These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: On the transforming growth factor beta-like activity of synthetic polypeptides comprising the amino-terminal sequence of human parathyroid hormone-related peptide. Author: Kikuchi H, Shigeno C, Lee K, Ohta S, Shiomi K, Ikeda T, Sone T, Dokoh S, Konishi J. Journal: Endocrinology; 1991 Mar; 128(3):1229-37. PubMed ID: 1999144. Abstract: Purified native forms of human parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrp) have recently been reported to display biological activities characteristic of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta). The TGF-beta-like property of PTHrp may reside within the amino N-terminal PTH-receptor binding region of the polypeptide, since a synthetic analog corresponding to amino acids 1-36 of human PTHrp is as active as purified native PTHrp in bioassays specific to TGF-beta. Complete lack of structural similarity between PTHrp and TGF-beta prompted us to address the question whether copresence of the TGF-beta-like and PTH-like biological activities in the N-terminal sequence of the PTHrp molecule is a general phenomenon observable with different N-terminal PTHrp peptides of varying amino acid chain length in a variety of target cells that respond in defined ways to TGF-beta in vitro. Two forms of synthetic N-terminal human PTHrp, PTHrp-(1-34) and [Tyr40]PTHrp-(1-40), which are fully active in conventional assays for PTH/PTHrp, were tested for effects in three in vitro bioassay systems for TGF-beta: 1) stimulation, and 2) inhibition, respectively, of epidermal growth factor-dependent soft-agar colony formation of either normal rat kidney-derived fibroblasts (NRK 49F) or human lung carcinoma cells (A549); and 3) biosynthesis of metabolically labeled fibronectin in both NRK 49F cells and clonal osteoblastic rat osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8). Human TGF-beta over the dose range of 2.5-80 pM significantly stimulated or inhibited soft-agar colony formation of either NRK 49F or A549 cells, respectively, and caused a severalfold increase in biosynthetically labeled [35S]fibronectin in NRK 49F and ROS 17/2.8 cells. In contrast, none of PTHrp-(1-34), [Tyr40]PTHrp-(1-40), and synthetic human PTH-(1-34), each tested at 0.1-10 nM, displayed detectable biological activity in any of the three assay systems. In addition, covalent cross-linking of intact NRK 49F and ROS 17/2.8 cells with either [125I]TGF-beta or 125I-[Tyr40] PTHrp-(1-40) revealed the presence of several distinct affinity-labeled receptor species for TGF-beta in both cell types and the 80K PTH/PTHrp receptors in ROS 17/2.8 cells. The affinity-labeled TGF-beta receptor species were insensitive to excess PTHrp and PTH peptides, and the 80K PTH/PTHrp receptors were insensitive to excess TGF-beta, indicating that PTHrp and TGF-beta do not cross-react with respect to receptor binding for interaction with these cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]