TL;DR: Vitamin B12 assayed microbiologically could not be detected in the specific granule fractions and unsaturated vitamin B12-binding proteins were almost exclusively localized to the specificgranules.
Abstract: 1. A granulocyte-rich fraction was isolated from blood of a patient with chronic granulocytic leukaemia and from blood of a normal subject and the cells were disrupted in isotonic sucrose. The nuclei were removed by low-speed centrifugation and the post-nuclear supernatant was fractionated by centrifugation on sucrose density gradients. 2. The subcellular organelles in the gradients were detected with marker enzymes by the use of highly sensitive assay techniques. Similar results were obtained with granulocytes from both subjects. 3. Unsaturated vitamin B 12 -binding proteins were almost exclusively localized to the specific granules. Chromatographic analysis of these proteins showed them to have approximately equal proportions of transcobalamins I and III. Vitamin B 12 assayed microbiologically could not be detected in the specific granule fractions.
TL;DR: Transcobalamin II was shown to be a specific B 12 transport protein promoting the uptake of B 12 by human normal and malignant cells as mentioned in this paper, but it did not enhance the uptake by tissue cells in vitro.
TL;DR: A microfine precipitate of silica (Quso G32) almost instantly quantitatively adsorbs the polypeptide transcobalamin II from serum without adsorbing the glycoproteins transcobalamins I and III.
TL;DR: Thermodynamic parameters for binding of cyanocobalamin to intrinsic factor, transcobalin I, and transcobalamin II have been determined by Sephadex gel filtration.