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1.
The current study explored prolactin proteolysis by rat lactating mammary gland. 125I-labelled rat prolactin was incubated with tissue fractions of lactating mammary gland and the extent of prolactin degradation and fragment formation was visualized and densitometrically quantitated from autoradiographs derived from SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions. At pH 4.5, the 25 000 X g pellet of mammary gland converted intact prolactin (23 kDa band) to proteolytic fragments (8-16 kDa bands) in a time- and tissue concentration-dependent fashion similar to that reported previously for rat ventral prostate. The prolactin-degrading and -fragmenting activity in lactating mammary gland was 5-10-times that observed for ventral prostate, the most active male tissue. This activity at acid pH was also demonstrable in other fractions of mammary gland but appeared to predominate in the cytosol. The above activities in mammary gland virtually disappeared at pH 7.4, appeared sensitive to aspartate and sulfhydryl proteinase inhibitors, and insensitive to serine and metalloenzyme proteinase inhibitors. The distribution of this activity could not be correlated with a particular enzyme marker. These characteristics of mammary gland activity differed significantly from those reported previously for prostate. When electrophoresis was conducted under non-reducing conditions, prolactin proteolysis in prostate and mammary gland was primarily associated with the formation of a more slowly migrating product (24 kDa band) with little spontaneous 8-16 kDa fragment formation. Re-electrophoresis of the 24 kDa band under reducing conditions resulted in the appearance of the 8 and 16 kDa fragments. In conclusion, prolactin is proteolytically modified by prostate and lactating mammary gland to a variant of intact hormone (24 kDa band) with a cleavage site in its large loop, by two or more widely distributed, acid-dependent proteinases. Lactating mammary gland, the principal target for prolactin, has the capacity to cleave the hormone in its loop at rates higher than any other tissue examined to date.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial proteinase isolated from secretory cells of the mammary gland of lactating rats able to hydrolyze 125I-labeled and native prolactin (PRL) has been studied. The enzyme represents a serine proteinase and is localized in the inner mitochondrial membrane. The molecular mass of the enzyme is 17-18 kDa, pH optimum is at 8.0-9.0. Partial purification of the enzyme has been carried out. The Km constant for 125I-PRL is equal to 10(-6) M, that for 2% hemoglobin is 1.2 x 10(-4) M. Analysis of products of rat and ovine PRL hydrolysis by proteinase using high performance liquid chromatography and PAAG electrophoresis revealed the formation of large-size fragments of the hormone. A possible role of proteinase in the mechanism of PRL action on mammary gland tissues is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Characterization of prolactin receptors in pig mammary gland.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Prolactin receptors present in the particulate fraction of lactating pig mammary gland were solubilized by 7.5mM-3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propane-su lph onic acid (Chaps) and purified by affinity chromatography on prolactin coupled to Affi-Gel 10. Nearly 30% of the particulate receptors were solubilized by the detergent and over a 1000-fold purification from homogenates was achieved. A water-soluble fraction rich in receptors was observed during the preparation of membranes, although this fraction has not yet been purified. Prolactin binding to the receptors was a time-dependent, reversible and saturable reaction in particulate, Chaps-solubilized and purified receptors. In all forms, receptors showed the same specificity to peptide hormones. Prolactin and human growth hormone bound to the same receptors, whereas bovine growth hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone and insulin failed to bind. After solubilization, the dissociation constant (Kd) for prolactin was decreased 5-fold from 9.8 X 10(-11) M in the particulate receptors to 1.8 X 10(-11) M in solubilized and purified receptors, being due principally to an increase in the association rate constant from 1.0 X 10(9)M-1 X h-1 to (3.9-4.6) X 10(9)M-1 X h-1, respectively, with the dissociation rate constant remaining unchanged at (1.1-1.3) X 10(-2)h-1. Isoelectric focusing of the prolactin-receptor complex revealed two peaks, one at a pI of 5.5-5.6 and the other at 5.2-5.3. Microsomal receptors were covalently cross-linked to 125I-labelled ovine prolactin with ethylene glycol bis(succinimidyl succinate) and analysed by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Autoradiography of the gel revealed a major subunit of Mr 28 000-35 000 and a minor one of Mr 67 000-69 000. Anti-(prolactin receptor) antibodies raised against rabbit mammary gland prolactin receptors were equally effective in inhibiting prolactin binding to particulate, solubilized and affinity-purified receptors, suggesting that purified prolactin receptors have a structure indistinguishable immunologically from particulate receptors and rabbit mammary gland prolactin receptors. The present demonstration shows that particulate prolactin receptors from a domestic animal can be solubilized and purified without losing the original properties of high affinity and binding specificity for hormones.  相似文献   

5.
Cathepsin D was purified from the lactating rabbit mammary gland by a rapid procedure, which included fractionation with (NH4)2SO4, acid precipitation, double affinity chromatography on pepstatin-Sepharose 4B and gel filtration on Sephadex G-100, resulting in approximately 360-fold purification of the enzyme over the homogenate and approximately 16% recovery. After isoelectric focusing, the enzyme dissociated into four (pI 5.8, 6.3, 6.5 and 7.2) multiple forms, but appeared homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Cathepsin D has a Mr of 45 kDa as determined by Sephadex G-100 column chromatography. On sodium dodecylsulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the enzyme gave a single protein band, corresponding to Mr of 45 kDa. The amino acid composition of the enzyme is similar to that of cathepsins D from other tissues. A single N-terminal amino acid was glycine. Cathepsin D contains 6.4% carbohydrates consisting of mannose, galactose, fucose and glucosamine at a ratio of 3:9:2:2. Cathepsin D is inhibited by pepstatin with Ki of 2.5 X 10(-9) M and irreversibly by N-diazoacetyl-N'-2.4-dinitrophenyl-ethylene diamine. The enzyme hydrolyzes bovine hemoglobin with the maximal activity at pH 3.0 with Km = 10(-5) M and HLeu-Ser-Phe(NO2)-Nle-Ala-Leu-OMe with Km = 4 X 10(-5) M and Rcat = 0.95 s-1. The major cleavage sites were Leu15-Tyr16, Phe24-Phe25 and Phe25-Tyr26 during hydrolysis of the oxidized insulin B-chain by cathepsin D.  相似文献   

6.
Purification and protein sequence analysis of rat liver prolactin receptor   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Prolactin receptors were purified from rat liver membranes by single-step immunoaffinity chromatography using a specific monoclonal antibody to the rat liver prolactin receptor. Scatchard analysis of 125I-human growth hormone binding to the purified receptor revealed two classes of specific binding sites with Ka = 18.5 x 10(9) and 1.2 x 10(9) M-1. Considering that both classes of binding sites are responsible for high affinity prolactin binding, the partially purified receptor preparation had a binding activity of 1.69 nmol/mg protein, representing 1000-fold purification over microsomal receptors with a recovery of 52%. From three separate purifications, 6 mg of partially purified prolactin receptor were obtained with a purity of approximately 4 to 6.5%. Thus, the use of monoclonal antibody for affinity chromatography resulted in a large improvement of prolactin receptor purification compared to previous hormone affinity chromatography (300-fold purification, 15% recovery). The purified receptor was run on preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and a homogeneous preparation of prolactin receptor was obtained by electroelution from gel slices corresponding to Mr 38,000-43,000. Immunoblot analysis using a radiolabeled monoclonal antibody revealed two separate but closely located bands of Mr 42,000 and 40,000 in microsomal, partially purified, and electroeluted preparations. The homogeneous receptor protein was extensively digested with L-1-tosylamido-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone trypsin, and 10 internal amino acid sequences of the rat liver prolactin receptor were determined by gas-phase sequence analysis. Oligonucleotide probes were prepared against two of these internal sequences, and a prolactin receptor cDNA was isolated from a rat liver library using one of these probes (Boutin, J. M., Jolicoeur, C., Okamura, H., Gagnon, J., Edery, M., Shirota, M., Banville, D., Dusanter-Fourt, I., Djiane, J., and Kelly, P. A. (1988) Cell 53, 69-77). The amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA reveals three potential sites of N-linked glycosylation, two of which were confirmed during protein sequencing. The prolactin receptor was characterized by affinity labeling with 125I-human growth hormone. Cross-linking of microsomes revealed a single band for the hormone-receptor complex with Mr 62,000. On the other hand, cross-linking of Triton X-100-solubilized or partially purified receptor with labeled hormone resulted in the appearance of two bands with Mr 62,000 and 102,000, suggesting the existence of a subunit structure of the prolactin receptor, or alternatively, the existence of two types of prolactin receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Because of the apparent clinical importance of human pulmonary surfactant B (SP-B), the expression of SP-B was directed to the mammary gland of transgenic mice using previously characterized rat whey acidic protein (WAP) regulatory sequences. rWAP/SP-B mRNA was expressed specifically in the mammary gland, and ranged from 1 to 5% of the endogenous WAP mRNA levels. SP-B was detected immunologically in both tissue and milk. The transgene product had an apparent molecular weight of 40--45 kDa, corresponding to the predicted size of the SP-B proprotein. Incubation of an SP-B-enriched fraction of milk with cathepsin D in vitro produced 20--25 kDa species, consistent with cleavage of the amino terminal domain by cathepsin D. This was confirmed using antibodies specific to the carboxy-terminal domain of SP-B. However, the appearance of only the SP-B proprotein in milk suggests that cathepsin D is not involved in the in vivo processing of SP-B. The SP-B proprotein can be expressed in milk of transgenic mice without any observed effects on mammary gland morphology or lactation  相似文献   

8.
9.
Two types of prolactin receptors were identified in sow mammary gland. When light membranes were prepared on a discontinuous sucrose gradient (0.3 and 1.7 M) and then diluted and washed with 0.3 M sucrose solution, a large amount (about 50%) of receptors were released from membranes and appeared in the supernatant fraction. These two forms (hydrophobic and water-soluble) of receptors were characterized as having the same binding specificity for lactogenic hormones and a similar affinity constant for ovine prolactin (K alpha approximately 10-12 X 10(9) M-1). Polyclonal antibodies and one monoclonal (mAb M110) antibody, obtained against partially purified prolactin receptors from rabbit mammary gland, cross-reacted effectively with sow mammary receptors. They completely inhibited the specific binding of [125I]oPRL to membrane and water-soluble receptors. The present studies indicate that the two types of sow prolactin receptors could represent the same molecular entity and confirm that prolactin receptors from rabbit and sow mammary gland exhibit numerous antigenic similarities.  相似文献   

10.
16K prolactin (PRL) is the name given to the 16-kDa N-terminal fragment obtained by proteolysis of rat PRL by tissue extracts or cell lysates, in which cathepsin D was identified as the candidate protease. Based on its antiangiogenic activity, 16K PRL is potentially a physiological inhibitor of tumor growth. Full-length human PRL (hPRL) was reported to be resistant to cathepsin D, suggesting that antiangiogenic 16K PRL may be physiologically irrelevant in humans. In this study, we show that hPRL can be cleaved by cathepsin D or mammary cell extracts under the same conditions as described earlier for rat PRL, although with lower efficiency. In contrast to the rat hormone, hPRL proteolysis generates three 16K-like fragments, which were identified by N-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometry as corresponding to amino acids 1-132 (15 kDa), 1-147 (16.5 kDa), and 1-150 (17 kDa). Biochemical and mutagenetic studies showed that the species-specific digestion pattern is due to subtle differences in primary and tertiary structures of rat and human hormones. The antiangiogenic activity of N-terminal hPRL fragments was assessed by the inhibition of growth factor-induced thymidine uptake and MAPK activation in bovine umbilical endothelial cells. Finally, an N-terminal hPRL fragment comigrating with the proteolytic 17-kDa fragment was identified in human pituitary adenomas, suggesting that the physiological relevance of antiangiogenic N-terminal hPRL fragments needs to be reevaluated in humans.  相似文献   

11.
When pituitary extracts were subjected to non denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, an unknown protein was found to associate with a proportion of the prolactin. This protein was dissociated from prolactin by sodium dodecyl sulfate. The protein was purified and sequenced. As the amino terminus was blocked, the amino acid sequences of three peptide fragments were determined. The obtained sequences of 41 amino acids were identical to partial sequences of a known protein, rat Annexin V. The molecular mass, 36 kDa, was also the same as the molecular weight of Annexin V. The existence of Annexin V mRNA in rat pituitary glands was also confirmed by polymerase chain reaction. These results show that Annexin V, a member of the calcium-dependent phospholipid binding proteins, is synthesized in the rat pituitary gland, and suggest its association with prolatin in the gland.  相似文献   

12.
The main sulphated proteins secreted by rat mammary gland tissue have Mr of approximately 32 000, 27 000 and 25 000 Da. In addition, there are high Mr components which have a diffuse electrophoretic mobility (Mr > 200 000) and most likely corresponded to proteoglycans. The sulphate groups in the proteins with discrete Mr are most likely all linked to carbohydrates. These sulphated molecules were partially purified and identified to isoforms of rat alpha-lactalbumin for the 25-27 kDa bands and to kappa-casein for the 32 kDa band. This pattern of protein sulphation is, as far as we know, quite specific to rat mammary epithelial cells.  相似文献   

13.
A pepstatin A-sensitive enzyme involved in yolk formation was purified from the masu salmon (Oncorhynchus masou) ovary using in vitro generation of yolk proteins from purified vitellogenin to assay enzymatic activity. Purification of the enzyme involved precipitation of ovarian extracts by water and ammonium sulfate followed by five steps of column chromatography. After SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, the purified enzyme appeared as a single approximately 42 kDa band that was immunoreactive to anti-human cathepsin D. The course of proteolytic cleavage of the three major yolk proteins (lipovitellin, beta'-component, and phosvitin) in fertilized masu salmon and Sakhalin taimen (Hucho perryi) eggs and embryos was visualized by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using specific antisera. Major yolk protein bands appeared in positions corresponding to 92 kDa, 68 kDa, and 22 kDa (lipovitellin-derived peptides), as well as 17 kDa (beta'-component). During embryo development, the 92 kDa and 22 kDa bands gradually decreased in intensity, becoming undetectable in alevins. The 68 kDa band and a minor 24 kDa band became more intense after the eyed stage. Two additional peptides, corresponding to 40 and 28 kDa, newly appeared in alevins. During embryonic growth, the beta'-component band (17 kDa) persisted and phosvitin appeared to be progressively dephosphorylated. In vitro analysis of lipovitellin proteolysis indicated that the enzyme involved is a Pefabloc SC-sensitive serine protease. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that a cathepsin D-like protease and serine proteases play key roles in yolk formation and degradation, respectively, in salmonid fishes.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously shown that rat prolactin is proteolytically cleaved in its loop by peripheral tissues of the rat. Of the tissues examined to date, lactating mammary gland exhibits the highest prolactin-cleaving activity. The objective of this study was to characterize cleaved prolactin, biologically, immunologically and chemically. By modifying an established analytical method, we were able to generate large (μg) amounts of cleaved rat prolactin from cell fractions of rat mammary gland which could then be assayed for biological and immunological activity relative to intact hormone. The cleaved product showed no significant difference relative to the intact rat prolactin when assayed for its ability to compete with 125I-labelled ovine prolactin for the prolactin receptor and for its ability to stimulate the proliferation of rat Nb2 lymphoma cells. Cleaved rat prolactin, however, did show a 50–60% reduction in activity relative to intact rat prolactin when assayed by radioimmunoassay. Using Edman degradation and partial amino acid analysis, we determined that the second N-terminus of the cleaved rat prolactin begins at amino acid 149. The divergence of biological and immunological activity produced by proteolytic cleavage in the loop of rat prolactin suggests that biological and immunological sites differ in location. The possible physiological implications of a cleaved rat prolactin molecule generated by target tissue with maintained biological activity and reduced immunological activity are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
A multidomain cystatin was purified from the leaves of mature and seedling tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum, cv Bonnie Best) that had been sprayed with methyl jasmonate. For seedlings, cystatin purification was accomplished using EDTA washing, KCI extraction, 70 degrees C heat treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration chromatography. For mature plants, DEAE chromatography was also needed to separate a protease, hydrolysis products of cystatin and serine proteinase inhibitors from the intact cystatin. Purified tomato cystatin has a molecular weight (Mr) of 88 kDa, eight papain binding domains, is a non-competitive inhibitor of papain with K1 of 1.4 nM and is not a glycoprotein. Tryptic peptides (Mr 26, 13 kDa) and most chymotryptic peptides (Mr 33, 13 kDa) of tomato cystatin retain inhibitor activity. Amino acid analysis revealed no Cys; Asx, Glx, Gly, Ser accounted for almost half the residues and there was some homology with potato multicystatin. Activity is stable at pH 4-11 at 4 degrees C, but unstable at neutral pH at > 60 degrees C (Ea = 92.5 kJ/mole). Extracts of mature plants treated with methyl jasmonate contain lower Mr cystatins that appear to result from the action of an endogenous 26 kDa protease on the 88 kDa inhibitor.  相似文献   

16.
Three monoclonal antibodies (M110, A82, and A917) were obtained by fusing myeloma cells and spleen cells from mice immunized with partially purified rabbit mammary gland prolactin (PRL) receptors. All 3 antibodies were capable of complete inhibition of 125I-ovine prolactin (oPRL) binding to rabbit mammary PRL receptors in either particulate or soluble form. M110 showed slightly greater potency than oPRL in competing for 125I-oPRL binding. These antibodies also inhibited PRL binding to microsomal fractions from rabbit liver, kidney, adrenal, ovary, and pig mammary gland, although A82 showed poor inhibition in pig mammary gland. There was no cross-reaction of any of the 3 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) for the other species tested: human (T-47D breast cancer cells) and rat (liver, ovary). In order to confirm that these antibodies are specific to the binding domain, antibodies were purified, iodinated, and binding characteristics were investigated. 125I-M110 and 125I-A82 binding was completely inhibited by lactogenic hormones, whereas nonlactogenic hormones did not cross-react. Competition of 125I-M110 by oPRL (ID50 = 0.44 nM) was comparable to that of 125I-oPRL by unlabeled oPRL (ID50 = 0.35 nM), while 125I-A917 binding was only partially competed (30-60%) by lactogenic hormones. Tissue and species specificity of labeled antibody binding paralleled results of binding inhibition experiments using 125I-oPRL. In addition, A82 and A917 completely inhibited 125I-M110 binding. In contrast, 125I-A82 binding was stimulated by A917 and 125I-A917 binding was stimulated by A82. These findings indicate that monoclonal antibodies can be readily prepared from partially purified PRL receptors from rabbit mammary gland; two antibodies (M110 and A82) are hormone binding site specific while the other (A917) binds a domain partially but not entirely distinct from the hormone binding site, and that all three antibodies have strong species specificity.  相似文献   

17.
The isolated cathepsin D-like enzyme from Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) liver was shown to be a monomer with a molecular mass of approximately 40 kDa. It was inhibited by Pepstatin A and had an optimum for degradation of haemoglobin at pH 3.0. The purified enzyme had lower temperature stability than bovine cathepsin D. Antibodies raised against the purified enzyme and against two C-terminal peptides of cod cathepsin D recognized a 40 kDa protein in immunoblotting of the samples from the purification process. Both antisera showed cross reactivity with a similar sized protein in liver from cod, saithe (Pollachius virens L.), Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus L.) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). A protein of same size was detected in wolffish (Anarhichas lupus L.) liver with the antibody directed against the purified enzyme. This antibody also recognized the native enzyme and detected the presence of cathepsin D in muscle of cod, saithe, herring and salmon. These antibodies may be useful in understanding the mechanisms of post mortem muscle degradation in fish by comparing immunohistochemical localization and enzyme activity, in particular in cod with different rate of muscle degradation. They may also be used for comparing muscle degradation in different fish species.  相似文献   

18.
The prolactin receptor is a membrane protein mainly involved in the development of the mammary gland and in lactation in mammals. We used specific cDNA constructs and the insect/baculovirus expression system and produced independently and in large amounts several recombinant forms of the rabbit mammary gland prolactin receptor: the full-length receptor (L1, L2), a truncated membrane form (S), a secretable form of the extracellular domain (E) and two forms of the intracellular domain (I1, I2). Of these forms, the L1 and L2 are associated with the membrane fraction, the E is predominantly secreted into the medium and the I1 and I2 are expressed as soluble proteins and surprisingly, a great portion accumulates in the culture medium. The molecular mass (94 kDa) of the expressed full-length receptor corresponds to the translation product of the entire cDNA coding region. The receptor biochemically identified in the rabbit mammary gland is however much shorter. Thus, in the mammary gland, the receptor presumably undergoes post-translational modifications. The receptor forms L1, L2 and S bind prolactin with specificity and affinity similar to those reported for the native receptor. They also interact with two monoclonal antibodies, M110 and A917, specific for the native conformation of the hormone-binding site. The I1 and I2 forms do not bind prolactin, whereas the E form does. Thus, the hormone binding site is located in the extracellular domain which can function autonomously as a PRL-binding soluble protein. However, the E form binds prolactin with a higher affinity than the native receptor and it does not bind one of the two antireceptor monoclonal antibodies, known to be hormone binding-site specific. Thus, the conformation of the native receptor and that of the E form differ.  相似文献   

19.
A sialidase [EC 3.2.1.18] from the ovary of starfish Asterina pectinifera was isolated and highly purified by preparative PAGE. The SDS-PAGE separation of the purified enzyme revealed two natures of protein bands, upper (50 kDa) and a lower (47 kDa). To identify the protein, N-terminal amino acid sequence of the upper band was done. The sequence matched with the N-terminal amino acid sequence of human lysosomal mature cathepsin D and cathepsin D activity was also found in all the preparation steps. Protease inhibitor pepstatin A inhibited the proteolysis activity of cathepsin D against a synthetic substrate. The two enzymes sialidase and cathepsin D were separated from each other by using high-performance gel-filtration chromatography. The Western blot analysis and isoelectric focusing showed the co-purified cathepsin D is a 50 kDa protein with a PI value of 4.2.  相似文献   

20.
Purification, cloning, and expression of the prolactin receptor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The rat liver prolactin receptor has been purified to homogeneity, and partial amino acid sequences have been obtained. The structure of the receptor has been deduced from a single complementary DNA clone. The mature protein of 291 amino acids has a relatively long extracellular region, a single transmembrane segment, and a short (57 amino acids) cytoplasmic domain. With the rat cDNA used as a probe, the prolactin receptor in rabbit mammary gland and human hepatoma cells has also been isolated. These tissues contain a second, longer form of the receptor (592 and 598 amino acids, respectively). Both the short and long forms of the prolactin receptor show regions of strong sequence identity with the human and rabbit growth hormone receptors, suggesting that the prolactin and growth hormone receptors originate from a common ancestor.  相似文献   

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