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1.
Recent studies show that nonamidated gastrins (Gly-gastrin and progastrin) stimulate colonic proliferation. However, the role of nonamidated vs. amidated gastrins in colon carcinogenesis has not been defined. We measured intermediate markers of carcinogenesis in transgenic mice overexpressing either progastrin (hGAS) or amidated gastrin (INS-GAS) in response to azoxymethane (AOM). The hGAS mice showed significantly higher numbers of aberrant crypt foci (140-200% increase) compared with that in wild-type (WT) and INS-GAS mice (P < 0.05) after AOM treatment. The bromodeoxyuridine-labeling index of colonic crypts also was significantly elevated in hGAS mice vs. that in WT and INS-GAS mice. The results therefore provide evidence for a mitogenic and cocarcinogenic role of nonamidated gastrins (progastrin), which is apparently not shared by the amidated gastrins. Although nonamidated gastrins are now believed to mediate mitogenic effects via novel receptors, amidated gastrins mediate biological effects via different receptor subtypes, which may explain the difference in the cocarcinogenic potential of nonamidated vs. amidated gastrins. In conclusion, our results provide strong support for a cocarcinogenic role for nonamidated gastrins in colon carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Antibodies to the extreme C-terminal region of human progastrin have been used to monitor the isolation of high-Mr immunoreactive material in a gastrinoma extract. Microsequence analysis of the product revealed amino acid residues in the first 18 positions corresponding to those predicted from the cDNA sequence for preprogastrin starting at position 22; the sequence and immunochemical data together allow the identification of this material as intact progastrin. Implications for gastrin biosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Several peptides derived from the gastrin-predicted preprohormone sequence were isolated from a human gastrinoma by gel permeation, anion exchange, and reverse phase chromatography. The peptides were identified and characterized structurally by a combination of radioimmunoassays, mass spectral analysis, and microsequence analysis. The largest peptide, progastrin-(1-35) (cryptagastrin), extends from the putative processing site for the signal peptidase to the double basic residues adjacent to the amino terminus of gastrin 34. A shorter form of this peptide, progastrin-(6-35) (cryptagastrin-(6-35), was also isolated in smaller amounts. In addition, sulfated and nonsulfated gastrin 17 amides (progastrin-(55-71)) and the glycine-extended nonsulfated gastrin 17 (progastrin-(55-72)) were identified by radioimmunoassay, and their structures were confirmed by mass spectral analysis. Isolation of cryptagastrin indicates that the signal peptide of human preprogastrin contains 21 amino acid residues, and progastrin, therefore, contains 80 amino acids. There is minimal processing of the cryptic peptide preceding the sequence of gastrin 34. An amidated gastrin form larger than gastrin 34 could contain 71 amino acids. No evidence was obtained for processing that would produce gastrins containing more than 34 but less than 71 amino acid residues.  相似文献   

4.
S J Kim  K N Uhm  Y K Kang  O J Yoo 《DNA sequence》1991,1(3):181-187
The complete nucleotide sequences of cDNAs encoding bovine and feline preprogastrins have been cloned from the antral mucosa mRNA. The gastrin mRNA of each animal encodes a preprogastrin of 104 amino acids consisting of a signal peptide, a prosegment of 37 amino acids, and a gastrin 34 sequence, followed by a glycine (the amide donor). The cleavage following a pair of lysine residues yields gastrin 17. We found that pairs of arginine residues flanking gastrin 34, the typical processing site sequence of all other preprogastrins and many peptide hormones, were arginines in the bovine preprogastrin, but the first basic amino acid pair had changed to Arg-Trp (57-58 residues) instead of Arg-Arg in the feline preprogastrin. Comparison of these amino acid and nucleotide sequences with published mammalian sequences showed extensive homology in the coding (63 to 73% amino acid identity) and in the untranslated regions (67 to 89% identity). Prosequence, the most variable region, shows greater amino acid difference between bovine and human preprogastrin (54% identity), and between bovine and rat preprogastrin (54% identity) than between other species (62 to 82% identity).  相似文献   

5.
A radioimmunoassay has been developed using antibodies to a synthetic analogue of the C-terminal hexapeptide sequence of the porcine gastrin precursor. Boiling water extracts of porcine antral mucosa contained immunoreactive material that diluted in parallel with standard peptide. Concentrations of immunoreactivity were 5.5 +/- 0.8 nmol X g-1 (mean +/- S.E.M.) in antral mucosa and were closely similar to those of C-terminal heptadecapeptide gastrin immunoreactivity (5.0 +/- 0.6 nmol X g-1). Approximately 30-fold lower concentrations were found in porcine duodenum. A similar distribution was found in ferret, but human, rat and chicken antrum did not contain significant quantities of immunoreactivity. Gel filtration of porcine antral extracts on Sephadex G-50 revealed a single peak of immunoreactivity eluting in a similar position to G17, but on anion-exchange chromatography two peaks of immunoreactive material were separated. These also differed in their retention time on reverse phase HPLC. Both peptides are probably derived by tryptic cleavage at the C-terminus of porcine preprogastrin. No evidence was found to suggest that there are significant quantities of unprocessed preprogastrin in hog antral mucosa. The precise chemical difference between the two immunoreactive peptides identified here remains to be established; together, however, they provide specific markers for progastrin synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Gastrin biosynthesis involves a complex series of posttranslational modifications; their elucidation requires a knowledge of the structure of the gastrin precursor. The complete structure of rat preprogastrin was deduced from the nucleotide sequence of a full length cDNA clone isolated from a rat antral cDNA library. Northern blot hybridization analysis of rat antral RNA together with human antral RNA, reveals a single mRNA species of approximately 670 bases. Comparison of this sequence with those of porcine and human gastrin reveals extensive (73%) homology in the gastrin coding region as well as short regions of conserved nucleotides in the noncoding regions. The rat sequence encodes a preprogastrin of 104 amino acids which consists of a signal peptide, a 37 amino acid prosegment; and the gastrin 34 sequence, followed by a glycine (the amide donor), and flanked by pairs of arginine residues. Cleavage at an internal pair of lysine residues yields gastrin 17. Unlike the human and porcine sequences, rat preprogastrin contains a 9 amino acid carboxy-terminal extension peptide (-Ser-Ala-Glu-Glu-Glu-Asp-Gln-Tyr-Asn) which is homologous to the midportion of gastrin 17 including the site of tyrosine sulfation.  相似文献   

7.
We developed a radioimmunoassay specific for glycine-extended progastrin processing intermediates (G-Gly) using antisera generated against the synthetic peptide Tyr-Gly-Trp-Met-Asp-Phe-Gly. Distribution of immunoreactivity in the porcine gastrointestinal tract obtained with this antibody paralleled that of gastrin with the mucosa containing the highest quantity, 116 +/- 22 pmol/g, wet weight (mean +/- S.E., n = 5), or roughly 4% of gastrin concentration. This immunoreactivity was localized specifically to antral mucosal G-cells by immunohistochemistry. On Sephadex G-50 column chromatography of porcine antral mucosal extracts glycine-extended progastrin processing intermediates were separated into three principal molecular forms, each corresponding to known molecular forms of gastrin, component I, tetratriacontagastrin (G34) and heptadecagastrin (G17). Following purification by antibody-coupled affinity chromatography, one molecular form corresponding to G17 in size was shown to have an amino terminus identical to that of G17. Another molecular form corresponding to G34 in size could be converted to the molecular form corresponding to G17 by tryptic digestion. Our findings indicate that glycine-extended progastrin processing intermediates may serve as immediate precursors for each molecular form of gastrin, thus suggesting an alternative pathway for gastrin biosynthesis more complex than that previously conceived.  相似文献   

8.
In an effort to identify and characterize precursors of gastrin in tissues, we generated region-specific antisera against a synthetic progastrin peptide, Try-Gly-Trp-Met-Asp-Phe-Gly-Arg-Arg (GL9), as deduced from the nucleotide sequence of gastrin mRNA. This antisera did not cross-react with gastrin or progastrin peptides with shorter carboxyl-terminal extensions. Progastrin-like immunoreactivity (PGLI) was measured in porcine antrum at a concentration of 6.8 +/- 1.2 pmol/g wet weight (mean +/- SE, n = 5), or roughly 0.2% of that of gastrin. On Sephadex G50 chromatography, a major peak of PGLI was eluted as a slightly larger molecule than gastrin heptadecapeptide (G17) but possessed the same N-terminal immunoreactivity. These findings suggest that G17 may be formed by processing of a carboxyl-terminally extended precursor as an alternative to cleavage of big gastrin (G34).  相似文献   

9.
Gastrin is initially synthesized as a large precursor that requires endoproteolytic cleavage by a prohormone convertase (PC) for bioactivation. Gastric antral G-cells process progastrin at Arg(94)Arg(95) and Lys(74)Lys(75) residues generating gastrin heptadecapeptide (G17-NH(2)). Conversely, duodenal G-cells process progastrin to gastrin tetratriacontapeptide (G34-NH(2)) with little processing at Lys(74)Lys(75). Both tissues express PC1/PC3 and PC2. Previously, we demonstrated that heterologous expression of progastrin in an endocrine cell line that expresses PC1/PC3 and little PC2 (AtT-20) resulted in the formation of G34-NH(2). To confirm that PC1/PC3 was responsible for progastrin processing in AtT-20 cells and capable of processing progastrin in vivo we coexpressed either human wild-type (Lys(74)Lys(75)) or mutant (Arg(74)Arg(75), Lys(74)Arg(75), and Arg(74)Lys(75)) progastrins in AtT-20 cells with two different antisense PC1/PC3 constructs. Coexpression of either antisense construct resulted in a consistent decrease in G34-NH(2) formation. Gastrin mRNA expression and progastrin synthesis were equivalent in each cell line. Although mutation of the Lys(74)Lys(75) site within G34-NH(2) to Lys(74)Arg(75) resulted in the production of primarily G17-NH(2) rather than G34-NH(2), inhibition of PC1/PC3 did not significantly inhibit processing at the Lys(74)Arg(75) site. We conclude that PC1/PC3 is a progastrin processing enzyme, suggesting a role for PC1/PC3 progastrin processing in G-cells.  相似文献   

10.
Hypergastrinemia increases gastric epithelial susceptibility to apoptosis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Plasma concentrations of the hormone gastrin are elevated by Helicobacter pylori infection and by gastric atrophy. It has previously been proposed that gastrin acts as a cofactor during gastric carcinogenesis and hypergastrinemic transgenic INS-GAS mice are prone to developing gastric adenocarcinoma, particularly following H. pylori infection. We hypothesised that the increased risk of carcinogenesis in these animals may partly result from altered susceptibility of gastric epithelial cells to undergo apoptosis. Gastric corpus apoptosis was significantly increased 48 h after 12Gy gamma-radiation in mice rendered hypergastrinemic by transgenic (INS-GAS) or pharmacological (omeprazole treatment of FVB/N mice) methods and in both cases the effects were inhibited by the CCK-2 receptor antagonist YM022. However, no alteration in susceptibility to gamma-radiation-induced gastric epithelial apoptosis was observed in mice overexpressing progastrin or glycine-extended gastrin. Apoptosis was also significantly increased in gastric corpus biopsies obtained from H. pylori-infected humans with moderate degrees of hypergastrinemia. We conclude that hypergastrinemia specifically renders cells within the gastric corpus epithelium more susceptible to induction of apoptosis by radiation or H. pylori. Altered susceptibility to apoptosis may therefore be one factor predisposing to gastric carcinogenesis in INS-GAS mice and similar mechanisms may also be involved in humans.  相似文献   

11.
Heptadecapeptide gastrins (G17) have been purified and sequenced from a variety of species. However, progastrin (G34) sequences have been determined only for pig and human from purified peptides and for rat from cDNA. Since G34 in most species accounts for only approximately 5% of total antral gastrin, micropurification techniques must be employed to avoid the need for large quantities of antral tissue. Efficient purification methodology yielded 1.5 and 1.3 nmol of G34 from the antrum of a single goat and of a single dog, respectively. The N-terminal pyroglutamyl residues were enzymatically removed and the peptides were sequenced through to the proximity of their COOH-termini. The COOH-terminal sequences of goat and dog G34 were confirmed by sequencing the corresponding deblocked G17 from each animal. The previously published dog G17 sequence was shown to be incorrect. The sequences for dog and goat G34 are: Dog less than ELGLQGPPQLVADLSKKQGPWMEEEEAAYGWMDF# Goat less than ELGLQDPPHMVADLSKKQGPWVEEEEAAYGWMDF# Dog and goat gastrins differ in 3 sites in the 17 amino acid NH2-terminus and only a single site in G17 (the sites of differences are underlined). The ratio for sulfated to non-sulfated antral G17 is 9:1 for the goat and 1:9 for the dog.  相似文献   

12.
Using gel and ion-exchange chromatography monitored by radioimmunoassays specific for sequences essential in the processing of preprogastrin and preprocholecystokinin, the products were characterized in extracts of porcine pituitary lobes before and after incubation with trypsin, carboxypeptidase B, and arylsulfatase. The intermediate and neural lobes contained only fully activated (i.e. alpha-amidated) preprogastrin products (component I, gastrin-34, and gastrin-17). In contrast, the anterior lobe contained, in addition to traces of alpha-amidated gastrin (2 pmol/g), hundredfold higher amounts of a nonamidated progastrin (189 pmol/g; Mr approximately 7000) and two nonamidated procholecystokinin fragments (75 pmol/g; Mr approximately 7000 and 5000). These results show that hormone genes, in spite of translation of their mRNA, are not necessarily expressed in functional peptides in cells outside the principal production regions. Hence, the study indicates that differentiation of endocrine cells may be controlled at the post-translational level.  相似文献   

13.
Evidence is accumulating that gastrin precursors may act as growth factors for the colonic mucosa in vivo. The aims of this study were to prepare recombinant human progastrin(6-80) and to investigate its structure and biological activities in vitro. Human progastrin(6-80) was expressed in Escherichia coli as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein. After thrombin cleavage progastrin(6-80) was purified by reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography and characterized by radioimmunoassay, amino acid sequencing, and mass spectrometry. Assays for metal ions by atomic emission spectroscopy revealed the presence of a single tightly bound calcium ion. Progastrin(6-80) at concentrations in the pm to nm range stimulated proliferation of the conditionally transformed mouse colon cell line YAMC. The observations that progastrin(6-80) did not bind to either the cholecystokinin (CCK)-A or the gastrin/CCK-B receptor expressed in COS cells and that antagonists selective for either receptor did not reverse the proliferative effects of progastrin(6-80) suggested that progastrin(6-80) stimulated proliferation independently of either the CCK-A or the gastrin/CCK-B receptor. We conclude that recombinant human progastrin(6-80) is biologically active and contains a single calcium ion. With the exception of the well known zinc-dependent polymerization of insulin and proinsulin, this is the first report of selective, high affinity binding of metal ions to a prohormone.  相似文献   

14.
The unprocessed gastrin precursor, progastrin (PG), is often overexpressed in colon cancer and other malignancies where it appears to stimulate colonic growth. Overexpression of progastrin also stimulates proliferation of normal colonic mucosa, but the receptors mediating these effects have not been identified. Here we report the development of a non-radioactive assay for assessment of PG binding to normal and transformed cells. Progastrin was labeled using biotinylation, and binding of biotinylated PG to cells was assessed using flow cytometry. Using this approach, we show strong and specific binding of PG to some cell lines (IEC-6, IEC-18, HT-29, COLO320) and minimal binding to others (HeLa, DC2.4, Jurkat). We also found PG binding to several non-gut epithelial lines, such as CHO-K1, COS-6 and HEK293 cells. The specificity of binding was confirmed by competition with cold, unlabeled PG but not with glycine-extended gastrin or amidated gastrin-17. Binding was not influenced by the presence of the classical CCK-2 receptor, but was partially dependent on the charged glycosaminoglycans (GAG). The analysis of primary colonic tissues isolated from wild type C57BL/6 mouse, revealed a small epithelial subpopulation of non-hematopoietic (CD45-negative) cells that strongly interacted with PG. Surprisingly, this population was greatly expanded in gastrin knockout mice. This non-radioactive, FACS-based assay should prove useful for further characterization of cells expressing the progastrin receptor.  相似文献   

15.
Gastrin processing in primary culture of gastrinoma cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
There is a general agreement on the cell specificity of gastrin processing. In order to investigate this processing in Zollinger-Ellison (ZE) patients, we have studied in two primary gastrinoma cultures (one from a pancreatic tumor, the other from a liver metastasis) the proportion of progastrin fragments using immunochemical and immunohistological methods. In tumor extracts as well as in sera, the predominant gastrin form differed between the two patients (i.e. being G17 and G34, respectively). In the two gastrinoma cultures, RIA determinations and electron microscopic observations indicated that the proportion of progastrin increased with time while that of G17 and G34 decreased. On the other hand, as the culture time extended, an increasing proportion of nonimmunostained secretory granules was observed suggesting the presence of other gastrin precursors (e.g. Gly-extended progastrin). From these findings, we suggest that gastrinoma culture cells could be a valuable tool in the biochemical approach to gastrin processing in ZE tumors.  相似文献   

16.
Cellular synthesis of peptide hormones requires PCs (prohormone convertases) for the endoproteolysis of prohormones. Antral G-cells synthesize the most gastrin and express PC1/3, 2 and 5/6 in the rat and human. But the cleavage sites in progastrin for each PC have not been determined. Therefore, in the present study, we measured the concentrations of progastrin, processing intermediates and alpha-amidated gastrins in antral extracts from PC1/3-null mice and compared the results with those in mice lacking PC2 and wild-type controls. The expression of PCs was examined by immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization of mouse G-cells. Finally, the in vitro effect of recombinant PC5/6 on progastrin and progastrin fragments containing the relevant dibasic cleavage sites was also examined. The results showed that mouse G-cells express PC1/3, 2 and 5/6. The concentration of progastrin in PC1/3-null mice was elevated 3-fold. Chromatography showed that cleavage of the Arg(36)Arg(37) and Arg(73)Arg(74) sites were grossly decreased. Accordingly, the concentrations of progastrin products were markedly reduced, alpha-amidated gastrins (-34 and -17) being 25% of normal. Lack of PC1/3 was without effect on the third dibasic site (Lys(53)Lys(54)), which is the only processing site for PC2. Recombinant PC5/6 did not cleave any of the dibasic processing sites in progastrin and fragments containing the relevant dibasic processing sites. The complementary cleavages of PC1/3 and 2, however, suffice to explain most of the normal endoproteolysis of progastrin. Moreover, the results show that PCs react differently to the same dibasic sequences, suggesting that additional structural factors modulate the substrate specificity.  相似文献   

17.
Colorectal cancers express significant amounts of immature glycine-extended gastrin (G-Gly) and G-Gly is able to stimulate cell proliferation in colonic cell lines and mucosa. Here we wished to investigate whether G17-Gly promote the invasiveness of LoVo human colonic cancer cells, a process which requires degradation of extracellular matrix by proteases and concomitant induction of cell migration. We confirmed that LoVo cells express gastrin and gastrin/CCK-B receptor mRNAs. We showed that these cells secrete matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1, -2, and -9. The function of MMP being to degrade components of extracellular matrix, they may thus favor cell migration. As compared to controls, G17-Gly (10(-7) to 10(-12) M) significantly enhanced about two to three times the LoVo cell migration through Matrigel, an artificial basement matrix barrier. Moreover, G17-Gly increased and gastrin/CCK-B receptor antagonists decreased MMP secretion in conditioned culture media of LoVo cells. Our findings show that physiological doses of incompletely processed form of gastrin induce the invasiveness of tumor cells in vitro and suggest a novel potential role for this peptide in the metastatic process of colonic cancers in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
We have isolated and sequenced cDNA clones encoding for preprogastrin from a canine antral cDNA library. Comparison of this sequence with those of porcine, human, and rat gastrin reveals extensive (83%) homology in the gastrin coding region as well as short regions of conserved nucleotides in the noncoding regions. The canine sequence encodes a preprogastrin of 104 amino acids which consists of a signal peptide, a 37-amino acid prosegment, and a 34-amino acid gastrin sequence, followed by a glycine (the amide donor), and flanked by pairs of arginine residues.  相似文献   

19.
The modifying effects of dietary feeding of zerumbone isolated from Zingiber zerumbet on the development of azoxymethane (AOM)-induced colonic aberrant crypt foci (ACF) were investigated in male F344 rats. Expression of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 in colonic mucosa exposed to AOM and/or zerumbone was also assayed. In addition, we assessed the effects of zerumbone on cell proliferation activity of crypts by counting silver-stained nucleolar organizer regions protein (AgNORs) in colonic cryptal cell nuclei. To induce ACF rats were given three weekly subcutaneous injections of AOM (15 mg/kg body weight). They were also fed the experimental diet containing 0.01% or 0.05% zerumbone for 5 weeks, starting one week before the first dosing of AOM. AOM exposure produced 84+/-13 ACF/rat at the end of the study (week 5). Dietary administration of zerumbone caused reduction in the frequency of ACF: 72+/-17 (14% reduction) at a dose of 0.01% and 45+/-18 (46% reduction, p<0.001) at a dose of 0.05%. Feeding of zerumbone significantly reduced expression of COX-2 and prostaglandins in colonic mucosa. Zerumbone feeding significantly lowered the number of AgNORs in colonic crypt cell nuclei. These findings might suggest possible chemopreventive ability of zerumbone, through suppression of COX-2 expression, cell proliferating activity of colonic mucosa, and induction of phase II detoxification enzymes in the development of carcinogen-induced ACF.  相似文献   

20.
Binding of ferric ions to the hormone glycine-extended gastrin17 is essential for biological activity (Pannequin, J., et al. (2002). J. Biol. Chem. 277: 48602-48609). The aims of the current study were to determine the properties of the complex between recombinant human progastrin6-80 and ferric ions. The stoichiometry and affinity of ferric ion binding were determined by fluorescence spectroscopy. The selectivity of metal ion binding and the stability of the 59Fe(III) progastrin6-80 complex were determined by equilibrium dialysis. The stoichiometry of 2.5 +/- 0.1 moles Fe/mole progastrin, and the apparent dissociation constant of 2.2 +/- 0.1 microM, were similar to the values previously determined for glycine-extended gastrin17 at pH 4.0. Of the four trivalent and seven divalent metal ions tested, only ferrous and ferric ions bound to progastrin6-80. The ferric ion-progastrin complex was extremely stable, with a half-life of 117 +/- 8 days at pH 7.6 and 25 degrees C. We conclude that recombinant human progastrin6-80 selectively binds ferrous and ferric ions with high affinity in a stable 2:1 complex.  相似文献   

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