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1.
Somatostatin receptors were characterized on guinea-pig pancreatic acini membranes using 125I-[Tyr11] somatostatin 14 as a radioligand. In 0.1 mM Ca2+ buffer the binding was saturable and slowly reversible, exhibiting a single class of high affinity binding sites (KD = 0.15 +/- 0.03 nM) with a maximal binding capacity (B max) of 178 +/- 18 fmol/mg protein. In 30 nM) free Ca2+ buffer, the binding was highly reversible. Affinity and B max were decreased by about 2-fold. Ca2+ exhibited an EC50 of 2.4 +/- 0.9 microM to potentiate the binding of somatostatin. Na+, but not K+, inhibited the binding: Bmax was decreased with no change in affinity. Somatostatin analogs inhibited the binding of 125I-[Tyr11] somatostatin 14. The relative potencies were: somatostatin 14 greater than somatostatin 28 = [Nle8]somatostatin 28 greater than [D Tryp8, D Cys14]somatostatin 14.  相似文献   

2.
The solubilization of somatostatin receptors from guinea-pig pancreas by different non-denaturing detergents was investigated after stabilization of the receptors by prior binding of 125I-[Tyr11]somatostatin or its analogue 125I-[Leu8,DTrp22,Tyr25]somatostatin 28, to pancreatic plasma membranes. The somatostatin-receptor complexes were solubilized in a high yield by Zwittergent 3-14 (3-[tetradecyldimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate), a zwitterionic detergent. Other detergents, digitonin, Triton X-100, Chaps (3-[cholamidopropyldimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate) and octyl beta-D-glycopyranoside, achieved only partial solubilization. The recovery of receptor complexes was increased by glycerol. In order to characterize solubilized somatostatin-receptor complexes, membranes receptors were covalently labelled using N-5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyloxysuccinimide as cross-linking reagent before solubilization. Gel filtration chromatography analysis resulted in the identification of a major protein component of apparent Mr = 93,000 which interacted with the two radioligands. In addition, a similar component of Mr = 88,000 was characterized after analysis by SDS-PAGE of membrane receptors covalently cross-linked with 125I-[Leu8,DTrp22,Tyr25]somatostatin 28 by different heterobifunctional reagents: N-5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyloxysuccinimide, N-hydroxysuccinimidyl 4-azidobenzoate, N-succinimidyl 6-(4'-azido-2'-nitrophenylamino)hexanoate. Optimal cross-linking results were obtained with N-5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyloxysuccinimide. The solubilized somatostatin-receptor complex was adsorbed to wheat-germ agglutinin-agarose column and eluted by specific sugars. We concluded that the guinea-pig pancreatic somatostatin receptor in the membrane and in the non-denaturing detergent solution behaves as a protein monomer of apparent Mr approximately 85,000-90,000. The somatostatin receptor is a glycoprotein which contains complex-type carbohydrate chains.  相似文献   

3.
Two populations of brain somatostatin (SS) receptors, one with high affinity for the somatostatin octapeptide analogue SMS 201-995 (SS1 type) and one poorly sensitive to this analogue (SS2 type) have been characterised in regard to their ionic requirements using two radioligands, the iodinated Tyr3 derivative of the octapeptide SS analog SMS 201-995 and the iodinated [Tyr11]-SS. Specific binding of 125I-[Tyr11]-SS to rat cortex membrane homogenates can be increased by approximately 180% in presence of 5 mM Mg2+. The increase in number of binding sites seen by Mg2+ is not accompanied by a marked increase in affinity for SS but for SMS 201-995: the low affinity binding for SMS 201-995 seen in absence of Mg2+ is replaced in part by higher affinity binding in presence of these ions. SMS 201-995 sensitive SS1 receptor subpopulation measured with 125I-204-090, a specific ligand for SS1 subpopulation, is massively increased in presence of Mg2+. However, SMS 201-995 insensitive SS2 receptor population measured with 125I-[Tyr11]-SS in presence of excess SMS 201-995 is unchanged in presence of Mg2+. The Mg2+-dependency can also be observed with autoradiography for extra cortical, i.e. hippocampal, brain SS receptors. 120 mM Na+ does not affect the total brain SS receptor population, but reduces the specific binding of SS1 receptors and increases that of SS2 receptors. Therefore, the rat brain, in particular the cortex, possesses a SMS 201-995-sensitive, Mg2+-dependent SS receptor subpopulation (SS1) as well as a SMS 201-995-insensitive, Mg2+-independent SS population (SS2).  相似文献   

4.
Tumor promoter inhibition of cellular binding of somatostatin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tumor promoting phorbol esters inhibited the binding of 125I-[Tyr11] somatostatin to isolated acinar cells from guinea-pig pancreas. Maximal inhibition reached 69.7 +/- 5% at 1 microM TPA. Receptor affinity was decreased by 2.5-fold without change in binding capacity. The ability of TPA in inhibiting somatostatin binding was decreased in 30 nM Ca2+ medium, abolished at 4 degrees C or in a membrane preparation. The effect of caerulein, a secretagogue which also caused loss of binding, and that of TPA were not additive. We concluded that TPA inhibits somatostatin binding not by binding directly at the active site of somatostatin receptor. TPA may act at a later point than caerulein via a similar pathway to modulate somatostatin receptor affinity.  相似文献   

5.
The binding of somatostatin-14 (S-14) to rat pancreatic acinar cell membranes was characterized using [125I-Tyr11]S-14 as the radioligand. Maximum binding was observed at pH 7.4 and was Ca2+-dependent. Such Ca2+ dependence of S-14 receptor binding was not observed in other tissues. Scatchard analysis of the competitive inhibition by S-14 of [125I-Tyr11]S-14 binding revealed a single class of high affinity sites (Kd = 0.5 +/- 0.07 nM) with a binding capacity (Bmax) of 266 +/- 22 fmol/mg of protein. [D-Trp8]S-14 and structural analogs with halogenated Trp moiety exhibited 2-32-fold greater binding affinity than S-14, [D-F5-Trp8]S-14 being the most potent. [Tyr11]S-14 was equipotent with S-14. The affinity of somatostatin-28 for binding to these receptors was 50% of that of S-14. Cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) inhibited the binding of [125I-Tyr11]S-14, but its inhibition curve was not parallel to that of S-14. In the presence of 1 nM CCK-8, the Bmax of S-14 receptors was reduced to 150 +/- 17 fmol/mg of protein. Dibutyryl cyclic GMP, a CCK receptor antagonist, partially reversed the inhibitory action of CCK-8, suggesting that CCK receptors mediate the inhibition of S-14 receptor binding. GDP, GTP, and guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate inhibit S-14 receptor binding in this tissue. The inhibition was shown to be due to decrease in binding capacity and not due to change in affinity. Specifically bound [125I-Tyr11]S-14 cross-linked to the S-14 receptors was found associated with three proteins of approximate Mr = 200,000, 80,000, and 70,000 which could be detected under both reducing and nonreducing conditions. Finally, pancreatic acinar cell S-14 receptors were shown to be down-regulated by persistent hypersomatostatinemia 1 week after streptozotocin-induced diabetes characterized by decreased Bmax (105 +/- 13 fmol/mg of protein) without any change in affinity. We conclude that pancreatic acinar cell membrane S-14 receptors require Ca2+ for maximal binding and thus differ from S-14 receptors in other tissues, S-14 receptors in this tissue also exhibit selective ligand specificities, these receptors are regulated by CCK-8 and guanine nucleotides, three receptor proteins of apparent Mr = 200,000, 80,000, and 70,000 specifically bind S-14, and (v) these receptors are regulated by S-14 in vivo as evidenced by decreased binding in streptozotocin diabetic rats characterized by hypersomatostatinemia.  相似文献   

6.
The somatostatin receptors on rat pancreatic acinar membranes were demonstrated by use of a radioiodinated (125I-) analogue of somatostatin (SMS 204-090 or [Tyr3]SMS). The tracer was found to bind to the receptor with a Kd of 58 pM. The number of sites detected by this tracer (4.7 pmol/mg of protein) was 5-10 times higher than the number of sites previously found with other tracers. Since the level of non-specific binding was also very low as compared with findings with other tracers, 125I-204-090 might be of interest in future attempts to characterize the somatostatin receptors in the pancreas. The prelabelled membranes were solubilized with 1% CHAPS, and the solubilized complexes were found to adsorb to wheat-germ-agglutinin-coupled agarose, from which they could be eluted with 4 mM-triacetylchitotriose. The complexes within this eluate were shown by gel filtration on Trisacryl GF-2000 to have an Mr of about 400,000. The dissociation of the complexes was augmented both within the membranes as well as in the solubilized state by incubation with the GTP analogue guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate, indicating that the complexes are probably functionally linked to a guanine-nucleotide-binding regulatory protein. After SDS/slab-gel electrophoresis and autoradiography of cross-linked complexes after treatment with the heterobifunctional reagent N-5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyloxysuccinimide, a broad band occurred at approximately Mr 90,000 both in the membranes and in the eluates of complexes after lectin-adsorption chromatography. We conclude that the augmentation of the number of detectable sites for binding of somatostatin, as well as the very low level of non-specific binding obtained by the use of 125I-[Tyr3]SMS as tracer, has made it possible for us to demonstrate the solubilization of the somatostatin receptor in conjunction with its ligand and a GTP-binding regulatory protein, and we have succeeded in cross-linking 125I-[Tyr3]SMS to a binding subunit of Mr 90,000 in the membranes and in demonstrating the presence of the same labelled binding subunit within complexes solubilized and chromatographed on a lectin column before cross-linking.  相似文献   

7.
125I-[Tyr2]scyllatoxin allowed to label a single class of high-affinity receptors in membranes from the human neuroblastoma cell line NB-OK 1. The Kd of these receptors was 60 pM for scyllatoxin (Leiurotoxin I) and 20 pM for apamin and the Bmax was low (3.8 fmol/mg membrane protein). K+ increased toxin binding at low concentrations but exerted opposite effects at high concentrations. Ca2+, guanidinium and Na+ exerted only inhibitory effects on binding. Scyllatoxin binding sites were overexpressed 2.5-fold after a 24-h cell pretreatment with 2 mM butyrate. This effect was suppressed by cycloheximide.  相似文献   

8.
J C Reubi 《Life sciences》1985,36(19):1829-1836
Cyclic octapeptide analogues of somatostatin (SS) like SMS 201-995 [H-(D) Phe-Cys-Phe-(D) Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr(ol)] or its Tyr3-derivative 204-090, displaced [125I-Tyr11]-SS 100% from pancreatic membranes but only 62-75% from brain membranes; the remaining sites were displaced by SS. These data indicate that some mini-somatostatins bind to a subpopulation of SS receptors in rat brain. The iodinated Tyr3-derivative (125I-204-090) can be considered a selective radioligand for one rat brain SS receptor subpopulation: It shows saturable and high affinity binding (KD = 0.29 nM; Bmax = 350 fmoles/mg protein) to rat cortex. The pharmacological properties of 125I-204-090 binding sites are similar to those of [125I-Tyr11]-SS sites. Distribution of these sites correspond to SS receptor-rich areas such as cortex, hippocampus, striatum, pituitary, pancreatic beta-cell. SS as well as SMS 201-995 bind to these sites with high affinity. The stability and high specific vs non-specific binding ratio makes 204-090 a radioligand of choice to measure this SS receptor subpopulation in CNS but also the SS receptors in pituitary and pancreas.  相似文献   

9.
Bombesin and bombesin-related peptides such as gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) stimulate DNA synthesis and proliferation of Swiss 3T3 cells in culture. We have used 125I-labelled [Tyr4]bombesin and 125I-labelled GRP to characterize and identify the receptors for these peptides on Swiss 3T3 cells. The binding of 125I-[Tyr4]bombesin, which retained full biological activity, was maximal between 20 and 30 min incubation at 37 degrees C, after which continued incubation led to a decline in cell-associated radioactivity. This decline was markedly slowed by the presence of lysosomal enzyme inhibitors. Specificity of the binding site was indicated by the competitive inhibition of binding by bombesin-related peptides, but not by unrelated peptides and growth factors. Scatchard analysis of binding data indicated a single class of high-affinity receptors. The calculated value for the dissociation constant (Kd) was 2.1 nM and each cell possesses approx. 240,000 receptors. Because [Tyr4]bombesin has no free amino group, 125I-GRP was used in chemical cross-linking studies. When disuccinimidyl suberate was used to covalently couple 125I-GRP to the cells, two major radiolabelled complexes were detected with molecular masses of approx. 80,000-85,000 and 140,000. The binding of 125I-[Tyr4]bombesin to the cells was pH-dependent with maximal binding at pH 6.5-7.5 and effectively no specific binding at pH values below 4.5. At 37 degrees C, cell-associated 125I-[Tyr4]bombesin quickly became resistant to removal by acidic buffers, suggesting its rapid transfer to an intracellular compartment. However, pre-incubation with unlabelled [Tyr4]bombesin did not induce down-regulation of bombesin receptors as measured by the subsequent binding of 125I-[Tyr4]bombesin. In contrast with the Swiss 3T3 cells, specific binding of 125I-[Tyr4]bombesin was not detectable in two cell lines which are biologically unresponsive to bombesin-related peptides.  相似文献   

10.
In the present study we characterized high-affinity somatostatin (SRIF) binding sites (Kd = 2.06 +/- 0.32 nM and Bmax = 295 +/- 28 fmol/mg protein) in cerebral cortex membrane preparations of European ground squirrel using 125I-[Tyr0-D-Trp8]-SRIF14 as a radioligand. The inhibition of radioligand specific binding by SRIF14, as well as by its agonists (SRIF28, Tyr0-D-Trp8-SRIF14, SMS 201 995) was complete and monophasic, thus revealing a single population of somatostatinergic binding sites. Radioautographic analysis of 125I-[Tyr0-D-Trp8]-SRIF14 labeled brain sections confirmed the results of our biochemical study. The homogeneity of SRIF binding sites in the ground squirrel neocortex was not dependent on the animal's life-cycle phase.  相似文献   

11.
Characterization of bombesin receptors on canine antral gastrin cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Dispersed canine antral mucosal cells were prepared by sequential steps of collagenase digestion and EDTA treatment. Cell preparations enriched in gastrin cells were made by centrifugal elutriation followed by step density gradient centrifugation. Specific, saturable, and reversible binding of 125I-[Tyr4]-bombesin was found in all preparations. This saturable binding was time, temperature, and cell number dependent. In both velocity (elutriator) and density cell separation experiments, saturable binding of bombesin correlated with the distribution of cells containing gastrin- but not somatostatin-like immunoreactivity. Maximal specific binding to gastrin (G) cell-enriched fractions was reached in 45 min at 37 degrees C and constituted 90% of total binding. Addition of 100 nM nonradioactive bombesin to cells incubated with 50 pM 125I-[Tyr4]-bombesin for 45 min resulted in time-dependent dissociation of specifically bound tracer to about 40% of the maximal equilibrium binding. Analysis of saturable equilibrium binding yielded a best fit to a one-site model of high affinity binding sites with an apparent Kd of 85 +/- 14 pM and a Bmax of 231,000 +/- 71,000 receptors/gastrin cell. Nonradioactive [Tyr4]-bombesin and related analogs inhibited the specific binding of the tracer in a dose-related manner. The rank order of potency, determined at the IC50, of [Tyr4]-bombesin and related analogs for inhibition of specific binding was bombesin greater than [Tyr4]-bombesin = hGRP-27 greater than GRP-10 greater than ranatensin much greater than neuromedin B. Cholecystokinin, somatostatin, substance K, and kassinin each tested at a concentration of 1 microM did not inhibit bombesin binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
A series of cyclic conformationally restricted penicillamine containing somatostatin octapeptide analogues have been prepared by standard solid phase synthetic techniques and tested for their ability to inhibit specific [125I]CGP 23,996 (des-Ala1-,Gly2-[desamino-Cys3Tyr11]-dicarba3, 14-somatostatin), [3H]naloxone or [3H]DPDPE ([D-Pen2-D-Pen5]enkephalin) binding in rat brain membrane preparations. We now report structure-activity relationship studies with the synthesis of our most potent and selective mu opioid receptor compound D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Orn-Thr-Pen-Thr-NH2, which we refer to as Cys2Tyr3Orn5Pen7-amide. While this octapeptide exhibited high affinity (IC50 = 2.80 nM) for an apparently single population of binding sites (nH = 0.89 +/- 0.1) and exceptional selectivity for mu opioid receptors with an IC50(DPDPE)/IC50 (naloxone) ratio of 4,829, it also displayed very low affinity for somatostatin receptors (IC50 = 22,700 nM). Thus, Cys2Tyr3Orn5Pen7-amide may be the ligand of choice for further characterization of mu opioid receptors and for examining the physiological role of this class of receptors.  相似文献   

13.
The role of somatostatin and its mechanism of action in the retina remains an important target for investigation. Biochemical and pharmacological studies were engaged to characterize the somatostatin receptors in the rabbit retina, and their coupling to G-proteins. The ability of selective ligands to inhibit [125I]Tyr11-somatostatin-14 binding to rabbit retinal membranes was examined. The sst2 analogues SMS201-995, MK678, and BIM23014, displayed IC50 values of 0.28 +/- 0.12, 0.04 +/- 0.01 and 1.57 +/- 0.39 nm, respectively. The sst1 analogue CH275 moderately displaced the [125I]Tyr11-somatostatin-14 binding, while selective analogues for sst3, sst4 and sst5 had minimal effect. Immunoblotting and/or immunohistochemistry studies revealed the presence of the pertussis toxin sensitive Gi1/2, and Go proteins, as well as Gs. Somatostatin-14 and MK678 stimulated GTPase activity in a concentration-dependent manner with EC50 values of 42.8 +/- 16.8 and 70.0 +/- 16.5 nm, respectively, thus supporting the functional coupling between the receptor and the G-proteins. CH275 stimulated the GTPase activity moderately, in agreement with its binding profile. The antisera raised against Goalpha and Gi1/2alpha inhibited the somatostatin-induced high-affinity GTPase activity, but only anti-Goalpha inhibited the MK678 stimulation of the enzyme. These results suggest that somatostatin mediates its actions in the rabbit retina by interacting mainly with sst2 receptors that couple to Goalpha.  相似文献   

14.
Somatostatin (SRIF) is a putative peptide neurotransmitter that may interact with brain capillaries following neurosecretion of the peptide. The present studies investigate the binding and metabolism of SRIF analogues in isolated bovine brain microvessels. 125I-[Tyr1]SRIF was rapidly degraded by capillary aminopeptidase with a half-time of approximately 3 min at 23 degrees C. The microvessel aminopeptidase had a low affinity and high capacity for the peptide, Km = 76 microM and Vmax = 74 nmol min-1 mgp-1. 125I-[Tyr11]SRIF was converted to free iodotyrosine at a much slower rate, presumably by a lower-activity endopeptidase. 125I-[Try11]SRIF was rapidly bound by microvessels, whereas another basic peptide, [Tyr8]bradykinin, or an acidic peptide, CCK8, or a neutral peptide, leucine enkephalin, were bound to a considerably less extent. The binding of 125I-[Tyr11]SRIF to the capillaries was nonsaturable up to a concentration of 1 microgram/ml of unlabeled peptide, and the binding reaction was extremely rapid, reaching equilibrium within 5 s at either 0 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Approximately 20% of the SRIF bound by the microvessels was resistant to acid wash and presumably represented internalized peptide. In addition, the 125I-[Tyr11]SRIF bound rapidly to the endothelial cytoskeleton remaining after a 1% Triton X-100 extraction of the microvessels. The peptide-cytoskeletal binding reaction was nonsaturable up to 1 microgram/ml of unlabeled [Tyr11]SRIF, but it was inhibited by 0.5% polylysine or 0.8 M KCl and was stimulated by 1 mM dithiothreiotol. These studies suggest that brain microvessels rapidly sequester and degrade SRIF analogues and that this may represent one mechanism for rapid inactivation of the neuropeptides subsequent to neurosecretion.  相似文献   

15.
Somatostatin receptors of plasma membranes from beta cells of hamster insulinoma were covalently labelled with 125I-[Leu8,D-Trp22,Tyr25]somatostatin-28 (125I-somatostatin-28) and solubilized with the non-denaturing detergent Triton X-100. Analysis by SDS/PAGE and autoradiography revealed three specific 125I-somatostatin-28 receptor complexes with similar molecular masses (228 kDa, 128 kDa and 45 kDa) to those previously identified [Cotroneo, P., Marie, J.-C. & Rosselin, G. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 174, 219-224]. The major labelled complex (128 kDa) was adsorbed to a wheat-germ-agglutinin agarose column and eluted by N-acetylglucosamine. Also, the binding of 125I-somatostatin-28 to plasma membranes was specifically inhibited by the GTP analog, guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP[S]) in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, when somatostatin-28 receptors were solubilized by Triton X-100 as a reversible complex with 125I-somatostatin-28, GTP[S] specifically dissociated the bound ligand to a larger extent from the soluble receptors than from the plasma-membrane-embedded receptors, the radioactivity remaining bound after 15 min at 37 degrees C being 30% and 83% respectively. After pertussis-toxin-induced [32P]ADP-ribosylation of pancreatic membranes, a 41-kDa [32P]ADP-ribose-labelled inhibitory guanine nucleotide binding protein coeluted with the 128-kDa and 45-kDa receptor complexes. The labelling of both receptor proteins was sensitive to GTP[S]. The labelling of the 228-kDa band was inconsistent. These results support the conclusion that beta cell somatostatin receptors can be solubilized as proteins of 128 kDa and 45 kDa. The major labeled species corresponds to the 128-kDa band and is a glycoprotein. The pancreatic membrane contains a 41-kDa GTP-binding protein that can complex with somatostatin receptors.  相似文献   

16.
H C Wong  J H Walsh  H Yang  Y Taché  A M Buchan 《Peptides》1990,11(4):707-712
The spleen from a Robertsonian mouse with high titer and affinity antiserum after being immunized with somatostatin-14 conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin was fused with FOX-NY cells. Hybridomas were cloned by limiting dilution, subcloned, and ascites was produced from the highest affinity close in pristine-primed Balb/c mice. Ascites fluid contained approximately 20 mg/ml IgG and bound 50% of 1 fmol 125I-[Tyr1]-somatostatin at a final dilution of 1:10,000,000. Binding of this IgG1 antibody, CURE.S6, was inhibited by 50% at 40 pM concentrations of either somatostatin-14 or somatostatin-28, but was not inhibited by [D-Trp8 -somatostatin at 1000-fold higher concentrations. The antibody produced very intense specific immunohistochemical staining of somatostatin endocrine cells in the stomach and pancreas and of intestinal somatostatin neurons with extremely low background staining. Intravenous injection of 2 mg purified antibody in urethane-anesthetized rats resulted in 300-fold increase in plasma GH within 15 min. CURE.S6 is a high affinity monoclonal antibody directed at the biologically active somatostatin ring structure. This antibody is useful for in vivo immunoneutralization of exogenous and endogenous somatostatin in the rat and also is an excellent reagent for immunohistochemical localization of somatostatin.  相似文献   

17.
We have synthesized two photoreactive derivatives of somatostatin, namely [125I-Tyr11,azidonitrobenzoyl (ANB)-Lys4]somatostatin and [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys9]somatostatin, and used them to characterize somatostatin receptors biochemically in several cell types. Saturation binding experiments carried out in the dark demonstrated that [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin bound with high affinity (KD = 126 +/- 39 pM) to a single class of binding sites in GH4C1 pituitary cell membranes. The affinity of this analog was similar to that of the unsubstituted peptide [125I-Tyr11]somatostatin (207 +/- 3 pM). In contrast, specific binding was not observed with [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys9]somatostatin. The binding of both [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin and [125I-Tyr11]somatostatin was potently inhibited by somatostatin (EC50 = 300 pM) whereas at 100 nM unrelated peptides had no effect. Furthermore, both pertussis toxin treatment and guanyl-5'yl imidophosphate (Gpp(NH)p) markedly reduced [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin binding. Thus, [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin binds to G-protein coupled somatostatin receptors with high affinity. To characterize these receptors biochemically, GH4C1 cell membranes were irradiated with ultraviolet light following the binding incubation, and the labeled proteins were identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. A major band of 85 kDa was specifically labeled with [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin but not with [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys9]somatostatin or [125I-Tyr11]somatostatin. The binding affinity of the 85-kDa protein for [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin was very high (Kd = 34 pM). Labeling of this protein was inhibited competitively by somatostatin (EC50 = 140 +/- 80 pM) but not by unrelated peptides. Furthermore, this band was not labeled in pertussis toxin-treated membranes or in untreated membranes incubated with Gpp(NH)p. Finally, [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin specifically labeled bands of 82, 75, and 72 kDa in membranes prepared from mouse pituitary AtT-20 cells, rat pancreatic acinar AR4-2J cells, and HIT hamster islet cells, respectively. Thus, [125I-Tyr11,ANB-Lys4]somatostatin represents the first photolabile somatostatin analog able to bind to receptors with high affinity. Our studies demonstrate that this novel peptide covalently labels specific somatostatin receptors in a variety of target cell types.  相似文献   

18.
The distribution and nature of (somatostatin) SRIF receptors and receptor mRNAs was studied in the brain and periphery of various laboratory animals using in situ hybridisation, autoradiography and radioligand binding. The messenger RNA (mRNA) expression of SRIF receptors msst1, msst2, msst3, msst4 and msst5 was studied in the adult mouse brain by in situ hybridisation histochemistry using specific oligonucleotide probes and compared to that of adult rats. As observed in rat brain, sst3 receptor mRNA is prominently expressed across the mouse brain, although equivalent binding has not yet been identified in situ. Sst1 and sst2 receptor mRNA expression, was prominent and again comparable to that observed in rat brain, whereas sst4 and especially sst5 receptor mRNA show comparatively low levels, although the former appears to be widely distributed while the latter could only be identified in a few nuclei. Altogether, the data are compatible with current knowledge, i.e. sst1 and sst2 receptor mRNA is prominent (both receptors have been functionally identified in the brain and for sst2 in the periphery), sst3 mRNA is highly expressed but in the absence of any functional correlate remains elusive. The expression of sst4 mRNA is comparatively low (especially when compared to what is seen in the lung, where high densities of sst4 receptors are present) and it remains to be seen whether sst5 receptor mRNA, which is confined to a few nuclei, will play a role in the brain, keeping in mind that high levels are found in the pituitary. Radioligand binding studies were performed in CCL39 cells expressing the five human recombinant receptors and compared to binding in membranes of rat cerebral cortex with [125I]Tyr11-SRIF14 which in the presence of 120 mM labels primarily sst1 receptor as suggested by the better correlation hsst1 and similar rank order of potency. The profile of [125I]Tyr3-octreotide labelled sites in rat cortex correlates better with recombinant sst2 than sst3 or sst5 binding profiles. Finally, [125I]LTT-SRIF28-labelled sites in rat lung express a sst4 receptor profile in agreement with previous findings. SRIF receptor autoradiography was performed in the brain and peripheral tissue of rat and/or guinea-pig using a number of ligands known to label recombinant SRIF receptors: [125I]LTT-SRIF28, [125I]CGP 23996, [125I]Tyr10-CST, or [125I]Tyr3-octreotide. Although, [125I]Tyr10-CST has been shown to label all five recombinant SRIF receptors, it is apparent that this radioligand is not useful for autoradiographic studies. By contrast, the other three ligands show good signal to noise ratios in rat or guinea-pig brain, rat lung, rat pancreas, or guinea-pig ileum. In most tissues, [125I]Tyr3-octreotide represents a prominent part of the binding (when compared to [125I]LTT-SRIF28 and [125I]CGP 23996), suggesting that sst2 receptors are strongly expressed in most tissues; it is only in rat lung that [125I]LTT-SRIF28 and [125I]CGP 23996 show marked binding, whereas [125I]Tyr3-octreotide does apparently label no sites, in agreement with the sole presence of sst4 receptors in this tissue.  相似文献   

19.
Somatostatin inhibited secretin-stimulated cyclic AMP formation in pancreatic acinar cells. The inhibition was only partial. Maximal inhibition reached about 50%. Somatostatin analogs tested inhibited secretin-stimulated cyclic AMP formation with a lower potency than somatostatin. Cys-Aza Ala-Phe-Phe-DTrp-Lys-Thr-Phe-Phe-Cys was found to be an antagonist of somatostatin in inhibiting secretin-stimulated cyclic AMP. Analogs inhibited the binding of 125I-[Tyr11] somatostatin to pancreatic acini. There was a good correlation (r = 0.97) between concentration for inhibiting 50% secretin-stimulated cyclic AMP and receptor binding affinities.  相似文献   

20.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to the amino-terminal region of the human parathyroid hormone-related peptide (hPTHrp) were used to characterize the interaction of hPTHrp with parathyroid hormone (PTH) receptors in clonal rat osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8). Both hPTHrp-(1-34) and [Tyr40]hPTHrp-(1-40) showed full agonist activity in stimulating cyclic AMP accumulation in ROS cells; human PTHrp-(1-34) was approximately 2.5-fold as potent as hPTH-(1-34). Both [Tyr-40]hPTHrp-(3-40) and hPTH-(3-34) inhibited the cyclic AMP increase induced by either hPTHrp or PTH with parallel dose-inhibition curves. Binding to intact ROS cells of a 125I-labeled [Tyr40]hPTHrp-(1-40) (125I-[Tyr40]hPTHrp-(1-40)) which retains full biological activity was time- and temperature-dependent and reversible. Binding of 125I-[Tyr40]hPTHrp-(1-40) and 125I-labeled [Nle8, Nle18, Tyr34]bovine PTH-(1-34)NH2 to ROS cells was competed for, to the same extent and with the comparable potency, by either unlabeled hPTHrp or PTH peptides. The binding capacity and affinity of receptors in ROS cells were strikingly similar for hPTHrp and PTH. Affinity cross-linking with either radioligand resulted in high affinity, specific labeling of an apparently identical macromolecule centering at Mr = 80,000, which was detected in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in both reducing and nonreducing conditions. The data indicate that hPTHrp and PTH, their amino-terminal fragments at least, interact with the identical receptors with regard to affinity, capacity, specificity, and physicochemical characteristics in osteoblastic ROS 17/2.8 cells.  相似文献   

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