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

A novel stimulant of gastric acid secretion was extracted and purified from the non-antral gastric mucosa of the canine stomach and some of its biological properties were examined. Tissue was boiled in water and extracted in 2% trifluoroacetic acid. The stimulatory activity was purified by a combination of reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and gel filtration. Fractions were assayed for a stimulation of basal, pentagastrin- and histamine-stimulated gastric acid secretion in the anaesthetized rat. Stimulatory activity was eluted from reverse-phase HPLC columns with acetonitrile and its elution from Sephadex G-10 and G-50 columns suggested a molecular weight of 1,000 to 3,000. The highly purified extracts enhanced basal, pentagastrin- and histamine-stimulated acid secretion in the rat. A stimulatory fraction was purified which was devoid of immunoreactive gastrin and gastrin-releasing peptide and contained only small amounts of histamine. Its chromatographic properties differed from those of histamine and acetylcholine. On two occasions the stimulant was purified to homogeneity and found to contain amino acids. Insufficient pure material was obtained for full characterization. The stimulant has been tentatively called oxyntin.
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PMID:Partial purification of a novel stimulant of gastric acid secretion from canine non-antral mucosa. 395 15

Four different forms of bombesin-like immunoreactive peaks were detected in extracts of human fetal lung by the use of reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Peaks I, II, III and IV, (increasing retention time), were eluted using a 14-38% of acetonitrile gradient containing 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). Peak II was the major material found in the extract of human fetal lung obtained at 16-20 weeks gestation. None of the four compounds contained in the eluted peaks had the same retention time as amphibian bombesin or porcine gastrin releasing peptide (GRP). On reversed-phase HPLC using two different solvent systems TFA or heptafluorobutyric acid (HFBA) as a hydrophobic counter ion, and in gel filtration chromatography, the chromatographic behavior of the main peak (peak II) was the same as that of the carboxyl terminal fragments of GRP, GRP18-27 or GRP19-27. This suggested that the peptide(s) in peak II resembled in composition the carboxy terminal 9 or 10 amino acids of porcine GRP. Following tryptic digestion the material in peak IV was converted to the more polar compound present in peak II. Two other peptide peaks were eluted close to peak II and these were presumed to be a modification of this main peak. One of the possible biosynthetic steps in the formation of bombesin-like peptides in human fetal lung could be a tryptic conversion of a less polar peptide to a more polar form (peak IV to II).
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PMID:Origin of bombesin-like peptides in human fetal lung. 670 Mar 81

Capillary electrophoresis incorporating hydrophobic selectivity is shown to be a powerful technique for separating closely related peptide species. In this work, hydrophobic interaction was induced through the addition of suitable amounts of a zwitterionic detergent (N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate) and further modified with organic solvents. A neutral, hydrophilic-coated capillary was used to minimize electroosmotic flow. Two test solutes, Met15- and Leu15-gastrin, were employed to probe hydrophobic selectivity with various electrophoretic conditions. The nature and concentration of the detergent and the organic modifier were varied to adjust the selectivity. Operation near the critical micelle concentration of the zwitterionic detergent in the presence of acetonitrile or various alcohols produced the highest hydrophobic selectivity among the conditions studied. The zwitterionic detergent approach was also briefly compared to the use of non-ionic detergents for hydrophobic selectivity.
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PMID:Use of zwitterionic detergents for the separation of closely related peptides by capillary electrophoresis. 795 99

Radioimmunoassay has made it possible to measure the levels of many hormones. However, samples for some hormones, such as cholecystokinin (CCK), need to be purified by reverse phase chromatography before assay. Usually, samples are eluted from cartridges or HPLC columns in about 50% acetonitrile, dried on a vacuum centrifuge, and then reconstituted in buffer. Drying and reconstituting samples is time consuming and introduces additional sources of error and peptide loss. The present study investigated the effect of acetonitrile on radioimmunoassays for CCK to see if samples containing acetonitrile could be assayed directly. The non-specific binding of a radiolabeled peptide, the zero binding (B0), and the fall in the presence of 2.5 fmol unlabeled CCK were determined in the presence of various proportions of acetonitrile with 0.1% TFA. Additionally, standard curves were compared in the presence and absence of 200microl of 50% acetonitrile, (n = 5). For assays using two separate CCK antisera, increasing amounts of acetonitrile gave progressively higher zero binding and fall, thereby increasing sensitivity and antibody titer. The use of 200microl 50% acetonitrile, chosen to represent typical sample conditions, increased antiserum titers by three to four-fold, as well as increasing sensitivity considerably. For one antiserum (CCK2), the IC20 was 0.36+/-0.02 fmol CCK/tube in the presence of acetonitrile and 1.45+/-0.08 fmol/tube in its absence (P< 0.001). For the other antiserum (Dino 7), the IC20 was 0.40+/-0.02 fmol CCK/tube in the presence of acetonitrile and 0.63+/-0.01 fmol/tube in its absence (P<0.001). A similar increase in sensitivity was seen with a gastrin assay. However, no significant change in the gastrin antibody titer was evident. Assays for several other hormones were unaffected by 200 microl of 50% acetonitrile. At volumes encountered in samples following chromatography, acetonitrile did not adversely affect radioimmunoassays for a number of hormones, and the sensitivity and antibody titer of the CCK assays were improved. Measurement of CCK samples without drying and reconstitution increases assay efficiency and sensitivity.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay of regulatory peptides in the presence of acetonitrile: marked improvement of cholecystokinin assays. 971 67

Beer was subjected to five successive chromatographic procedures to isolate the gastrin release-inducing activity, guided by bioassay of the fractions in anaesthetized Donryu rats. The procedures were: (1) hydrophobic interaction chromatography (aqueous effluent with an HP20 column); (2) weak cation-exchange chromatography (1 M acetic acid eluate with a CM Sephadex C-25 column); (3) gel filtration (methanol eluate with a Sephadex LH-20 column); (4) same as (2); (5) high-performance liquid chromatography (YMC-Pack ODS-AM with 7% acetonitrile-0.01 M HCl). The active component finally isolated had a specific activity approximately 10000 times higher than that of beer. It was identified by means of mass, 1H- and 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance spectral analyses as N-methyltyramine (NMT). The dose of NMT giving maximal gastrin-releasing activity was 25 microg/kg, and the 50% effective dose was approximately 10 microg/kg on oral administration to rats. NMT was isolated and identified as a gastrin release inducer in beer. Its concentration in beer is sufficient to account for most of the activity of beer.
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PMID:Isolation from beer and structural determination of a potent stimulant of gastrin release. 1034 76