Primary structure of scombrine alpha: two different species with an identical protamine.
@article{Buesa1998PrimarySO, title={Primary structure of scombrine alpha: two different species with an identical protamine.}, author={Carlos Buesa and L J Del Valle and N{\'u}ria Saperas and Marc A. Goethals and Dom{\`e}nec Lloris and Manel Chiva}, journal={Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part B, Biochemistry \& molecular biology}, year={1998}, volume={119 1}, pages={ 145-9 } }
We have studied the protamine scombrine alpha from the mackerel Scomber scombrus. Scombrine alpha is found phosphorylated in spermatid nuclei, but not in nuclei of ripe sperm. It is a typical fish protamine, made up of two distinct molecular species, each of 34 amino acid residues. The primary structure of the main component of scombrine alpha is 100% identical to scombrine gamma, the nonmicroheterogeneous protamine from Scomber australasicus (11). The second component of scombrine alpha is a…