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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We tested the radioassays for cyclic AMP and human
gastrin
, both involving separation on coated charcoal, for interaction with bile acids and detergents, and found a concentration-dependent interaction of taurocholic and glycocholic acid as well as of the surfactant
Triton X-100
and sodium laurylsulfate in both assays. The interaction was detectable from concentrations of 0.5 mmol of bile acid per liter or 625 mg of detergent per liter, giving rise to falsely decreased
gastrin
values and falsely increased or decreased values for cyclic AMP. The interactions demonstrated may be a general effect on all radioassays that are based on the use of coated charcoal in the separation of free from bound ligands.
...
PMID:Bile acid and detergent interaction with radioassays based on coated charcoal. 18 82
The presence of a putative GRP receptor on rat pancreatic particulate membranes was demonstrated by covalent cross-linking to 125I-
gastrin
releasing peptide (GRP), which revealed a radioactive band with Mr = 80-90 kDa on reduced SDS-PAGE. Fresh rat pancreatic membranes contained a GRP receptor which was solubilized with
Triton X-100
as assessed by its failure to sediment at 100,000 x g for one hour and its ability to pass through a 0.22 mu filter. When 125I-GRP binding was studied using Sephadex G50 gel filtration chromatography to separate bound from unbound ligand, substantial amounts of 125I-GRP binding were observed in rat crude solubilized pancreatic membranes, but essentially no specific binding was observed until the crude solubilized membranes were fractionated by ammonium sulfate precipitation. Specific 125I-GRP binding was 500, 700 and 1400 fmol/mg protein, respectively, in the 0-25%, 25-50% and 50-80% saturated ammonium sulfate fractions (125I-GRP concentration = 1 nM). Specific binding was temperature dependent, saturable and of high affinity, (KD = 2.3 nM). A unique 70 kDa band was visualized by silver staining of the SDS-PAGE of eluates of GRP(14-27) affinity gel compared with eluates of control affinity gels incubated with the 25-50% (NH4)2SO4 fraction. The lower Mr than that observed with covalent cross-linking may represent the binding subunit of a larger receptor protein. This ligand-affinity isolated protein is thus a good candidate for the GRP receptor, or the binding subunit of it, from normal rat pancreas.
...
PMID:Isolation of a gastrin releasing peptide receptor from normal rat pancreas. 164 10
Bombesin and structurally related peptides including
gastrin
releasing peptide (GRP) are potent mitogens for Swiss 3T3 cells. Here we attempted to solubilize bombesin receptors under conditions in which the ligand (125I-labelled GRP) was prebound to the receptor prior to detergent extraction. We found that 125I-GRP-receptor complexes were solubilized from Swiss 3T3 cell membranes by using the detergents taurodeoxycholate or deoxycholate. These detergents promoted ligand-receptor solubilization in a dose-dependent manner. In contrast, a variety of other detergents including
Triton X-100
, octylglycoside, CHAPS, digitonin, cholic acid and n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside, were much less effective. Addition of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP gamma S) to ligand-receptor complexes isolated by gel filtration enhanced the rate of ligand dissociation in a concentration-dependent and nucleotide-specific manner. Our results demonstrate for the first time the successful solubilization of 125I-GRP-receptor complexes from Swiss 3T3 cell membranes and provide evidence for the physical association between the ligand-receptor complex and a guanine nucleotide binding protein(s).
...
PMID:Solubilization of the bombesin receptor from Swiss 3T3 cell membranes. Functional association to a guanine nucleotide regulatory protein. 215 8
A
gastrin
binding protein (GBP) has been identified in detergent extracts of porcine gastric mucosal membranes by covalent cross-linking to 125I-[Nle15]
gastrin
with disuccinimidyl suberate. The apparent molecular weight of the cross-linked complex (80,000) is uneffected by reduction suggesting that the GBP is not composed of disulfide-bonded subunits. Subtraction of the molecular weight of 125I-
gastrin
indicates that the molecular weight of the GBP is 78,000. A similar molecular weight has been observed previously for the gastrin receptor (74,000) on intact canine parietal cells and plasma membranes therefrom, and for the receptor for the related hormone cholecystokinin (76,000-85,000) on pancreatic acinar membranes under reducing conditions. The similarity in molecular weight between the gastrin receptor and the solubilized GBP suggests that the latter protein is probably the gastrin receptor. However, the concentration (2 microM) of [Nle15]
gastrin
required for 50% inhibition of cross-linking of
gastrin
to the GBP solubilized in 0.1%
Triton X-100
is 200-fold greater than the value (10 nM) observed for the gastrin receptor on isolated canine gastric parietal cells. A lower concentration (0.3 microM) of [Nle15]
gastrin
was required to inhibit cross-linking in a milder detergent (0.4% digitonin, 0.08% cholate). Thus, the reduced affinity for
gastrin
of the putative solubilized form of the gastrin receptor appears to be a result of detergent extraction.
...
PMID:Identification of a gastrin binding protein in porcine gastric mucosal membranes by covalent cross-linking with iodinated gastrin. 301 69