Release of vitamin B-12 in vitro from intrinsic factor-vitamin B-12 complex. Purification and characterization of a releasing factor from rat ileal brush border.
Vitamin B-12 is released from the purified gastric intrinsic factor- [57Co]vitamin B-12 (intrinsic factor-[57Co]vitamin B-12) complex, when incubated with rat intestinal mucosa. Maximum specific activity for splitting the complex is localized in ileal brush border. Release of [57Co]vitamin B-12 is not due to its mere exchange during incubation with endogenous non-radioactive vitamin B- 12. The splitting process has specific requirement for Ca2+ and ATP and it is thermolabile, time- as well as temperature-dependent. It is also inactivated by the presence of p- chloromercuribenzoate. Further, the vitamin B-12-releasing factor has been isolated from solubilized brush border and is purified 70-fold by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation, gel filtration and Con. A-Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography. In SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it is resolved into a single band of about 25 kDa, indicating its purity. The releasing factor exhibits maximum activity at pH 7.4; isoelectric focusing reveals only one major form with pI 7.52. With intrinsic factor-[57Co]vitamin B-12-complex as the substrate, apparent Km and Vmax values obtained are 128.2 X 10(-12) M/I and 117.6 pg X h-1 100 micrograms protein, respectively. Amino acid and carbohydrate analyses reveal the glycoprotein nature of the factor. Intrinsic factor-[57Co]vitamin B- 12 complex is not susceptible to unspecific proteolytic digestion. Similarly, the releasing factor does not hydrolyse other proteins. Thus, the observed substrate-specificity of the releasing factor differentiates it from other known proteolytic enzymes of ileal brush borders.