The purification of cerebroside sulfate activator (CSAct) or saposin B from pooled human urine is described. Urinary proteins are concentrated by ammonium sulfate precipitation. A suspension of the precipitate is heat-treated and the heat-stable proteins are fractionated through a series of chromatographic steps. An initial concanavalin A column retains little of the CSAct activity, but is important for subsequent purification. Passing the Con A effluent directly onto an octyl Sepharose column removes the protein of interest which is recovered by affinity elution with octyl glucoside. Subsequent ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatographies yield a protein of 80-90% purity, although it is sometimes necessary to repeat one or more steps. A small amount of CSAct can sometimes be recovered from the initial Con A Sepharose column by methyl mannoside elution and purified by a parallel chromatographic protocol. Mass spectral analysis suggests that the final material is a mixture of two major and several minor glycoforms of a 79 amino acid protein with the structure predicted from the human prosaposin cDNA by truncation of both N- and C-terminal regions. Sugar analysis revealed the presence of glucosamine, mannose, and fucose, consistent with the major isoforms bearing a five-sugar Man(2)GluNac(2)Fuc or a single GluNac substituent. The human urinary material is similar to the previously characterized pig kidney protein in most respects, but varies in some details.
Copyright 1999 Academic Press.