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1.
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and TRH extended peptides were extracted from rat hypothalamus and spinal cord and resolved by gel exclusion chromatography under dissociating conditions. Peptides related to TRH were detected by trypsin digestion and radioimmunoassay with an antibody to TRH or an antibody raised against the pentapeptide Glp-His-Pro-Gly-Lys. In addition to the tripeptide hormone a series of C-terminally extended forms of TRH was shown to occur in both tissues; no N-terminally extended peptides were detected. The structure of the TRH-related peptides was confirmed by chromatographic identification of the N-terminal pentapeptide sequence released by trypsin. The TRH extended peptides, which accounted for 15-20% of the total TRH, were present in three groups of different molecular size corresponding to predicted fragments of the TRH prohormone. One of the peptides in the spinal cord was identified by chromatographic comparison with a synthetic 16-residue peptide representing residues 154-169 of the prohormone. In the spinal cord the TRH extended peptides differed in their relative concentrations from the corresponding peptides in the hypothalamus, possibly reflecting differences in processing. The finding of extended forms of TRH in which the extension occurs only on the C-terminal side of the hormone sequence shows that the prohormone undergoes highly specific processing.  相似文献   

2.
An antibody was raised to the synthetic pentapeptide pGluHisProGlyLys which, in radioimmunoassay (RIA), could detect the pentapeptide at a level of 10 fmole per tube and exhibited <0.5 per cent cross reactivity with a series of related peptides. The RIA was used to demonstrate the presence of C-terminally extended forms of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) in rat hypothalamus. After extraction, the endogenous peptides were resolved by gel exclusion chromatography and TRH-extended peptides were revealed by trypsin digestion to release the pentapeptide. The TRH extended peptides occurred in substantial quantity, approximately 11 pmoles/g, indicating that only partial processing of the gene duplicated prohormone takes place.  相似文献   

3.
S M Cockle 《FEBS letters》1990,264(2):253-256
High concentrations of thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) are known to be present in the olfactory lobe, and the processing of the TRH prohormone in this region of the brain has been examined in this study. TRH-extended peptides have been detected in the rat olfactory lobe: these peptides accounted for approximately 11% of the total TRH immunoreactivity present in the tissue and contained the sequence pGlu-His-Pro-Gly-Arg exclusively at their N-termini. Extended peptides containing pGlu-His-Pro-Gly-Lys at their N-termini were not detected suggesting that incomplete cleavage occurs only at Arg-Arg residues in the TRH-prohormone. In view of the highly specific processing of the prohormone, it is likely that the TRH-extended peptides play important physiological roles.  相似文献   

4.
The novel peptide, pyroglutamylglutamylprolineamide (pGlu-Glu-ProNH2), has recently been isolated and characterized from the rabbit prostate complex. The tripeptide is present in high concentrations in the prostate complex and semen, together with a 40-50 residue polypeptide which contains a TRH-immunoreactive fragment at its C-terminus. The present study investigates changes in the levels of these TRH-related peptides in rabbits aged 11 weeks, 4 months, 7 months, 13 months and 2 years. For each age group the peptides were extracted from the prostate complex, separated by gel exclusion chromatography, and located by TRH radioimmunoassay. The TRH-immunoreactive fragment was released from the polypeptide by trypsin digestion prior to radioimmunoassay. Very low concentrations of TRH-immunoreactive peptides were present at 11 weeks of age, but considerable levels of both peptides were found in all the other age groups. Anion exchange chromatography, under conditions which resolve TRH and pGlu-Glu-ProNH2, showed that the majority of the low molecular weight TRH immunoreactivity co-eluted with synthetic pGlu-Glu-ProNH2. The remaining TRH immunoreactivity, which had not bound to the anion resin, also failed to bind to a cation exchange column at pH 2.0, indicating that it was not authentic TRH. Dissection of the prostate complex into its four constitutive regions (vesicular gland, coagulating gland, prostate and bulbourethral gland) followed by extraction, chromatography and TRH radioimmunoassay of each region showed that the TRH-related peptides were located in the prostate.  相似文献   

5.
The cleavage products from the conversion of proparathormone to parathormone by a bovine and porcine parathyroid microsomal converting activity have been analyzed. In the conversion reaction, the first 6 amino acid residues of the prohormone (Lys-Ser-Val-Lys-Lys-Arg-) are released as an intact hexapeptide. This is rapidly converted to a pentapeptide by removal of the NH2-terminal lysine and then to a tetrapeptide by removal of the COOH-terminal arginine. In order to test for the presence of a postulated COOH-terminal extension of the parathormone sequence in proparathormone, mixtures of 14C-proparathormone and 3H-parathormone were subjected to digestion by trypsin or Staphylococcus aureus protease. The resulting radioactive peptides from the hormone and its precursor were compared. There was no evidence that any fragments different from those from the hormone were released from the prohormone except those accounted for by the NH2-terminal hexapeptide adduct on proparathormone. Thus, the conversion of the prohormone to the hormone catalyzed by the microsomal membrane activity requires only the cleavage of this hexapeptide.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Peptide neurotransmitters and hormones are synthesized as protein precursors that require proteolytic processing to generate smaller, biologically active peptides that are secreted to mediate neurotransmission and hormone actions. Neuropeptides within their precursors are typically flanked by pairs of basic residues, as well as by monobasic residues. In this review, evidence for secretory vesicle cathepsin L and Arg/Lys aminopeptidase as a distinct proteolytic pathway for processing the prohormone proenkephalin is presented. Cleavage of prohormone processing sites by secretory vesicle cathepsin L occurs at the NH2-terminal side of dibasic residues, as well as between the dibasic residues, resulting in peptide intermediates with Arg or Lys extensions at their NH2-termini. A subsequent Arg/Lys aminopeptidase step is then required to remove NH2-terminal basic residues to generate the final enkephalin neuropeptide. The cathepsin L and Arg/Lys aminopeptidase prohormone processing pathway is distinct from the proteolytic pathway mediated by the subtilisin-like prohormone convertases 1/3 and 2 (PC1/3 and PC2) with carboxypeptidase E/H. Differences in specific cleavage sites at paired basic residue sites distinguish these two pathways. These two proteolytic pathways demonstrate the increasing complexity of regulatory mechanisms for the production of peptide neurotransmitters and hormones.  相似文献   

8.
Sequential processing reactions in the formation of hormone amides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The substrate specificity of an enzyme with amidating activity, present in porcine pituitary, was investigated by examining its ability to convert the synthetic peptides D-Tyr-Val-Gly and D-Tyr-Val-Gly-Lys-Arg to the dipeptide amide D-Tyr-Val-CONH2. The purified enzyme catalysed the amidation reaction with the tripeptide but did not accept the pentapeptide as a substrate. With the mixture of enzymes present in a membrane fraction from porcine pituitary or the enzymes in a secretory granule fraction, both the tripeptide and pentapeptide substrates gave rise to D-Tyr-Val amide; the formation of dipeptide amide from the pentapeptide, however, involved a latency period after which amidation occurred at a similar rate with the two substrates. Evidence was obtained that arginine and lysine were released from the C terminus of the pentapeptide before amidation took place since the rate of formation of dipeptide amide was reduced at pH values that were compatible with amidation but unfavourable to the action of carboxypeptidase H. In addition formation of the dipeptide amide from the pentapeptide was blocked by guanidinoethylmercaptosuccinic acid and glycylarginine, which are inhibitors of carboxypeptidase enzymes. The experiments demonstrate that removal of basic residues from the C terminus of a peptide and amidation at C-terminal glycine are reactions that take place consecutively. These prohormone-processing reactions, which are intrinsic to the formation of hormone amides, did not synergise.  相似文献   

9.
We have demonstrated that during opiate withdrawal, preprothyrotropin releasing hormone (preproTRH) mRNA is increased in neurons of the midbrain periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) while the concentration of TRH remained unaltered, suggesting that the processing of proTRH may be different in this region of the brain. The aim of the present study was to determine which of the proTRH-derived peptides are affected by opiate withdrawal in the PAG. These changes were compared to other TRH-containing areas such as the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), median eminence (ME) and the lateral hypothalamus (LH). Control and morphine-treated rats 24 h following naltrexone-precipitated withdrawal were decapitated and the brain microdissected. Pooled samples from each animal group were acid extracted, and peptides were electrophoretically separated then analyzed by specific radioimmunoassay. Opiate withdrawal caused a significant change in the level of some post-translational processing products derived from the TRH precursor. In the PAG, opiate withdrawal resulted in an accumulation of the intervening preproTRH(83-106) peptide from the N-terminal side of the prohormone, while the levels of the C-terminal preproTRH(208-285) peptide were reduced, with no change in preproTRH(25-50) or TRH, itself, as compared to control animals. Immunohistochemical analysis also showed significant increases in cellular preproTRH(83-106) peptide immunolabeling in the PAG. Opiate withdrawal in the lateral hypothalamus, unlike from the PAG, was accompanied by an increase in the concentration of TRH. In addition, western blot analysis showed that during opiate withdrawal, the mature form of the prohormone convertase 2 (PC2) increased only in PAG as compared with their respective controls. Thus, these results demonstrate a region-specific regulation of TRH prohormone processing in the brain, which may engage PC2, further suggesting a role for specific proTRH-derived peptides in the manifestations of opiate withdrawal.  相似文献   

10.
Skin secretions from the South African frog Xenopus laevis have been chromatographed by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), fractionated, and analyzed by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry (FAB-MS). The HPLC chromatograms showed the secretion to be a complex mixture with over 30 components at similar levels to the four peptides previously isolated from X. laevis skin, i.e. xenopsin, caerulein, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, and PGLa. FAB-MS analysis of the HPLC fractions gave numerous protonated molecular ions ranging from m/z 491 to 2662. Preliminary assignments of these components were made by comparing these experimental molecular weights to those predicted for regions within the xenopsin, caerulein, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, and PGLa precursors. These results suggested that many of these skin secretions were peptides originating from additional processing of the xenopsin, caerulein, and PGLa precursors, primarily involving cleavage at single arginine residues, and a novel cleavage at the NH2-terminal side of single lysines. These assignments were subsequently confirmed by Edman degradation, FAB-MS peptide sequencing, and amino acid analysis. All of these peptides contain one or more lysines and would be expected to have amphiphilic structures. As yet, nothing is known about their activity, although they resemble in composition the mast cell degranulating peptides melittin and the bombolitins. These precursor fragments were also found to have limited sequence homology to bombinin, a hemolytic amphibian peptide isolated from the European Bombina toad.  相似文献   

11.
We have recently identified a novel peptide in the rabbit prostate complex which cross-reacts with an antibody to thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) and has the structure pGlu-Glu-ProNH2. In the present study, high concentrations of a TRH-related tripeptide and also a polypeptide (10-12 kDa) containing a TRH-immunoreactive peptide at its C-terminus were detected in human semen. The low molecular mass TRH-like peptide and the immunoreactive fragment from the polypeptide were isolated from human semen and shown to have identical structures. Amino acid analysis suggested compositions Glx2, Pro1, and after mild acid hydrolysis, the same sequence, Glu-Glu-Pro, was established for the two peptides. Fast atom bombardment (FAB) mass spectrometry yielded a pseudomolecular ion (M + H)+ of 355.38 which was identical to that of the synthetic peptide pGlu-Glu-ProNH2. The data demonstrate that human semen contains the TRH-like peptide pyroglutamylglutamylprolinamide and also a polypeptide terminating in the sequence Gln-Glu-ProNH2.  相似文献   

12.
This study considers the possible involvement of the tripeptide TRH (thyrotropin releasing hormone) in the physiological regulation of melanophore stimulating hormone (MSH) secretion from the pars intermedia of the toad, Xenopus laevis. TRH was shown to stimulate release of MSH from superfused neurointermediate lobes obtained from white-background adapted animals, but had no effect on secretion from lobes of black-background adapted animals. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed a rich TRH-containing neuronal network terminating in the neural lobe of the Xenopus pituitary. Plasma levels of TRH, determined with a specific radioimmunoassay, proved to be extremely high and no significant difference in this level could be found between white- and black-adapted animals. Plasma TRH probably originates from the skin, and our results show that its concentration is within the effective concentration range established for this peptide in stimulating MSH release from the pars intermedia. Therefore, while both our superfusion and immunohistochemical results argue favourably for a function of TRH in the regulation of MSH secretion, we conclude that, in any regulatory role, it would likely have to function within the pars intermedia at concentrations exceeding the high plasma values. While TRH could be involved in short-term activation of the secretory process in white-background adapted animals or in animals undergoing the initial stages of black background adaptation, our results indicate that this peptide may have no function in the maintenance of secretion from the pars intermedia of animals fully adapted to black background.  相似文献   

13.
The endogenous ligand of guanylyl cyclase C, guanylin, is produced as the 94-amino-acid prohormone proguanylin, with the hormone guanylin located at the COOH terminus of the prohormone. The solution structure of proguanylin adopts a new protein fold and consists of a three-helix bundle, a small three-stranded beta-sheet of two NH2-terminal strands and one COOH-terminal strand, and an unstructured linker region. The sequence corresponding to guanylin is fixed in its bioactive topology and is involved in interactions with the NH2-terminal beta-hairpin: the hormone region (residues 80-94) partly wraps around the first 4 NH2-terminal residues that thereby shield parts of the hormone surface. These interactions provide an explanation for the negligible bioactivity of the prohormone as well as the important role of the NH2-terminal residues in the disulfide-coupled folding of proguanylin. Since the ligand binding region of guanylyl cyclase C is predicted to be located around an exposed beta-strand, the intramolecular interactions observed between guanylin and its prosequence may be comparable with the guanylin/receptor interaction.  相似文献   

14.
Using gel, ion-exchange, and reverse-phase chromatography monitored by radioimmunoassays specific for five sequences of preprocholecystokinin (prepro-CCK), its processing products were measured in neutral and acid extracts of porcine cerebral cortex before and after incubation with trypsin, carboxypeptidase B, and arylsulfatase. Three categories of peptides were found: biologically active peptides, i.e. peptides with the alpha-amidated COOH terminus Trp-Met-Asp-Phe-NH2, comprising large CCKs, i.e. peptides larger than CCK-58 and peptides eluting like CCK-58, CCK-33, and CCK-22; CCK-octapeptides in sulfated and traces of nonsulfated forms; and small CCKs, i.e. traces of CCK-7, large amounts of CCK-5, and modest concentrations of CCK-4 (the structures of CCK-5 and -4 were confirmed by sequence analysis); four NH2-terminal fragments, of which the two predominant ones correspond to the desnonapeptide fragments of CCK-58 and CCK-33; and COOH-terminal extended peptides corresponding to glycine-extended CCK-58, CCK-33, and CCK-8 in small but significant amounts. Thus, in addition to CCK-8 the porcine cerebral cortex synthesizes larger and smaller active CCK peptides in quantities of an order similar to those of CCK-8. The occurrence of these together with the NH2-terminal fragments and glycine-extended peptides can be explained only by the existence of different processing pathways for preproCCK. Consequently, the results suggest that cerebral CCK neurons are heterogeneous and comprise at least three populations with different biosynthetic machineries.  相似文献   

15.
Three pyroglutamylpeptide amides, pGlu-Glu-Pro amide, pGlu-Phe-Pro amide and pGlu-Gln-Pro amide, with similar structures to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), have been identified previously in the male reproductive system. We report here that rat and human mammary gland contain neutral TRH-immunoreactive peptides which are not retained on cation or anion exchange chromatography and that similar peptides occur in the milk of rat, cow, ewe and sow. The TRH-like peptides in lyophilized milk from the cow were purified by gel exclusion chromatography, mini-column cation exchange chromatography and reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and the chromatographed peptides were located by TRH radioimmunoassay (RIA). In each chromatographic system the major TRH-immunoreactive peptide from cow milk exhibited identical behavior to pGlu-Phe-Pro amide; in addition there were two minor TRH-immunoreactive components. The possible physiological role of the TRH-like peptides in the mammary gland is discussed. In a series of patients with breast carcinoma, mammary tumor tissue was shown to contain approximately four times more TRH-like peptide than normal mammary tissue from the same patient, raising the possibility that the TRH-like peptides may be implicated in tumor development.  相似文献   

16.
In the present study, the effect of TRH on amylase secretion was determined both in vivo, by cannulating the pancreatic duct of rats, as well as in vitro, by using isolated lobules and dissociated acini. The results show that TRH inhibited both basal and stimulated in vivo amylase secretion. Nevertheless, the in vitro experiments failed to show a TRH-related inhibitory effect when TRH was used alone, although the hormone did blunt the secretion elicited by CCK8 and bethanechol from isolated lobules and dissociated acini. Results suggest that TRH can inhibit stimulated amylase secretion in rats through a direct effect on acinar cells.  相似文献   

17.
The multifunctional prohormone, proopiomelanocortin (POMC), is processed in the melanotrope cells of the pituitary pars intermedia at pairs of basic amino acid residues to give a number of peptides, including alpha-melanophore-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH). This hormone causes skin darkening in amphibians during background adaptation. Here we report the complete structure of Xenopus laevis prohormone convertase PC2, the enzyme thought to be responsible for processing of POMC to alpha-MSH. A comparative structural analysis revealed an overall amino acid sequence identity of 85-87% between Xenopus PC2 and its mammalian counterparts, with the lowest degree of identity in the signal peptide sequence (28-36%) and the region amino-terminal to the catalytic domain (59-60%). The occurrence of a second, structurally different PC2 protein reflects the expression of two Xenopus PC2 genes. The expression pattern of PC2 in the Xenopus pituitary gland of black- and white-adapted animals was found to be similar to that of POMC, namely high expression in active melanotrope cells of black animals. This observation is in line with a physiological role for PC2 in processing POMC to alpha-MSH.  相似文献   

18.
The neuropeptide thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) elicits a variety of physiological effects of which some are due to cholinergic mechanisms. TRH modulates in vivo the effects of compounds affecting acetylcholinesterase (AChE). In the present study the in vitro effects of TRH on the activity of AChE were explored. TRH has no effect at physiologically relevant concentrations. At unphysiologically high concentrations (>5 mM) a slight inhibition was found. This was noticed also when the enzyme was exposed to the amide-free tripeptide analog p-Glu-His-Pro. We conclude that any cholinergic effect of TRH observed in vivo is unlikely to be due to a direct interaction of the peptide with AChE.  相似文献   

19.
I M Jackson  S Reichlin 《Life sciences》1974,14(11):2259-2266
Measurement of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) in the rat by a radioimmunoassay capable of detecting 6 pg is described. TRH was found in high concentration in the hypothalamus, especially in the stalk median eminence (SME). Small but significant concentrations were also detected hroughout the extrahypothalmic brain. Quantitatively, these levels are substantial, and suggest that this tripeptide may have an extrathyroidal brain function. TRH was measurable in the blood only in low concentrations, but large amounts were excreted in the urine (18.4ng/day).  相似文献   

20.
Two tripeptide amides with stuctures similar to thyrotropin releasing hormone were isolated from human seminal fluid and their amino acid sequences determined. The peptides were purified by gel exclusion from Sephadex G50 and were detected by radioimmunoassay with thyrotropin releasing hormone antibody; in addition, N-terminally extended forms were demonstrated by radioimmunoassay after trypsin digestion. Further purification of the tripeptides was by chromatography on SP-Sephadex C25 and by high performance liquid chromatography on C18 Microbondapak using an HCl/acetonitrile gradient. After exclusion from mini-columns of SP-Sephadex C25 and DEAE-Sephadex A25, two neutral peptides were obtained in homogeneous form by high performance liquid chromatography with an HCl/methanol gradient. Amino acid analysis gave the following compositions: Glu, 0.74, Phe, 1.0, Pro, 1.0; and Glu, 1.72, Pro, 1.0. Both peptides possessed a blocked N terminus, but after opening the pyroglutamyl ring the sequences Glu-Phe-Pro and Glu-Glx-Pro were demonstrated. The chromatographic properties of the endogenous peptides were identical to the properties of the corresponding synthetic peptides. The structure of pGlu-Phe-Pro (where p-indicates pyro-) amide was confirmed by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry. The presence in human semen of three structurally related peptides, pGlu-Phe-Pro amide, pGlu-Gln-Pro amide, and the previously reported pGlu-Glu-Pro amide (Cockle, S. M., Aitken, A., Beg, F., and Smyth, D. G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7788-7791), suggests that this series of peptides may have evolved to fulfil complementary biological roles.  相似文献   

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