Abstract
A protein inhibiting salivary and pancreatic a-amylase of mammalian origin is contained in dry seeds of beans (Phaseolus vulgaris). Starting from a crude bean extract, the amylase inhibitor may be purified about 30fold in one step to apparent homogeneity by chromatography on matrix-bound salivary amylase. Compared with protein obtained by a conventional purification procedure and in similar yield, the amylase inhibitor obtained by affinity chromatography had the same specific activity (4.5 (akat inhibitor units/mg protein). A one step purification from crude extracts to homogenous inhibitor with the same specific activity was achieved by immuno-affinity chromatography on immobilized rabbit antibody raised against pure amylase inhibitor. The yield was 60 % that of a conventional purification. Criteria of purity of the inhibitor protein were thin-layer electrofocussing and immuno-electrophoresis.