Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Big gastrin comprising 34 amino acid residues (G34) consists of an N-terminal pentadecapeptide linked via two lysine residues to a C-terminal heptadecapeptide identical with little gastrin (G17). Both G17 and G34 have now been established as the principal active forms of gastrin. In this study, release of G34 N-terminal peptide fragment of methacholine and porcine gastrin releasing peptide (pGRP) stimulation in isolated rat stomach perfusion system was investigated by radioimmunoassay with use of an antiserum specific to the N-terminal portion of G34. G34 N-terminal immunoreactivity (IR-G34-N) was detected in rat stomach and proximal duodenum, and the highest concentration was found in extract of the antral mucosa. The concentration of IR-G34-N was constantly lower than that of IR-G17. By gel-filtration study, IR-G34-N in antral mucosa extract was attributed mostly to the G34 N-terminal pentadecapeptide-like component, and the concentration of G34 was about one tenth of G17. Methacholine 10(-8)-10(-3) M produced a biphasic dose-dependent release of IR-G34-N from the vascularly perfused isolated rat stomach. The maximal release was shown by 10(-5) M of methacholine. The release was concomitant with that of IR-G17 during methacholine stimulation. Stimulation of pGRP (14-27) (10(-7) M) produced a monophasic release of IR-G34-N from the vascularly perfused isolated rat stomach. The release was concomitant with that of G17 during the stimulation. The integrated IR-G34-N release was not stoichiometric with that of IR-G17, and IR-G34-N was constantly low. Gel-filtration of the perfusate from rat stomach revealed the presence of the G34 N-terminal pentadecapeptide-like component as a sole major component. The present results demonstrate that post-translational processing of the gastrin precursor in the rat antrum did not necessarily produce G34, which is further converted in the tissue to G17-related peptide(s) and that the G34 N-terminal fragment formed in the G34 conversion is stored and released concomitantly with G17-related peptide(s).
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PMID:[Co-existence and co-release of gastrin 34 N-terminal fragment with gastrin 17 in rat stomach]. 306 41

Gastrin injection and refeeding fasted rats are effective trophic stimuli for the oxyntic gland mucosa of the stomach. Neither stimulus increases detectable ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity in the tissue. Difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), a potent inhibitor of ODC, blocks the mucosal growth response, indicating that ODC activity is necessary for growth. Elevated levels of spermidine and spermine are detectable in the mucosa after gastrin administration. Using a highly specific, polyclonal antiserum to ODC, we determined that the enzyme is present in oxyntic gland mucosa confined to a narrow band of cells at the base of the gastric pits and openings of the glands. In antral mucosa, ODC is present throughout the lower 20% of the mucosa, which consists of the necks and pyloric glands. Using antiserum dilution techniques, we show that gastrin administration increases immunoreactive ODC in the oxyntic gland area but not in the antral mucosa, where it has no trophic effect. Elevated cellular content of ODC is apparent within 2 h after injection of gastrin, peaks at 4 h, and declines to basal levels by 12 h. Gastrin-stimulated increase in ODC is confined to the narrow band of cells in which low levels of the enzyme protein were detected in control animals. The decarboxylating activity detectable in oxyntic gland mucosal extracts is not inhibited by administration of DFMO or cycloheximide, each of which inhibits ODC activity in other tissues. Addition of unlabeled lysine to the decarboxylation assay reaction of oxyntic gland mucosa extract inhibits the decarboxylation of radiolabeled ornithine substrate. Thus it is likely that the stomach possesses nonspecific decarboxylase activity, which accounts for most of the measured activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Gastric mucosal ornithine decarboxylase: localization and stimulation by gastrin. 313 18

A highly specific and sensitive competitive radioimmunoassay was developed for caerulein (CLN), an analogue of cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8), in plasma and brain. Antiserum was produced in rabbit by immunization with N delta-[CLN-(1-6)]-ornithine amide conjugated with bovine serum albumin by the glutaraldehyde method. N alpha-[CLN-(1-6)]-lysine amide was labelled with 125I-Bolton & Hunter reagent and used as a labelled antigen after purification by high-performance liquid chromatography. This assay was highly specific for CLN, and cross reactivities for other related peptides, CCK-4, CCK-8, gastrin-I, and gastrin-(14-17), were not observed (less than 0.01%). The limits of determination in biological specimens after CLN administration were 11 pg/ml in human plasma and rat plasma and 80 pg/g in rat brain. This study showed that the slight structure difference between hapten and 125I-labelled antigen is important to the assay performance.
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PMID:A highly specific and sensitive radioimmunoassay of caerulein, an analogue of cholecystokinin-8. 323 85

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.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and sequencing of a rat preprogastrin complementary deoxyribonucleic acid. 345 95

A peptide that cross-reacted with C-terminal gastrin/CCK antisera was isolated from chicken antral extracts by a combination of gel filtration and reversed-phase HPLC. The sequence was: Phe-Leu-Pro-His- Val-Phe-Ala-Glu-Leu-Ser-Asp-Arg-Lys-Gly-Phe-Val-Gln-Gly-Asn-Gly-Ala- Val-Glu-Ala-Leu-His-Asp-His-Phe-Tyr-Pro-Asp-Trp-Met-Asp-Phe(NH2). Aside from the C-terminal tetrapeptide and the Tyr residue, the molecule does not resemble other known forms of gastrin or CCK. The peptide was a potent stimulus of avian gastric acid but not pancreatic secretion. The results have important implications for the structure-activity and evolutionary relationships of the gastrin/CCK family.
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PMID:Isolation from chicken antrum, and primary amino acid sequence of a novel 36-residue peptide of the gastrin/CCK family. 374 81

The antitumor action of the 2-chloroethylnitrosocarbamoyl derivatives of peptides related to the 9-13 amino acid residues of alpha-MSH/ACTH and of the C-terminal tetrapeptide analogue of gastrin have been investigated. Series of 2-chloroethylnitrosoureas attached to amino acids, di-, tri-, tetra-, or pentapeptides were examined in a primary screening system. Among these compounds the Pro-Val-, Lys-Pro-Val-, and Trp-Gly-Lys-Pro-Val-containing 2-chloroethylnitrosocarbamoyl groups were the most effective in the L1210 system. The human melanoma xenograft line was also affected by these agents, while colorectal xenografts were insensitive. A combination of tripeptide-2-chloroethyl-nitrosourea with BCNU induced more than additive growth inhibition of L1210 leukemia.
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PMID:Antitumor action of N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosocarbamoyl derivatives of biologically active polypeptide hormone fragments. 394 98

A partially purified enzyme extracted from the bladder of the toad, Bufo marinus L., was found to cleave the glycine amide moiety from oxytocin, 8-lysine-vasopressin, 8-arginine-vasopressin, and other hormone analogs terminating in a primary carboxamide group; however, this enzyme does not attack hormone analogs terminating with a methylamide, dimethylamide, or carboxyl group. Preliminary experiments indicate that a functionally similar enzyme is also present in the mammalian kidney, the major target organ of neurohypophyseal antidiuretic hormones. This enzyme, besides inactivating oxytocin and 8-lysine-vasopressin, also cleaves the phenylalanine amide moiety from a tetrapeptide analog of gastrin, another hormone terminating in a primary carboxamide group. Attention is drawn to the possible general significance of "carboxamidopeptidases" for the termination of the action of peptide hormones in which the C-terminal amino acid residue bears a carboxamide group.
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PMID:Enzymatic inactivation of peptide hormones possessing a C-terminal amide group. 526 Sep 45

Porcine ileal mucosa was homogenized and freeze-thawed in 0.05 M NH4HCO3 + 0.01 M EDTA + 1 mM benzamidine hydrochloride at pH 8.6. Subsequent stepwise precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 followed by fractionation on Sephadex G-50 medium and G-50 fine eluted with alkaline buffer and final fractionation on G-50 superfine in 1.0 M acetic acid yielded a pure protein of 13,000 daltons as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of the protein has been determined and it contains 126 residues with no tryptophan detectable. Tryptic peptide maps demonstrate that the protein does not contain glucagon and RIA of the peptide did not detect any immunoreactive glucagon or gastrin. The isoelectric point is 6.4. The intact protein is resistant to Edman degradation and the partial N-terminal sequences of two CNBr fragments are: Lys-Arg-Leu-Ala-Leu ...., Glu-Gly-Gly-Thr-Val-Val-Val-Asn-Ser.... The C-terminal residue, alanine was determined using carboxypeptidase Y. The isolated peptide, in the range of 10(-15)-10(-9) M stimulated oxyntic cell hydroxyl ion production in sections of guinea pig gastric fundus. The dose response was linear with biphasic peaks at 10(-14) and 10(-9) M and the maximal response to the peptide was equal to that observed with gastrin. The addition of either atropine (10(-5) M) or cimetidine (10(-5) M) with the peptide (10(-14) M) caused greater than 50% inhibition of oxyntic cell stimulation (P less than 0.005). This peptide is a potent stimulator of the oxyntic cell and its effect is inhibited by muscarinic cholinergic and H2 receptor blockers. Hence, it represents a significant component of the physiological enterooxyntin effect observed in response to intestinal meals.
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PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of an entero-oxyntin from porcine ileum. 609 Jan 3

Cholecystokinin (CCK)-like immunoreactivity (CCK-LI) in a pool of 12 dog brains was extracted sequentially into boiling water and cold 2% trifluoroacetic acid. Gel filtration on Sephadex G-50 revealed three main molecular forms detected by a carboxyl-terminal antibody; one was eluted in the position of CCK-58 (58 amino acid residues long); a second, in the position of CCK-8; and a third, near the radioactive iodide marker. When the CCK-LI was purified by affinity chromatography using carboxyl-terminal CCK antibody followed by three steps of reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography, three components were isolated and characterized by sequence microanalysis. The smallest component was the pentapeptide common to gastrin and CCK. The second peak was eluted in the same region as synthetic CCK octapeptide, and sequence analysis showed that the chemical structure of this biologically active region of canine CCK is identical to that found in sheep and pig brains. The 22-residue amino-terminal sequence of brain CCK-58 was: Ala-Val-Gln-Lys-Val-Asp-Gly-Glu-Pro-Arg-Ala-His-Leu-Gly -Ala-Leu-leu-Ala-Arg-Tyr-Ile-Gln-, the same as the sequence found for canine intestinal CCK-58 from this pool of dogs. This is the same sequence others have reported for porcine brain CCK-58 lacking nine amino acid residues (CCK-58 desnonapeptide) except that the porcine peptide had a serine in position 9. The canine CCK amino-terminal sequence differed from the sequence Ala-Gln-Lys-Val-Asn-Ser previously reported for intestinal CCK-58 purified from another pool of dog tissue, but the rest of the residues identified were identical in the two peptides. CCK-58 may be a molecular precursor of the smaller forms of CCK in brain as well as in gut.
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PMID:Isolation of a large cholecystokinin precursor from canine brain. 609 6

The conformation of several naturally occurring peptide hormones and bioactive oligopeptides in phospholipid solutions was studied by circular dichroism. Phosphatidylcholine induced a partial helix in human gastrin I at neutral pH, but phosphatidylserine did not unless the five consecutive glutamic acid residues in gastrin were protonated. Reduced somatostatin with two lysines and substance P with one arginine and one lysine were partially helical in phosphatidylserine, but not phosphatidylcholine, solution. Both lipids induced a helical conformation in glucagon and its COOH-terminal fragment (19-29) probably because the helical segment is primarily located at the uncharged COOH terminus. Thus, polypeptides with a helix-forming potential can have the helical conformation only when the peptides carry no charge or charges opposite to those on the polar head of the lipid. Renin substrate, which has potentials for the beta form and beta turn, seemed to form a mixture of the two conformations in phosphatidylserine solution. Angiotensin I with a strong probability for the beta form adopted the beta form in phosphatidylserine solution and sleep peptide with no structure-forming potential remained unordered in lipid solutions. The helix usually predominated over the beta form in lipid solutions if the peptide has potentials for both conformations. This could account for the preponderance of helices in bacteriorhodopsin of the purple membrane, which according to its amino acid sequence would have favored the beta form.
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PMID:Lipid-induced ordered conformation of some peptide hormones and bioactive oligopeptides: predominance of helix over beta form. 618 2


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