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1.
An antibody raised against a synthetic cholecystokinin (CCK) analog, (1-27)-(CCK)-33, corresponding to the midregion of CCK-58, detected immunoreactivity in intestinal extracts which eluted between the positions of CCK-33/39 and CCK-58 on high performance liquid chromatography. This peak, lacking carboxyl-terminal cholecystokinin immunoreactivity, was purified by reverse phase and cation-exchange chromatographies. Amino acid, mass spectral, and microsequence analysis established that it was the amino-terminal desnonapeptide fragment of cholecystokinin-58, (1-49)-CCK-58. It was demonstrated further that CCK-58 has less biological activity than CCK-8, suggesting that the amino terminus either sterically hindered the ability of CCK-58 to exert its biological activity or that its amino terminus acted at another site to inhibit release of amylase from rat pancreatic acini. The desnonapeptide of CCK-58 by itself had no biological activity, nor did it affect CCK-8-stimulated amylase release from isolated rat pancreatic acini, suggesting that the amino terminus shields the carboxyl terminus from expressing its biological activity. Its presence in intestine suggests that it is released into the circulation where it could be detected by midregion antibodies. The presence of high proportions of (1-49)-CCK-58 indicates that most CCK-8 is directly derived from CCK-58. Its occurrence in brain and intestine indicates similar processing for procholecystokinin in both tissues.  相似文献   

2.
Cholecystokinin-58 (CCK-58) is the largest and most abundant, biologically active form of cholecystokinin in canine intestinal mucosa. Despite the high amounts in mucosa, CCK-58 has not been detected in significant amounts in the circulation. The release of CCK-58 into the peripheral blood in response to an intraduodenal perfusion of sodium oleate (9.0 mmol h-1) was studied in seven conscious dogs. Plasma (50 ml) was obtained before and after endogenous stimulation by a newly developed method that prevents in vitro degradation of large cholecystokinins. The relative abundance of immunoreactive forms of CCK was studied by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) which separated the gastrin and CCK forms. Column eluates were measured with an antibody which recognizes the intact carboxyl terminus of both gastrin and CCK. Cholecystokinin immunoreactivity increased over basal in plasma by 7 fmol/ml after intraduodenal perfusion with sodium oleate. The most abundant form of stimulated cholecystokinin immunoreactivity eluted on HPLC in the position of CCK-58 (63% of total immunoreactivity found). Since CCK-58 is biologically active and is the most abundant circulating form, it should play an important role in the physiology of cholecystokinin.  相似文献   

3.
Evidence suggests that amino terminal extensions of CCK-8 affect the carboxyl terminal bioactive region of CCK. Cat CCK-58 was purified by low pressure reverse phase and ion-exchange chromatography steps and several reverse phase HPLC steps. The purified peptide and its tryptic fragments were characterized by mass spectral analysis and microsequence analysis. The structure of cat CCK-58 is: AVQKVDGEPRAHLGALLARYIQQARKAPSGRMSVIKNLQSLDPSHRISDRDY(SO3) MGWMDF-amide. Cat and dog CCK-58 are identical except for position 40 which is serine in cat and asparagine in dog. Radioimmunoassay detected cat CCK-58 about 1/10th as well as dog CCK-58, indicating a marked effect on C-terminal immunoreactivity. Cat CCK-58 with a serine at position 40, the same residue found in pig, mouse, cow and rabbit CCK-58, can be used as a unique bioprobe for defining how amino terminal amino acids influence the structure and bioactivity of the carboxyl terminal region of CCK.  相似文献   

4.
Cholecystokinin-58 (CCK-58) was purified from rat intestines using an extraction method that yields large amounts of this peptide. Greater than 30% of total CCK immunoreactivity eluted before CCK-39 upon gel permeation chromatography (Sephadex G-50) if extracts were loaded onto Sep Pak cartridges before freezing. If the extracts were frozen and stored at −70°C for six weeks, only 20% of the material eluted in this region and total immunoreactivity was reduced by 50%, suggesting that proteases were active under these storage conditions. This early eluting peak was purified by reverse phase and ion-exchange HPLC to a single absorbance peak. Microsequence analysis of this peak detected AVLRPDSEP which is the amino terminus of rat CCK-58 predicted from the rat preprocholecystokinin cDNA. Because degradation of CCK-58 occurred in these extracts, it is possible that CCK-58 is the predominant molecule form in the rat small intestine.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular forms of cholecystokinin (CCK) in the peripheral circulation were studied in normal subjects and cirrhotic patients. Fractionation of plasma extract collected 20 min after intraduodenal infusion of fat revealed four major peaks by Sephadex G-50 column chromatography in normal subjects. Peak I eluted at a position similar to CCK-33, peaks II and III eluted between CCK-33 and CCK-14, and peak IV eluted between CCK-14 and CCK-8. In cirrhotic patients, there was a prominent peak (peak V) eluted at a position similar to CCK-8, in addition to those four peaks. These findings are consistent with the previous observations of hepatic elimination of CCK-8, and suggest that smaller forms of CCK similar in size to CCK-8 are not major forms of CCK in plasma in normal subjects but circulate substantially in cirrhotic patients.  相似文献   

6.
Nichols R 《Peptides》2007,28(4):767-773
Invertebrate sulfakinins are structurally and functionally homologous to vertebrate cholecystokinin (CCK) and gastrin. To date, sulfakinins are reported to require a sulfated tyrosine for activity; sulfated and nonsulfated CCK and gastrin are active. This is the first nonsulfated sulfakinin activity reported. Nonsulfated Drosophila melanogaster sulfakinins or drosulfakinins (nsDSK I; PheAspAspTyrGlyHisMetArgPheNH2) and (nsDSK II; GlyGlyAspAspGlnPheAspAspTyrGlyHisMetArgPheNH2) decreased the frequency of contractions of adult D. melanogaster foregut (crop) in vivo. The EC50's for nsDSK I and nsDSK II were approximately 2 x 10(-9)M and approximately 3 x 10(-8)M, respectively. Nonsulfated DSK peptides also decreased the frequency of larval anterior midgut contractions. Sulfated DSK peptides decreased both adult and larval gut contractions. Whether sulfation is required for sulfakinin activity may depend on where the peptide is applied, what tissue is analyzed, or what preparation is used. D. melanogaster contains two sulfakinin receptors, DSK-R1 and DSK-R2; vertebrates contain two CCK receptors, CCK-1 and CCK-2. A sulfated DSK I analog, [Leu7] sDSK I, binds to expressed DSK-R1; the corresponding nonsulfated analog does not bind to DSK-R1. No DSK-R2 binding data are reported. Sulfated and nonsulfated CCK peptides preferentially bind to CCK-1 or CCK-2, respectively. Sulfated and nonsulfated sulfakinins may bind to DSK-R1 or DSK-R2, respectively. Sulfakinin activities, spatial and temporal distribution, and homology to CCK and gastrin suggest sulfated and nonsulfated DSK peptides act in diverse roles in the neural and gastrointestinal systems including gut emptying and satiety.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular cloning of cholecystokinin (CCK) mRNA from porcine brain and gut has demonstrated that CCK is synthesized as an identical precursor in both tissues. The sequence for porcine CCK-58 predicted from CCK cDNA was identical with the amino acid sequence of the peptide purified from different lots of animals. However one group did report that there were differences in the N-terminus of CCK-58 purified from the intestines of two different lots of mongrel dogs. In the current report it is demonstrated that the amino acid sequences of CCK-58 purified separately from three bovine brains are identical through the first 19 N-terminal amino acid residues. The peptides were sequenced for ten additional steps and were shown to be identical with the previously reported sequences for the N-terminus of CCK-39. The N-terminus of bovine CCK-58 has the following sequence: AVPRVDDEPRAQLGALLAR.  相似文献   

8.
J B Jansen  C B Lamers 《Peptides》1987,8(5):801-805
The present study was undertaken to characterize molecular forms of cholecystokinin (CCK) in human fat-stimulated plasma by Sephadex G50 column chromatography followed by radioimmunoassays employing 3 different region-specific antibodies. CCK was extracted and concentrated from plasma of healthy subjects by adsorption to SEP-PAK C18 cartridges and from plasma of gastrectomized patients by addition of 96% ethanol. Antibody 1703 binds to carboxy-terminal CCK-peptides containing at least 14 amino acid residues, antibody T204 to sulfated carboxy-terminal CCK-peptides and antibody 5135 to carboxy-terminal forms of CCK and gastrin. Four molecular forms of CCK were consistently demonstrated; peak I eluted in the void volume and comprised 1.8-10.2% of CCK-immunoreactivity, peak II eluted between the void volume and the CCK-33/39 standard and comprised 9.8-21.6%, peak III eluted at the position of the CCK-33/39 standard and comprised 42.4-55.4%, and peak IV eluted between the CCK-33/39 and CCK-14 standards and comprised 25.4-40.1% of CCK immunoreactivity. Since these 4 molecular forms reacted to all 3 CCK-antibodies it is likely that they contain the sulfated tyrosyl and carboxy-terminal regions of CCK and, therefore, possess biological activity.  相似文献   

9.
Acid and neutral extracts of rat cerebral cortex and upper small intestine were prepared and the endogenous concentrations of cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity (CCK-LI) measured by three new CCK-specific radioimmunoassays. The characterization of the immunoreactive CCK molecular forms was undertaken using gel permeation chromatography in the presence of 6 M urea to minimise problems relating to peptide adsorption or aggregation. Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was also performed on the rat tissue extracts. Rat cortex contained 268 +/- 12 pmol/g CCK-LI, and over 90% resembled the sulphated CCK-8, which was preferentially extracted at neutral pH. In contrast, the rat upper small intestine (97 +/- 8 pmol/g of CCK-LI) contained less than 20% CCK-8, the majority of immunoreactive CCK being of larger molecular size and being preferentially extracted at acid pH. In the small intestine the predominant molecular form(s) was intermediate in size between CCK-33 and CCK-8. Large amounts of CCK-33 and of a molecular form larger than CCK-33 were also detected. It is concluded that post-translational cleavage of CCK differs in rat brain and gut.  相似文献   

10.
Cholecystokinin-58 has been shown to be the major form of cholecystokinin (CCK) released to the circulation upon lumenal stimulation of the small intestine in humans and dogs. In anesthetized dogs, electrical vagal stimulation evokes pancreatic exocrine secretion that is in part mediated through the release of CCK. We studied the molecular form of CCK stored in canine vagus nerves and that released into circulation upon electrical vagal stimulation. Gel filtration and radioimmunoassay of the water and acid extracts of canine vagus nerves indicated CCK-8 (35%) and CCK-58 (65%) as the major molecular forms in the vagus nerve. Both forms of CCK isolated from the vagal extracts were equally bioactive as the standard CCK-8 and CCK-58, respectively, in stimulation of amylase release from isolated rat pancreatic acini. Analysis of plasma collected after electrical vagal stimulation indicated that CCK-8 is the only form released into the circulation. The release of CCK-8 upon electrical vagal stimulation was not affected by application of lidocaine to the upper small intestinal mucosa, suggesting that it was released from vagal nerve terminals.  相似文献   

11.
Cholecystokinin (CCK)-58 was found to be the most abundant form in upper small intestinal mucosa of man, dog and cat. However, in pig, beef and rat upper small intestinal mucosa CCK-33/39 and smaller CCK-forms were dominant. The differences in the distribution of the molecular forms of cholecystokinin between these species presumably reflects altered posttranslational processing of procholecystokinin. This may be caused by the different feeding habits of the investigated species. The different forms of cholecystokinin were distributed over the entire length of the mucosa in canine small intestine. The total amount of CCK decreased from the duodenal mucosa towards the colon. In the canine duodenal mucosa, CCK-58 accounted for 85% of the total CCK-like immunoreactivity. The relative amounts of small forms of CCK increased towards the distal jejunum.  相似文献   

12.
COOH-terminal immunoreactive cholecystokinin (iCCK) in methanol and acid extracts of brain and gut in the developing rat between 3 and 28 days after birth and in the adult has been fractionated on Sephadex G50. The single peak observed in methanol extracts of brain has an elution volume identical to that of CCK8. Acid extracts of brain contain only 10% as much iCCK as methanol extracts in a molecular form that appears to be a larger precursor because its elution volume on Sephadex is earlier than that of CCK33 or 39. Methanol extracts of duodenum at all ages contain a molecular form which is larger than CCK12 and about equal in abundance to CCK8. Acid extracts of rat duodenum contain 3 peaks: one elutes in the region of a previously described precursor form, CCK58; another co-elutes with CCK33 or 39; the third peak appears to be lower in molecular weight and is most prominent in the 2 week rat duodenum. Whether the larger iCCK found in methanol extracts or the smaller form found in acid extracts is derived from a common CCK precursor is yet to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
A number of different forms of cholecystokinin (CCK) exist in the brain and intestine. Gel permeation and ion exchange chromatography and high performance liquid chromatography have been used to isolate a peptide from partially purified porcine intestinal extracts with N-terminal homology to porcine brain CCK-58. This peptide contracted both the guinea pig ileum longitudinal muscle and gallbladder muscle and these responses were inhibited by dibutyryl cyclic GMP or proglumide. The potency was approximately 1/100 of that of CCK-8. The reason for this low potency is unclear, but it is possible that a critical part of the biologically active region is modified or that it is a truncated form of CCK-58. A further peptide was isolated with a sequence homologous to cytochrome oxidase polypeptide VII and chymodenin.  相似文献   

14.
Using an antiserum generated against synthetic CCK-10, we have developed a radioimmunoassay specific for the carboxyl-terminus of cholecystokinin (CCK). Three rabbits were immunized with synthetic sulfated carboxy-terminal CCK decapeptide (CCK-10) conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. Using 125I-CCK-39 prepared by the Iodogen method as a tracer, we found that all immunized rabbits produced antibodies against the conjugate. Antiserum R016 had the highest titer (1:225,000 after four immunizations) and was studied most extensively. R016 recognizes all molecular forms of CCK, including unsulfated and oxidized forms, but has negligible cross-reactivity with gastrin and other peptides. Using CCK-8 as a standard, the assay has a minimum detection limit of 0.5 pM and an ED50 of 11.5 pM. Serial dilutions of water/acid extracts of canine intestine were parallel to serial dilutions of sulfated CCK-8, CCK-33 and CCK-39. The assay was used to measure CCK concentrations in canine plasma after C18 Sep-Pak extraction; the concentration of immunoreactive CCK increased from a basal value of 7.8 +/- 1.0 to 9.5 +/- 1.2 and 11.1 +/- 1.2 pM 30 and 60 min postprandially (P less than 0.05 by paired analysis). This sensitive and uniquely specific CCK radioimmunoassay should be useful in characterizing several aspects of CCK physiology and the method for generating CCK antisera should be of value to other investigators.  相似文献   

15.
Immunochemical studies were carried out on extracts of the neural ganglion from the ascidian Ciona intestinalis in order to the characterize the peptide(s), which react with antibodies against the C-terminal sequence common for the mammalian hormones, cholecystokinin (CCK) and gastrin. Radioimmunoassays specific for the sulphotyrosyl-containing N-terminus of CCK-8, for the common alpha-carboxyamidated C-terminus and for gastrin were used to monitor gel chromatography and reverse-phase HPLC of the extracts. Only neutral extracts contained immunoreactive material (634 (524-785) pmol eqv.CCK-8/g) (mean and range, n = 4)). HPLC revealed a small peak eluting almost like CCK-8 and a larger peak eluting earlier. By subsequent gel chromatography the larger peak eluted in the same position as sulphated CCK-8. The material was recognized almost equally by the N- and C-terminal CCK radioimmunoassays, whereas the specific C-terminal gastrin radioimmunoassay did not measure the peptides. Treatment with arylsulphatase removed the binding to the antiserum specific for the sulphotyrosyl-containing sequence of CCK. The results indicate that the ganglion of Ciona intestinalis contains a tyrosyl-sulphated peptide resembling mammalian CCK-8.  相似文献   

16.
In this work, we 1) synthesized rat CCK-58, 2) determined the amounts and forms of rat CCK in whole blood after stimulation of its release by casein, 3) determined the potency of CCK-8 and CCK-58 peptides to displace labeled CCK-8 from CCK(A) and CCK(B) receptors transfected into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and 4) examined the biological actions of CCK-8 and rat CCK-58 in an anesthetized rat model. CCK-58 was the only detected endocrine form of CCK in rat blood. Synthetic rat CCK-58 was less potent than CCK-8 for displacing the label from CCK(A) and CCK(B) receptors in transfected CHO cells. However, rat CCK-58 was more potent than CCK-8 for stimulation of pancreatic protein secretion in the anesthetized rat. In addition, CCK-58 but not CCK-8 stimulated fluid secretion in this anesthetized rat model. These data suggest that regions outside the COOH terminus of rat CCK-58 influence the expression of CCK biological activity. The presence of only CCK-58 in the circulation and the fact that its biological activity differs from CCK-8 suggests that CCK-58 deserves scrutiny in other physiological models of CCK activity.  相似文献   

17.
Cholecystokinin (CCK) is expressed in the central and peripheral nervous systems and functions as a neurotransmitter and neuroendocrine hormone. The in vivo forms of CCK include CCK-83, -58, -39, -33, -22, -12, and -8. Tissues in the periphery produce the larger forms of CCK, such as CCK-58, whereas the brain primarily produces CCK-8. The different biologically active forms of CCK observed in vivo may result from cell-specific differences in endoproteolytic cleavage during post-translational processing. Evidence suggests that cleavages of pro-CCK occur in a specific sequential order. To further delineate the progression of cleavages during pro-CCK maturation, mutagenesis was used to disrupt putative mono- and dibasic cleavage sites. AtT-20 cells transfected with wild-type rat prepro-CCK secret CCK-22 and -8. Mutagenesis of the cleavage sites of pro-CCK had profound effects on the products that were produced. Substitution of basic cleavage sites with nonbasic amino acids inhibits cleavage and leads to the secretion of pathway intermediates such as CCK-83, -33, and -12. These results suggest that CCK-58 is cleaved to both CCK-33 and -22. Furthermore, CCK-8 and -12 are likely derived from cleavage of CCK-33 but not CCK-22. Alanine substitution at the same site completely blocked production of amidated products, whereas serine substitution did not. The cleavages observed at nonbasic residues in this study may represent the activity of enzymes other than PC1 and carboxypeptidase E, such as the enzyme SKI-1. A model for the progression of pro-CCK processing in AtT-20 cells is proposed. The findings in this study further supports the hypothesis that pro-CCK undergoes parallel pathways of proteolytic cleavages.  相似文献   

18.
There is evidence from studies in animals that the effects of both fat and CCK on gastrointestinal function and energy intake are attenuated by consumption of a high-fat diet. In humans, the effects of exogenous CCK-8 on antropyloroduodenal motility, plasma CCK, peptide YY (PYY), and ghrelin concentrations, appetite, and energy intake are attenuated by a high-fat diet. Ten healthy lean males consumed isocaloric diets (~15,400 kJ per day), containing either 44% (high-fat, HF) or 9% (low-fat, LF) fat, for 21 days in single-blind, randomized, cross-over fashion. Immediately following each diet (i.e., on day 22), subjects received a 45-min intravenous infusion of CCK-8 (2 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)), and effects on antropyloroduodenal motility, plasma CCK, PYY, ghrelin concentrations, hunger, and fullness were determined. Thirty minutes after commencement of the infusion, subjects were offered a buffet-style meal, from which energy intake (in kilojoules) was quantified. Body weight was unaffected by the diets. Fasting CCK (P < 0.05), but not PYY and ghrelin, concentrations were greater following the HF, compared with the LF, diet. Infusion of CCK-8 stimulated pyloric pressures (P < 0.01) and suppressed antral and duodenal pressures (P < 0.05), with no difference between the diets. Energy intake also did not differ between the diets. Short-term consumption of a HF diet increases fasting plasma CCK concentrations but does not affect upper gut motility, PYY and ghrelin, or energy intake during CCK-8 infusion, in a dose of 2 ng.kg(-1).min(-1), in healthy males.  相似文献   

19.
In addition to its role as a gut hormone, cholecystokinin (CCK) is a widespread and potent neurotransmitter. Its biosynthesis requires endoproteolytic cleavage of proCCK at several mono- and dibasic sites by subtilisin-like prohormone convertases (PCs). Of these, PC1 and PC2 are specific for neuroendocrine cells. We have now examined the role of PC2 and its binding protein, 7B2, in the neuronal processing of proCCK by measurement of precursor, processing-intermediates and bioactive end-products in brain extracts from PC2- and 7B2-null mice and from corresponding controls. PC2-null mice displayed a nine-fold increase of cerebral proCCK concentrations, and a two-fold increase in the concentrations of the processing-intermediate, glycine-extended CCK, whereas the concentrations of transmitter-active (i.e. alpha-amidated and O-sulfated) CCK peptides were reduced (61%). Chromatography showed that O-sulfated CCK-8 still is the predominant transmitter-active CCK in PC2-null brains, but that the fraction of intermediate-sized CCK-peptides (CCK-58, -33 and -22) was eight-fold increased. 7B2-null brains displayed a similar pattern but with less pronounced precursor accumulation. In contrast with the cerebral changes, PC2 deficiency was without effect on proCCK synthesis and processing in intestinal endocrine cells, whereas 7B2 deficiency halved the concentration of bioactive CCK in the intestine. The results show that PC2 plays a major neuron-specific role in the processing of proCCK.  相似文献   

20.
Peptides identical or related to mammalian gut hormones occur widely, not just in gut endocrine cells but also in central or peripheral nerves, amphibian skin glands, and a variety of invertebrate tissues. The dual distribution in brain and gut was probably already established early in the vertebrate line; representatives of the oldest vertebrate group, the cyclostomes, have cholecystokinin-like factors in gut endocrine cells and in brain. The related sequences of certain gut peptides, notably gastrin and cholecystokinin (CCK), and secretin, glucagon, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), and gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP), indicate evolution from common ancestral molecules by gene duplication and divergence. Functionally important residues are conserved. Thus the COOH-terminal pentapeptide common to gastrin and CCK also contains their minimal active fragment. There are also evolutionary changes at the level of the target organ receptor mechanisms: these are also evolutionary changes at the level of the target organ receptor mechanisms; these are illustrated by evidence suggesting that secretin regulates the flow of pancreatic juice in mammals whereas the structurally related peptide VIP has a similar role in birds.  相似文献   

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