Abstract: | A biosynthetic labeled peptide structurally related to the thymic peptide ubiquitin was first identified fortuitously in bovine pars intermedia cells in regard to its partial NH2 terminal amino acid sequence (Met 1, Leu 8, 15 and Lys 6, 11, 27, 29, 33) after a protein segment data bank search. A peptide with the same behavior on carboxymethylcellulose chromatography and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis has been purified after labeling experiments in two areas of rat brain, hypothalamus and striatum, and in a mouse and a human ACTH-secreting pituitary tumors. It represents about 1 to 10% of the total labeled proteins in the various experiments. Its identity with the above mentioned bovine pituitary peptide was confirmed by microsequence analysis with respect to Met 1, Lys 6, 11 in hypothalmus, Met 1 in striatum, and Lys 6, 11, 27, 29, 33 in the two pituitary tumors. The availability of standard purified ubiquitin allowed us to show that labeled and cold peptides have the same electrophoretic mobility and elution volume on Sephadex G-50 chromatography this further confirms their identity. Possible interests of such a biosynthetic characterization of a ubiquitin-related peptide are discussed, particularly in view of the structural relationship of ubiquitin to the non histone component of nuclear protein A-24, and as a test of tissue viability and biosynthetic efficiency in our in vitro biosynthetic systems. |