von Willebrand antigen II (vW AgII) and von Willebrand factor (vWf) are immunochemically distinct proteins that are deficient in the plasma and platelets of patients with severe von Willebrand's disease. Normal human umbilical vein endothelial cells were cultured in the presence of [35S]methionine. Crossed immunoelectrophoresis of endothelial cell supernates and detergent-solubilized endothelial cells demonstrated specific incorporation of the [35S]methionine into vW AgII. Furthermore, when endothelial cells were lysed in the presence of proteolytic inhibitors, a second, less anodal peak was identified on crossed immunoelectrophoresis. This peak represented a complex of vW AgII and vWf and demonstrated a reaction of complete identity with the vW AgII immunoprecipitate. When plasma, serum, or platelets were evaluated by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, this "complex" peak was not present. When antibodies to vWf, fibronectin, or fibrinogen were present in the first dimension of crossed immunoelectrophoresis, only the antibodies to vWf removed the complex. Radioiodinated polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to vWf also localized vWf to this complex. Under reducing conditions, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [35S]methionine-labeled immunoprecipitates indicated that the molecular weight of vW AgII is 98,000 and that vWf was present as two species of 220,000 and 260,000 mol wt, respectively. Immunofluorescent microscopy of endothelial cells demonstrated colocalization of vW AgII and vWf in endothelial cells with intense immunostaining of the same subcellular granules.
D R McCarroll, E G Levin, R R Montgomery
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