color in the presence of sulfate ions indicates the quantity of sulfate. Some of the factors other than SO 4 2− which can influence the pink color intensity of the rhodizonate-barium complex are described. The optimum conditions for the determination of sulfate are investigated. The assay procedure has good reproducibility and has a lower limit of detection of about 1 nmol of SO 4 2− when low Ba 2+ concentrations are used. A comparative study of the rate of hydrolysis of a number of different substrates by aryl sulfatase A using this method as well as an independent, spectrophotometric method is described. The maximum variation between the two procedures is 5% which is within the possible uncertainty in the standard curves and the error in the molar extinctions used for the estimation of products. The method is substantially more accurate and convenient than previously described methods which required chromatographic separations, radioactive substrates, etc.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1980

Subunit affinity chromatography and its application to the isolation of aryl sulfatase A enzymes

Robert L. Van Etten; Abdul Waheed

Abstract The monomeric form of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A (aryl sulfate sulfohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.1) was covalently coupled to CNBr-activated Sepharose and the catalytic properties of the covalently coupled monomer subunit were examined. The immobilized subunit showed one pH optimum near pH 5.6 which appears to be the characteristic pH optimum of the monomer. The enzyme-Sepharose complex exhibited the characteristic anomalous kinetic behavior at pH 5.5 but there was no turnover-induced inactivation of the immobilized enzyme at pH 4.5. The covalently coupled subunit column was examined for its ability to act as a subunit affinity chromatography medium. It was found that dissolved aryl sulfatase A was removed from solution at pH 4.5 and pH 5.0, I = 0.2, and became associated with the affinity column of Sepharose-aryl sulfatase A. The retained subunit of the enzyme could subsequently be quantitatively eluted with 0.2 m Tris-HCl, pH 7.5. Extraneous protein such as bovine serum albumin did not measureably affect the rate or equilibrium for association of the enzyme to the covalently bound subunit. The extent of binding of the enzyme to the affinity column was found to be strongly dependent on the time of equilibration and on the pH. About 90% of the enzyme was retained after 24 h at pH 5.0, I = 0.2. Under otherwise comparable conditions, use of Sepharose-6MB resulted in slightly faster association than did Sepharose-4B. Under the experimental conditions employed, the total capacity of the affinity column was approx 50% of the total aryl sulfatase A coupled to the Sepharose. The rabbit liver subunit column also permits the purification of several other aryl sulfatase A enzymes. Thus, the subunit affinity column provides a simple, convenient, and rapid procedure for the isolation of most mammalian aryl sulfatase A enzymes as well as for studying inter- and intraspecific subunit association interactions.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1979

The monomer-dimer association of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A and its relationship to the anomalous kinetics

Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract The polymerization of aryl sulfatase A (aryl sulfate sulfohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.1) has been studied by frontal gel chromatography on Sephadex G-200 and Bio-Gel A-5m under various conditions of pH, ionic strength, and temperature. The aryl sulfatase A molecule exists as a monomer and as a dimer at pH 7.5 and pH 4.5, respectively. The extent of dissociation is markedly pH-, protein concentration-, and ionic strength-dependent. Only a small effect of temperature was observed. The enthalpy change (Δ H o ) for the dissociation was −2.5 ± 1 kcal/mol at pH 5.5–5.6, and the entropy change for dissociation of the enzyme dimer to two monomeric units was −47 cal mol −1 deg −1 . Sulfate ion has little effect on the extent of dissociation of the enzyme at pH 5.6. The present studies suggest that the dissociation of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase A is regulated by the ionization of amino acid residues whose apparent p K is between pH 5 and 6. The driving force for the association of the subunits of the enzyme is primarily ionic and/or ionic/hydrogen bond formation. The small enthalpy change and the fact that dissociation is strongly favored by an increase in the ionic strength suggest that hydrophobic interactions play only a minor role in stabilizing the dimeric quaternary structure relative to the monomeric state. The monomeric form of the enzyme exhibits the anomalous kinetics often observed with sulfatase A but the dimer does not show anomalous kinetics. Since aryl sulfatase A is probably in the dimeric form in the lysosome, the anomalous kinetics of the enzyme are unlikely to be of physiological importance in the intact lysosome.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1985

Biosynthesis of prostatic acid phosphatase in a normal human cell-line.

Robert L. Van Etten; Abdul Waheed

The biosynthesis of the prostatic form of human acid phosphatase was studied in normal embryonic lung cells, WI-38, by metabolic labeling with tritiated leucine and [32P]phosphate, followed by specific immunoprecipitation, gel electrophoresis, and fluorography. Of the total tartrate-inhibitable acid phosphatase activity in WI-38 cells, 30% is due to the prostatic form. The primary translation product that leads eventually to the mature prostatic enzyme is a precursor polypeptide of 112 kDa. The precursor polypeptide is processed to mature polypeptides of 59, 55, and 49 kDa via an intermediate 91-kDa precursor. WI-38 cells also secrete a 113-kDa peptide into the medium. The precursor and mature polypeptides are glycosylated and phosphorylated. Upon treatment with endo-beta-hexosaminidase H, the apparent molecular weighs of the polypeptides are reduced by approximately 4 kDa and phosphate is lost.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1979

Covalent modification as the cause of the anomalous kinetics of aryl sulfatase A

Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract Mammalian aryl sulfatase A enzymes are known to exhibit an anomalous kinetic behavior in which the enzyme becomes inactivated as it catalyzes the hydrolysis of substrate. Part of the activity of this inactive, turnover-modified form of the enzyme can apparently be restored by the simultaneous presence of substrate and sulfate ion. The present experiments, conducted with 2-hydroxy-5-nitrophenyl [ 35 S]sulfate (nitrocatechol sulfate), establish that the turnover-modified enzyme is covalently labeled. The stoichiometry of the incorporation of radioactivity corresponds to 2 g atom of 35 S per mole of enzyme monomer (each monomer of rabbit liver aryl sulfatase consists of two equivalent subunits). It is also shown that isolated, turnover-modified enzyme has lost 80% of its secondary structure when compared to the native enzyme. A commonly used sulfating agent, pyridine-sulfur trioxide complex brings about a similar loss of activity and of secondary structure.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1985

Isolation and characterization of a homogeneous acid phosphatase from catfish liver

Aleksandra Kubicz; Abdul Waheed; Robert L. Van Etten

A homogeneous, tartrate-inhibitable acid phosphatase (AcPase) was obtained from the liver of channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) by the use of Affi Gel-10-coupled aminohexyltartramic acid affinity chromatography. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 82,500 and is a dimer consisting of two apparently equivalent subunits with subunit weights of 35,000 +/- 3000. Amino acid composition data are presented and compared with those of mammalian acid phosphatases. Data suggest that the enzyme is a metalloacid phosphatase. Catfish liver AcPase exhibits two molecular forms with pI 5.66 and 5.37 which were separated by chromatofocusing. A spontaneous conversion of the less acidic form to a more acidic form was observed and this conversion was accompanied by a decreased sensitivity towards tartrate inhibition.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1989

Carbohydrate removal fails to eliminate the heterogeneity of human prostatic acid phosphatase

Michael F. Morris; Abdul Waheed; John M. Risley; Robert L. Van Etten

Human prostatic acid phosphatase is known to display considerable charge heterogeneity upon isoelectric focusing. The structural basis of this heterogeneity is not known, although it has been widely attributed to variations in the nature of the carbohydrate chains or to substituents on the carbohydrate chains of the glycoprotein. In this study, the role of the carbohydrate chains in the charge heterogeneity of the protein was examined. First, sialic acid residues were removed by treatment of the acid phosphatase with neuraminidase. The desialo enzyme was fractionated and purified by L-tartramic acid affinity chromatography. Then, after the protein oligosaccharide linkages were made accessible by the presence of NP-40 or by denaturing the protein, the protein was completely deglycosylated by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F at pH 4.5 and 9.3. Two discrete intermediates were clearly resolved by SDS gel electrophoresis during the deglycosylation of the denatured protein at pH 9.3, indicating the existence of three sites of glycosylation on the protein. Peptide mixtures were obtained by digestion of carboxymethylated and citraconylated derivatives of the enzyme with trypsin and the glycopeptides were isolated. The amino acid compositions of the glycopeptides were consistent with the interpretation that there are a minimum of two sites of glycosylation on each peptide subunit of the enzyme. Isoelectric focusing experiments on the native, desialo, and denatured, deglycoso acid phosphatase showed that the heterogeneity of the protein is not eliminated either by desialylation or by deglycosylation. Thus, the electrophoretic heterogeneity of human prostatic acid phosphatase does not lie primarily in the oligosaccharide part of the glycoprotein or in altered conformational states of the protein, but in structural variations of the polypeptide itself. The heterogeneity may be due to variations at the C-terminus, partial deamidation, phosphorylation, sulfation or other posttranslational modifications of the protein chain.

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