The Keratin Chains of Avian Scale Tissue

1976 
The three major proteins of chick scale keratin were isolated as their S-carboxymethylated derivatives and shown to be similar or identical in molecular weight by gel filtration but to he distinct by amino acid analysis and gel electrophoresis. The major amino-terminal sequence of scale keratin chains was determined and shown to be highly homologous to the corresponding region of feather keratin chains. The carboxyl-terminal peptides of the three scale keratin fractions differed in sequence but were all homologous to the carboxyl-terminal segment of feather keratin chains. The pronounced concentration of cysteine residues at the amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal segments suggested a similar role for these regions in both scale and feather keratin chains, namely to provide a disulphidelinked matrix to maintain the organisation of fibrils which arise from the internal hydrophobic segments of both types of chain. Analysis of a large hydrophobic segment from each of the three isolated protein fractions revealed that each was composed largely of repeating tripeptide units of the type Gly-Gly-X (where X = Phe, Leu or Tyr). At a few positions in each hydrophobic peptide, microheterogeneity was apparent in the sequences indicating that each isolated protein fraction was composed of at least three different chains each encoded by a different gene. A minimum of nine keratin genes are therefore expressed in scale tissue.
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