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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. A new line of cloned, differentiated rat hepatocytes (RL-PR-C) was evaluated for its usefulness as an in vitro system for studying the regulation of the insulin receptor. 2. Insulin rapidly reversibly and specifically bound to RL-PR-C hepatocytes. Binding of tracer 125I-labeled insulin, which was competitively inhibited by native insulin as well as by proinsulin and analogs of insulin and proinsulin in proportion to their biological activity, was not influenced by glucagon, corticotropin, or human growth hormone. Anti-insulin receptor serum from a patient with Acanthosis Nigricans Type B competed with 125I-labeled insulin for binding to cell surface sites. 3. Trypsinization destroyed insulin binding sites, but these were restored by incubation under growth conditions; a 75% restoration of binding sites was achieved by one cell population doubling. 4. RL-PR-C hepatocytes responded to insulin binding by an increase in glycogen synthesis from glucose. The insulin effect was maximal at 85 nM, but was detectable at lower, more physiological, concentrations. 5. Chronic exposure (for at least 3h) of hepatocytes to insulin (10(-10)--(10(-8) M) reduced by up to 60% the number of binding sites for insulin (down-regulation). Down-regulation was prevented by cycloheximide at concentration (10 micron) sufficient to inhibit markedly protein synthesis from tracer isoleucine. Recovery from down-regulation induced by native insulin at 10(-7 M or lower concentrations was complete by 18 h under growth conditions. 6. Although RL-PR-C hepatocytes spontaneously transform after about 90 population doublings, no significant differences between normal and transformed cells were observed in insulin binding characteristics and in interaction of cells with anti-insulin receptor serum. However, transformed cells exhibited a substantially reduced (maximum of 20%) down-regulation response to insulin. 7. RL-PR-C rat hepatocytes appear, for these reasons, to be a useful model system for studying the regulation of the insulin receptor.
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PMID:Hormone receptors. 7. Characteristics of insulin receptors in a new line of cloned neonatal rat hepatocytes. 56 93

We have demonstrated that beta-lipotropin is a precursor molecule and that during its maturation, it gives rise to beta-endorphin. This model is similar to proinsulin, proparathyroid hormone and proglucagon models. Since beta-endorphin is also found in the hypothalamus, one can foresee that its biosynthesis will be similar if not identical. It is then conceivable to believe that the other hypothalamic factors are issued from larger precursor molecules. When this will be shown, and well established, studies on their control mechanism will be much easier.
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PMID:[Biosynthesis of beta-endorphin]. 66 12

Most peptide hormones and neurotransmitters are synthesized as larger precursor proteins, which are post-translationally processed to mature bioactive products. An early event in prohormone maturation is endoproteolytic cleavage, occurring usually at pairs of basic amino acids (e.g. Lys-Arg). Since many of the characteristics of a prohormone endoprotease are unknown, distinguishing these enzymes from other cellular proteases in vitro has been difficult. In this report, the substrate specificity of a model prohormone processing system, the insulinoma cell line Rin m5F, was characterized in vivo to establish a set of criteria by which putative proinsulin endoproteases may be assessed. To determine the role of composition of the paired basic amino acid site in directing cleavage, a series of mutant prohormones containing altered cleavage sites was constructed and expressed in Rin m5F cells. Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) was used as a substrate since this prohormone was previously shown to be processed by these cells. To control for positional effects, all four permutations of lysine and arginine (Lys-Arg, Arg-Arg, Arg-Lys, and Lys-Lys) were introduced at both the efficiently processed cleavage site separating the ACTH and beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) domains of POMC and at the inefficiently processed site in the beta-endorphin sequence near the COOH-terminus of the precursor. His-Arg and Met-Arg sites were also introduced at the ACTH/beta-LPH junction to assess the requirement for paired lysines and arginines. Identification of POMC-derived peptides demonstrated efficient processing of Lys-Arg and inefficient processing of Lys-Lys and Arg-Lys sites at both positions in the prohormone. The Arg-Arg sequence, however, was processed in a position-dependent manner, being efficiently cleaved between ACTH and beta-LPH but only about 50% processed within beta-endorphin. His-Arg was not cleaved in Rin m5F cells, although surprisingly Met-Arg was partially processed. These results indicate a strict preference of the insulinoma prohormone endoprotease(s) for paired basic amino acids ending in arginine, but that processing efficiency of some sequences may be modulated by location within the precursor molecule.
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PMID:An in vivo characterization of the cleavage site specificity of the insulin cell prohormone processing enzymes. 216 Apr 59

Seventeen human subjects fasted without electrolyte replacement for 3 days and hormone levels were measured before, during and after the fast. Immediate consequences of the fasting state in healthy human subjects include a marked increase in plasma cortisol. ACTH, beta-endorphin, beta-lipotrophic hormone, adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine. Levels of all these hormones were much greater on the first morning of the fast than in the post-prandial state, even though the plasma glucose level was no lower than that observed on the morning before the fast began. A clear fall in TSH and tri-iodothyronine (T3) levels was observed, but thyroxine levels did not change significantly. Insulin levels fell whereas proinsulin levels did not fall during the fast, though they did rise markedly upon re-feeding. An increase in GH levels was particularly apparent in male subjects, but was also seen in females when evening samples were compared. Pancreatic glucagon showed a modest rise during the fast, but fell again on refeeding; total glucagon also rose as the fast proceeded, but increased markedly upon re-feeding. Levels of gastrin and peptide YY remained low during the fast. Plasma electrolyte levels were unchanged. The following were closely correlated: cortisol with ACTH, T3 with log10 TSH, dopamine with noradrenaline, and (negatively, during the fast) pancreatic glucagon with glucose.
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PMID:The effect of a 72-h fast on plasma levels of pituitary, adrenal, thyroid, pancreatic and gastrointestinal hormones in healthy men and women. 292 6

The soluble guanylate cyclase activity of rat liver appears to be stimulated in VITRO by insulin at pMolar concentrations, while proinsulin, denaturated insulin or desoctapeptide insulin, are not able to stimulate the studied enzymic activity. Corresponding concentrations of other peptide hormones such as corticotropin (ACTH) or glucagon, either in the absence or in the presence of bacitracin, do not show any effect on the investigated enzymic system. Insulin stimulation of the soluble guanylate cyclase is characterized by a significant increase in the Vmax together with a decrease of the apparent Km. Insulin at low concentrations doesn't affect the cyclic GMP hydrolyzing activity; conversely higher concentrations of the hormone, while exerting a less marked effect on the guanylate cyclase activity, inhibit the cyclic GMP hydrolyzing activity.
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PMID:Low insulin concentrations stimulate in vitro the soluble guanylate cyclase activity of rat liver. 613 76

The knowledge of the amino acid sequence of both beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) and gamma-LPH was the starting point that led to the hypothesis, considered revolutionary in 1967, that hormonal precursors exist. This concept was simultaneously proposed for proinsulin and applied later to other polypeptide hormones. The discovery of endorphins brought together two fields of research that were not related: the opiates and the so-called pituitary lipotropic hormones. The demonstration of specific brain opiate receptors led to the hypothesis of the existence of endogenous opiate ligands which could act as neurotransmittors. The isolation of such substances in the brain, first named enkephalins, revealed through their amino acid sequence their structural homology with the pituitary lipolytic hormones. The finding of a more potent opioid substance in the pituitary (beta-endorphin) that comprises the last 31 amino acids of beta-LPH shed a new light on the hypothesis proposed earlier which gave to beta-LPH a role as a precursor molecule. Finally, the addition of ACTH completed a putative multipotent precursor model that has been recently named pro-opiomelanocortin. Pulse-chase experiments have definitely proven that beta-endorphin is a maturation product of a large precursor also containing ACTH and MSH. In other studies, many groups have suggested that endorphins play important roles as possible neuromodulators in pain transmission, in analgesia, in tolerance and dependence, as well as on behavior and endocrine regulations, mainly those related to the hypothalamo-pituitary axes. The elucidation of the biosynthetic process or processes of cerebral endorphins (either enkephalins or beta-endorphin) is of primary importance in order ot understand better their biological as well as regulatory functions. These studies should also be applicable to the biosynthesis of all the other neuronal peptide hormones. It is hoped that they will provide new tools for the study of some important central nervous system functions, such as pain and endocrine control and the physiopathology of behavioral diseases.
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PMID:[Endorphins: structure, roles and biogenesis]. 626 34

The AtT-20 cell line, derived from the mouse anterior pituitary, synthesizes an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) precursor, proteolytically processes it to mature ACTH, stores it in secretory granules, and releases mature ACTH on stimulation with a secretagogue. A cDNA for human proinsulin inserted downstream from the SV40 early promoter in an SV40-pBR322 recombinant vector was introduced into AtT-20 cells. The stably transformed cell line, AtT-20ins4b/1, stores immunoreactive insulin, proteolytically processes proinsulin to smaller fragments, and on stimulation with secretagogues releases insulin-like material, not proinsulin, into the medium. Similarly transformed fibroblast L-cells secrete only proinsulin; they do not store it, and their secretion rate is unaffected by secretagogues. The transport mechanism for precursor ACTH thus appears to recognize other prohormones.
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PMID:Expressing a human proinsulin cDNA in a mouse ACTH-secreting cell. Intracellular storage, proteolytic processing, and secretion on stimulation. 631 96

A lysed preparation of isolated insulin secretory granules efficiently cleaved murine proopiomelanocortin (mPOMC) at physiologically important Lys-Arg processing sites. This processing was mostly attributed to an activity that co-eluted with the proinsulin processing type-II endopeptidase from anion exchange chromatography (Lys-Arg-directed; Davidson, H. W., Rhodes, C. J., and Hutton, J. C. (1988) Nature 333, 93-96). The principal peptide hormone products generated by the insulin secretory granule lysate were identified by specific radioimmunoassay and NH2-terminal microsequencing analysis of high performance liquid chromatography-separated products as alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, corticotropin-like intermediate, gamma-lipotropin, beta-endorphin-(1-31), 18-kDa NH2-terminal fragment and, to a lesser extent, adrenocorticotrophin and beta-lipotropin. This processing had an acidic pH optimum (pH 5-5.5) and was Ca(2+)-dependent (K0.5 activation = 5-80 microM). With increasing Ca2+ concentrations there was an increase in the extent to which mPOMC was processed. The in vitro processing of mPOMC by the insulin secretory granule endopeptidase activity reported here is in excellent agreement with the in vivo processing of this prohormone by a combination of PC2 and PC3, candidates of prohormone endpeptidase, in gene transfer studies with cells that express the regulated secretory pathway (Thomas, L., Leduc, R., Thorne, B. A., Smeekens, S. S., Steiner, D. F., and Thomas, G. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88, 5297-5301).
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PMID:Processing of proopiomelanocortin by insulin secretory granule proinsulin processing endopeptidases. 838 98

Human obesity has an inherited component, but in contrast to rodent obesity, precise genetic defects have yet to be defined. A mutation of carboxypeptidase E (CPE), an enzyme active in the processing and sorting of prohormones, causes obesity in the fat/fat mouse. We have previously described a women with extreme childhood obesity (Fig. 1), abnormal glucose homeostasis, hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism, hypocortisolism and elevated plasma proinsulin and pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) concentrations but a very low insulin level, suggestive of a defective prohormone processing by the endopeptidase, prohormone convertase 1 (PC1; ref. 4). We now report this proband to be a compound heterozygote for mutations in PC1. Gly-->Arg483 prevents processing of proPC1 and leads to its retention in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). A-->C+4 of the intro-5 donor splice site causes skipping of exon 5 leading to loss of 26 residues, a frameshift and creation of a premature stop codon within the catalytic domain. PC1 acts proximally to CPE in the pathway of post-translational processing of prohormones and neuropeptides. In view of the similarity between the proband and the fat/fat mouse phenotype, we infer that molecular defects in prohormone conversion may represent a generic mechanism for obesity, common to humans and rodents.
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PMID:Obesity and impaired prohormone processing associated with mutations in the human prohormone convertase 1 gene. 920 82

Carboxypeptidase E (CPE) functions as a regulated secretory pathway sorting receptor for several prohormones, including pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), proenkephalin and proinsulin. The association of CPE with lipid rafts in the trans -Golgi network and secretory granule membranes is necessary for its sorting receptor function. We now provide evidence that a domain within the C-terminal 25 residues of CPE functions as a signal for both raft association and the sorting of CPE to the regulated secretory pathway. A fusion protein containing the extracellular domain of the human interleukin-2 receptor Tac (N-Tac) and the C-terminal 25 amino acids of CPE was transfected into Neuro2A cells. This fusion protein floated in sucrose density gradients, indicating raft association, and co-localized with chromogranin A (CGA), a secretory granule marker. To define further a minimum sequence required for raft association and sorting, deletion mutants of CPE that lacked the C-terminal four or 15 residues (CPE-Delta4 and CPE-Delta15 respectively) were transfected into a clone of CPE-deficient Neuro2A cells. In contrast with full-length CPE, neither CPE-Delta4 nor CPE-Delta15 floated in sucrose density gradients. The sorting of both CPE-Delta4 and CPE-Delta15 to the regulated secretory pathway was impaired, as indicated by significantly increased basal secretion and a lack of response to stimulation. Additionally, there was a significant decrease in the co-localization of mutant CPE immunofluorescence with CGA when compared with full-length CPE. Finally, the sorting of the prohormone POMC to the regulated pathway was impaired in cells transfected with either CPE-Delta4 or CPE-Delta15. We conclude that the sorting of CPE to the regulated secretory pathway in endocrine cells is mediated by lipid rafts, and that the C-terminal four residues of CPE, i.e. Thr(431)-Leu-Asn-Phe(434), are required for raft association and sorting.
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PMID:Sorting of carboxypeptidase E to the regulated secretory pathway requires interaction of its transmembrane domain with lipid rafts. 1240 51


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