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1.
The biogenesis of rat thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) involves the processing of its precursor (proTRH) into five biologically active TRH peptides and several non-TRH peptides where two of them had been attributed potential biological functions. This process implicates 1) proper folding of proTRH in the endoplasmic reticulum after its biosynthesis and exit to the Golgi apparatus and beyond, 2) initial processing of proTRH in the trans Golgi network and, 3) sorting of proTRH-derived peptides to the regulated secretory pathway. Previous studies have focused on elucidating the processing and sorting determinants of proTRH. However, the role of protein folding in the sorting of proTRH remains unexplored. Here we have investigated the role in the secretion of proTRH of a sequence comprising 22 amino acid residues, located at the N-terminal region of proTRH, residues 31-52. Complete deletion of these 22 amino acids dramatically compromised the biosynthesis of proTRH, manifested as a severe reduction in the steady state level of proTRH in the endoplasmic reticulum. This effect was largely reproduced by the deletion of only three amino acid residues, 40PGL42, within the proTRH31-52 sequence. The decreased steady state level of the mutant DeltaPGL was due to enhanced endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation. However, the remnant of DeltaPGL that escaped degradation was properly processed and sorted to secretory granules. Thus, these results suggest that the N-terminal domain within the prohormone sequence does not act as "sorting signal" in late secretion; instead, it seems to play a key role determining the proper folding pathway of the precursor and, thus, its stability.  相似文献   

2.
The hypothalamic tripeptide, thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), has been detected in neonatal pancreatic tissue and localized by immunocytochemistry in the islets of Langerhans. To determine whether the TRH gene is expressed in islets, we have extracted RNA from cultured rat islets and probed for proTRH mRNA using a [32P]-labeled antisense RNA. Islet proTRH mRNA comigrated with the 1.6 kilobase proTRH mRNA present in the rat hypothalamus. Normalized to total RNA, islets cultured for 7 days contained at least 10 times more proTRH mRNA than day 1 whole pancreas. We conclude that pancreatic TRH is synthesized in situ in the islets of Langerhans. This is the first attempt to characterize and quantify proTRH mRNA using neoformed foetal islets. We propose that quantitative analysis of proTRH mRNA concentrations in this culture system will enable study of the direct regulation of TRH biosynthesis in the pancreas.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: Pro-thyrotropin-releasing hormone (proTRH) is the precursor to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH; pGlu-His-Pro-NH2), the hypothalamic releasing factor that stimulates synthesis and release of thyrotropin from the pituitary gland. Five copies of the TRH progenitor sequence (Gln-His-Pro-Gly) and seven cryptic peptides are formed following posttranslational proteolytic cleavage of the 26-kDa rat proTRH precursor. The endopeptidase(s) responsible for the physiological conversion of proTRH to the TRH progenitor form is currently unknown. We examined the in vitro processing of [3H]leucine-labeled or unlabeled proTRH by partially purified recombinant PC1. Recombinant PC1 processed the 26-kDa TRH precursor by initially cleaving the prohormone after the basic amino acid at either position 153 or 159. Based on the use of our well-established antibodies, we propose that the initial cleavage gave rise to the formation of a 15-kDa N-terminal peptide (preproTRH25–152 or preproTRH25–158) and a 10-kDa C-terminal peptide (preproTRH154–255 or preproTRH160–255). Some initial cleavage occurred after amino acid 108 to generate a 16.5-kDa C-terminal peptide. The 15-kDa N-terminal intermediate was further processed to a 6-kDa peptide (preproTRH25–76 or preproTRH25–82) and a 3.8-kDa peptide (preproTRH83–108), whereas the 10-kDa C-terminal intermediate was processed to a 5.4-kDa peptide (preproTRH206–255). The optimal pH for these cleavages was 5.5. ZnCl2, EDTA, EGTA, and the omission of Ca2+ inhibited the formation of pYE27 (preproTRH25–50), one of the proTRH N-terminal products, by 48, 82, 72, and 45%, respectively. This study provides evidence, for the first time, that recombinant PC 1 enzyme can process proTRH to its predicted peptide intermediates.  相似文献   

4.
Prepro-thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) contains five TRH progenitor sequences and at least six other potential peptides (Lechan, R. M., Wu, P., Jackson, I. M. D., Wolf, H., Cooperman, S., Mandel, G., and Goodman, R. H. (1986a) Science 231, 159-161). Previous studies using radioimmunoassays developed against discrete regions of prepro-TRH have demonstrated that several of the potential peptides are present in rat brain and pancreas (Wu, P., Lechan, R. M., and Jackson, I. M. D. (1987) Endocrinology 121, 108-115; Wu, P. and Jackson, I. M. D. (1988a) Brain Res. 456, 22-28; Wu, P., and Jackson, I. M. D. (1988b) Regul. Pept. 22, 347-360). However, the low level of peptides present in intact tissues has made isolation of the peptides difficult. CA77 cells, a medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line, also express prepro-TRH and display processing similar to that found in tissues. However, peptide content in this tumor cell line is enhanced only 3-fold compared with normal tissues (Sevarino, K. A., Wu, P., Jackson, I. M. D., Roos, B. A., Mandel, G., and Goodman, R. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 620-623). To achieve higher levels of expression for facilitating peptide sequencing studies and to see if alternate processing of prepro-TRH could be detected in different cell types, we transfected into 3T3, GH4, AtT20, and RIN 5F cells a cDNA vector under control of the cytomegalovirus immediate-early promoter. 3T3 and GH4 cells failed to process prepro-TRH beyond cleavage of the signal sequence. Both AtT20 and RIN 5F cells efficiently cleaved the precursor at dibasic sites to generate mature TRH and the non-TRH peptides previously identified in vivo. Peptide content was up to 30 times greater than in hypothalamic extracts and 10 times greater than in CA77 cells. Secretion experiments with transfected AtT20 cells demonstrated that both mature TRH and the non-TRH peptides were secreted via a regulated secretory pathway similar to that utilized by endogenously synthesized peptides. We isolated several of the non-TRH peptides synthesized by transfected AtT20 cells and characterized these peptides by sequential Edman degradation. These studies identified the signal sequence cleavage site and determined that the non-TRH peptides are generated by cleavage at the dibasic sites flanking the five TRH progenitor sequences. Further, we determined that processing occurs at the Arg51-Arg52 site located in the amino-terminal portion of the precursor, the only dibasic site not flanking a TRH progenitor sequence.  相似文献   

5.
Rat thyrotropin-releasing hormone prohormone (pro-TRH) is a protein containing five copies of TRH, separated by connecting peptides. We have recently developed radioimmunoassays to synthetic peptides corresponding to prepro-TRH(160-169) and prepro-TRH(178-199). In the present study we have used these assays to investigate the ontogenesis of pro-TRH-derived peptides in the rat pancreas. Reverse-phase HPLC analysis of pancreatic extracts from 2-day-old rats showed the presence of two major immunoreactive peptides exhibiting the same retention time as synthetic prepro-TRH(160-169) and prepro-TRH(178-199), respectively. The concentrations of TRH and pro-TRH cryptic peptides in the rat pancreas rose rapidly after birth, reached a maximum at day 2-4 and decreased gradually afterwards. Streptozotocin treatment of newborn rats induced a marked decrease of TRH (96%), prepro-TRH(160-169) (97%) and prepro-TRH(178-199) content (94%) in pancreatic extracts. These results indicate that the evolution of TRH and pro-TRH-derived peptides follows the same pattern during the postnatal period. Our results also suggest that beta-cells are the only source of pro-TRH-derived peptides in the rat pancreas.  相似文献   

6.
Prohormone convertases (PCs) 1 and 2 are the primary endoproteases involved in the post-translational processing of proThyrotropin Releasing Hormone (proTRH) to give rise to TRH and other proposed biologically active non-TRH peptides. Previous evidence suggests that PC1 is responsible for most proTRH cleavage events. Here, we used the PC1 and PC2 knockout (KO) mouse models to examine the effects of PC1 or PC2 loss on proTRH processing. The PC1KO mouse presented a decrease in five proTRH-derived peptides, whereas the PC2KO mouse showed only lesser reduction in three TRH (Gln-His-Pro), TRH-Gly (Gln-His-Pro-Gly), and the short forms preproTRH(178-184) (pFQ(7)) and preproTRH(186-199) (pSE(14)) of pFE(22) (preproTRH(178-199)). Also, PC1KO and not PC2KO showed a decrease in pEH(24) indicating that PC1 is more important in generating this peptide in the mouse, which differs from previous studies using rat proTRH. Furthermore, downstream effects on thyroid hormone levels were evident in PC1KO mice, but not PC2KO mice suggesting that PC1 plays the more critical role in producing bioactive hypophysiotropic TRH. Yet loss of PC1 did not abolish TRH entirely indicating a complementary action for both enzymes in the normal processing of proTRH. We also show that PC2 alone is responsible for catalyzing the conversion of pFE(22) to pFQ(7) and pSE(14), all peptides implicated in regulation of suckling-induced prolactin release. Collectively, results characterize the specific roles of PC1 and PC2 in proTRH processing in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Rat thyrotropin-releasing hormone prohormone (pro-TRH) contains five separate copies of the TRH progenitor sequence: Gln-His-Pro-Gly. Each of the five sequences is flanked by pairs of basic residues and linked together by one of several predicted connecting sequences. Two of the pro-TRH-connecting peptides, prepro-TRH-(160-169) and prepro-TRH-(178-199), were detected in extracts of rat neural tissues by radioimmunoassay using antibodies directed against the corresponding synthetic probes. Endogenous prepro-TRH-(160-169) and prepro-TRH-(178-199) were purified by gel exclusion chromatography, reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography, and ion-exchange chromatography. Structural identification of each peptide was achieved by chromatographic comparison with synthetic standards, immunological analysis, and tryptic mapping. Equimolar amounts of these connecting fragments were observed in hypothalamus and spinal cord. Quantification of TRH in spinal cord and hypothalamus extracts revealed the presence of 4.9-6.3 mol of TRH/mol of prepro-TRH-(178-199) and 4.4-6 mol of TRH/mol of prepro-TRH-(160-169), respectively. By using the indirect immunofluorescence technique, prepro-TRH-(178-199) immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, and a dense plexus of immunopositive nerve terminals was observed in the external zone of the median eminence, in a distribution similar to that described for TRH. These studies demonstrate that prepro-TRH-(160-169) and prepro-TRH-(178-199) are, together with TRH, predominant storage forms of the TRH precursor in hypothalamus and spinal cord, being present in molar ratios corresponding to those expected for a nearly complete processing of the prohormone molecule. The presence of pro-TRH-connecting peptides in various brain regions, including the median eminence, suggests that these peptides might act as neuromodulators in the central nervous system and/or neuroendocrine signals at the pituitary level. In the olfactory lobes, prepro-TRH is processed differently since a C-terminally extended form of TRH, prepro-TRH-(172-199), is found as a major end product along with lower but significant amounts of prepro-TRH-(178-199) and prepro-TRH-(160-169). The striking difference in pro-TRH processing patterns among the various tissues examined suggests differential regulating mechanisms for TRH and/or TRH-related activities.  相似文献   

9.
Acid extracts of Xenopus laevis skin were fractionated by gel filtration on Sephadex G50 ion-exchange chromatography and reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Peptides related to thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) were identified in the eluted fractions by trypsin digestion and radioimmunoassay (RIA) using antibodies to the TRH tripeptide pGlu-His-Pro amide or to a TRH-related pentapeptide pGlu-His-Pro-Gly-Lys. In addition to the tripeptide hormone, evidence was obtained for the presence of peptides containing 10-20 amino acid residues which were extended on the NH2-terminal or COOH-terminal side of TRH. The peptides extending on the NH2-terminal side predominated and were shown to comprise 5 components present in differing concentrations, indicating that the processing sites in the TRH prohormone vary in their susceptibility to proteolysis. Evidence was also obtained for the presence of small amounts of the TRH-related pentapeptide pGlu-His-Pro-Gly-Lys. Using similar procedures it was demonstrated that TRH extended peptides were present in bovine hypothalamus. In this species the peptides extended at the NH2-terminus of TRH occurred in similar concentrations to the peptides extended at the COOH-terminus. The results show that processing of the TRH prohormone in Xenopus and ox leads to the formation of peptides intermediate in size between the prohormone and the tripeptide amide; the TRH extended peptides occur in significant quantity and in Xenopus are formed with a high degree of specificity.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated and sequenced a cDNA encoding rat cardiac troponin I. The predicted amino acid sequence was highly identical with previously reported chemically derived amino acid sequences for rabbit and bovine cardiac troponin I. Clones for slow skeletal muscle troponin I were also obtained from neonatal rat cardiac ventricle by the polymerase chain reaction. The nucleotide sequences of these clones were determined to be more than 99% identical with a previously reported rat slow skeletal troponin I cDNA [Koppe et al. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 14327-14333]. The troponin I clones hybridized to RNA from the appropriate muscle from adult animals. However, RNA from fetal and neonatal rat heart also hybridized with the slow skeletal troponin I cDNA, demonstrating its expression in fetal and neonatal rat heart. Slow skeletal troponin I steady-state mRNA levels decreased with increasing age, but cardiac troponin I mRNA levels increased through fetal and early neonatal cardiac development. Thus, during fetal and neonatal development, slow skeletal and cardiac troponin I isoforms are coexpressed in the rat heart and regulated in opposite directions. The degree of primary sequence differences in these isoforms, especially at phosphorylation sites, may result in important functional differences in the neonatal myocardium.  相似文献   

11.
C-type natriuretic peptide of 22 residues (CNP-22) is very recently identified in porcine brain as a third member of the mammalian natriuretic peptide family (1). Using a radioimmunoassay system newly established for CNP-22, we searched for CNP-related peptides in porcine brain. In addition to CNP-22, one major form of immunoreactive CNP was detected in porcine brain extracts, being isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. By microsequence analysis, the peptide was deduced to be a 53-amino acid peptide carrying a CNP-22 sequence at the C-terminus, and was designated C-type natriuretic peptide-53 (CNP-53). CNP-53 was found to be a major molecular form of CNP in porcine brain.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract— High concentrations (411 ± 30 pg/mg protein; mean ± S.E., n = 12) of immunoreactive TRH (TRHi) were detected in extracts of human fetal cerebellum (13-26 weeks gestation). The TRHi in the cerebellar extracts, when subjected to gel filtration and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), co-migrated with synthetic TRH. In each instance, no TRHi was detected which did not share identical chromatographic mobilities with synthetic TRH. Like synthetic TRH, the TRHi in extracts of fetal cerebellum and hypothalamus was insoluble in diethyl ether and was efficiently degraded when incubated at 37°C with adult rat serum. No significant degradation of TRHi occurred when the incubation was conducted at 0°C or when the extracts were incubated with rat serum that had been preheated at 60°C for 20 min. Neither synthetic TRH nor TRHi in extracts of fetal cerebellum or hypothalamus was degraded when incubated with human umbilical cord serum at 37°C or 0°C. The results of this study are supportive of the view that the TRHi in extracts of human fetal cerebellum is identical to TRH.  相似文献   

13.
Antisera directed against the amino-terminus of porcine CCK 33 detects related immunoreactivity in rat brain extracts, the distribution of which follows that of CCK 8. Sephadex chromatography indicates that several immunoreactive peptides are present with a molecular weight range of 2600-3500. These peptides are likely to be CCK 39 or CCK 33 and the amino terminal segments of CCK 39/33 without the CCK 8 sequence. The presence of CCK 39/33 and its amino-terminal fragments without CCK 22 and its amino-terminal fragments confirms the absence of CCK 22 in the rat brain. This cleavage at CCK 22 is one of the major differences between the processing of CCK in rat brain and gut and may reflect differences in their physiological roles.  相似文献   

14.
Insulin, pancreatic polypeptide, glucagon, oxyntomodulin, and two distinct glucagon-like peptides were isolated from acidic ethanol extracts of bullfrog pancreas by gel filtration followed by high pressure liquid chromatography. The amino acid sequences of pancreatic polypeptide, oxyntomodulin, and both glucagon-like peptides were determined. Frog pancreatic polypeptide contains 36 amino acid residues and has a COOH-terminal phenylalaninamide. It is more homologous with human pancreatic polypeptide (61%) than other characterized members of this family of peptides. Frog glucagon has an amino acid composition identical to the NH2-terminal 29 residues of the larger, more abundant oxyntomodulin and was not sequenced. The finding of a single form of glucagon and oxyntomodulin, but two glucagon-like peptides in frog pancreas extract is similar to that found or deduced for mammals.  相似文献   

15.
Classical and 'new' neurotransmitters appear in a certain sequence which seem to be similar in rat and man. Serotonin is one of the earliest transmitter which can be detected at a gestational age of 8 days in the rat. A couple of days later noradrenergic and dopaminergic fluorescence can be detected. The development of neurons with gamma-aminobutyric acid and acetylcholine lags behind the monoaminergic neurons. Endorphin is found in high concentrations at an early stage, while substance P, enkephalin and hypothalamic peptides like thyrotropin releasing hormone appear later in development. Inhibitory transmitters like GABA, somatostatin and endorphins reach their maximal concentrations in CNS during infancy, which might have some functional implications. The classical neurotransmitter noradrenaline might have certain unique functions during fetal and perinatal life. It seems to be important for the development of the cerebral cortex. It is released in high quantities at birth and might be of importance for the neonatal adaptation such as inducing arousal. The function of all the newly detected neuropeptides is far from elucidated even in adult life. Some of them seem to have important functions during perinatal life, while perhaps they occur in the adult organism only as evolutionary residues. For example endorphins seem to affect respiratory control in the fetus and the newborn in ways not seen in the adult. So called neuromodulators, for example adenosine, might also have particular functions during perinatal life.  相似文献   

16.
Two physalaemin (PHY)-like immunoreactive peptides, designated PHLIPs, have been purified from extracts of rabbit stomach tissue. Fast atom bombardment/mass spectrometry (FAB/MS) indicated that the m/z values for the PHLIP protonated molecular ions were 867.419 and 796.4. FAB/tandem MS spectra, coupled with a knowledge of the amino acid composition and the aid of a computerized fragment-matching program, indicated the amino acid sequences to be: (formula; see text) The sequences of PHLIPs-7 and -8 were confirmed with synthetic peptides. The PHY-antiserum cross-reactivity of the PHLIPs reflects homology at amino acid residues 1, 3, 4 and 5 for the mammalian and amphibian residues.  相似文献   

17.
cDNA clones for alpha-L-fucosidase were isolated from a rat liver lambda gt11 expression library by using both monospecific polyclonal antibodies against the affinity-purified enzyme and biotinylated rat liver fucosidase cDNA sequences as probes. The largest clone, lambda FC9, contained a 1522 bp full-length cDNA insert (FC9) that encoded the 434-amino acid-residue subunit (Mr 50439) of rat liver alpha-L-fucosidase. A putative signal peptide 28 amino acid residues in length preceded the sequence for the mature protein. In addition, FC9 specified for 11 nucleotide residues of 5' untranslated sequence, 78 nucleotide residues of 3' untranslated sequence and a poly(A) tail. The deduced amino acid sequence from FC9 in conjunction with the experimentally determined N-terminus of the mature enzyme suggested that rat liver fucosidase did not contain a pro-segment. However, there was the possibility of limited N-terminal processing (one to five amino acid residues) having occurred after removal of the predicted signal peptide. Amino acid sequences deduced from FC9 were co-linear with amino acid sequences measured at the N-terminus of purified fucosidase and on two of its CNBr-cleavage peptides. An unusual aspect of rat liver alpha-L-fucosidase protein structure obtained from the FC9 data was its high content of tryptophan (6%). The coding sequence from FC9 showed 82% sequence identity with that from a previously reported incomplete human fucosidase sequence [O'Brien, Willems, Fukushima, de Wet, Darby, DiCioccio, Fowler & Shows, (1987) Enzyme 38, 45-53].  相似文献   

18.
The rat TRH gene encodes a 255-amino-acid precursor polypeptide, preproTRH, containing five copies of TRH and seven non-TRH peptides. Expression of this gene is well documented in the central nervous system, particularly in the hypothalamus. Thyroids also contain TRH immunoreactivity, but it is unknown whether this immunoreactivity results from expression of the TRH gene or from other genes encoding TRH-like products. Since the CA77 neoplastic parafollicular cell line expresses the TRH gene, we investigated whether TRH gene expression also occurs in normal thyroid parafollicular cells. Northern analysis of total thyroid RNA with a preproTRH-specific RNA probe identified a single hybridizing band the same size as authentic TRH mRNA found in hypothalamus and CA77 cells. Gel filtration analysis of thyroid extracts identified the same 7-kilodalton and 3-kilodalton species of immunoreactive preproTRH53-74 previously identified in hypothalamus and CA77 cells. Immunoreactive preproTRH115-151, not previously identified, was found in all three tissues. Part of this immunoreactivity comigrated with the synthetic preproTRH115-151 standard on gel filtration and reversed-phase HPLC. PreproTRH53-74 was localized to thyroid parafollicular cells by immunostaining. These findings demonstrate authentic TRH gene expression by normal rat thyroid parafollicular cells and establish the CA77 cell line as the only model system of a normal TRH-producing tissue. In addition to expanding the range of neuroendocrine peptides known to be produced by parafollicular cells, these results also suggest a potential paracrine regulatory role for TRH gene products within the thyroid.  相似文献   

19.
Rat prothyrotropin releasing hormone (proTRH) is processed in the regulated secretory pathway (RSP) of neuroendocrine cells yielding five TRH peptides and several non-TRH peptides. It is not understood how these peptides are targeted to the RSP. We show here that a disulfide bond in the carboxy-terminus of proTRH plays an important role in the trafficking of this prohormone. Recombinant proTRH was observed to migrate faster on a native gel when treated with dithiothreitol (DTT) suggesting the presence of a disulfide bond. In vitro disulfide bond formation was prevented either by DTT treatment or by mutating cysteines 213 and 219 to glycines. In both cases the peptides derived from these mutants exhibited increased constitutive release and processing defects when expressed in AtT20 cells, a neuroendocrine cell line used in our prior studies on proTRH processing. Immunocytochemistry revealed that wild-type proTRH and mutant proTRH localized in a punctate pattern typical of proteins sorted to the regulated secretory pathway. These data suggest that the proposed disulfide bond of proTRH is involved in sorting of proTRH-derived peptides and in their retention within maturing secretory granules. This is the first evidence of structural motifs being important for the sorting of proTRH.  相似文献   

20.
Recent isolation, structural identification, and synthesis of ovine CRF has made possible the generation of specific antibodies against this hypothalamic peptide. Two fragments of the amino acid sequence corresponding to ovine CRF (CRF 37-41 and CRF 22-41), as well as the full sequence of 41 residues (CRF 1-41), synthesized in our laboratories by solid-phase methods, were coupled to bovine serum albumin (BSA) with glutaraldehyde. New Zealand white rabbits were immunized with the emulsified mixtures of peptide-BSA conjugates and Freund's adjuvant as immunogens. The specificity of the generated antibodies was studied by agar-gel diffusion, absorption tests in the immunohistochemical system, and with the aid of displacement curves in RIA. 125I-Tyr(35)-CRF 36-41 and 125I-Tyr(0)-CRF 1-41 were used as radioligands in the RIA. The minimum detectable dose was 20 pg. The linearity observed in RIA for immunoreactive CRF in extracts of rat hypothalami, together with the immunocytochemical findings in the rat brain, indicate the presence of substance(s) immunologically indistinguishable from CRF. Immunohistochemistry with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique detected the following CRF-immunoreactive structures in vibratome sections of hypothalami of colchicine-treated rats: CRF-containing cell bodies were observed mainly in smaller neurons of the paraventricular nucleus. CRF-positive nerve fibers and/or terminals were present in the external zone of the median eminence, with some immunoreactive CRF also present in the internal zone. The CRF-positive terminals were localized in the central regions of the median eminence. These morphological data reinforce the view that this polypeptide plays a physiological role in the control of ACTH release.  相似文献   

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