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Title: The C region of human insulin-like growth factor (IGF) I is required for high affinity binding to the type 1 IGF receptor. Author: Bayne ML, Applebaum J, Underwood D, Chicchi GG, Green BG, Hayes NS, Cascieri MA. Journal: J Biol Chem; 1989 Jul 05; 264(19):11004-8. PubMed ID: 2472386. Abstract: We have produced and characterized the binding properties of three structural analogs of human insulin-like growth factor I (hIGF-I). These analogs are [1-62]hIGF-I, an analog lacking the carboxyl-terminal 8-amino acid D region of hIGF-I; [1-27, Gly4, 38-70]hIGF-I, an analog in which residues 28-37 of the C region of hIGF-I are replaced by a 4-reside glycine bridge; and [1-27,Gly4,38-62]hIGF-I, an analog with the C region glycine replacement and a D region deletion. The removal of the D region of hIGF-I has little effect on binding to the type 1 and type 2 insulin-like growth factor (IGF) receptors. [1-62]hIGF-I has 2-fold higher affinity for the insulin receptor and 4-fold higher affinity for IGF serum-binding proteins. The replacement of the C region of hIGF-I with a four-glycine span results in a 30-fold loss of affinity for the type 1 IGF receptor. However this analog has near normal affinity for the type 2 IGF receptor, the insulin receptor, and IGF serum-binding proteins. Incorporating the C region glycine replacement and the D region deletion into one analog does not affect binding to either the type 2 receptor or to IGF serum-binding proteins. As predicted from the single deletion analogs [1-27,Gly4,38-62]hIGF-I has reduced affinity for the type 1 IGF receptor (approximately 40-fold) and increased affinity for the insulin receptor (5-fold). These data indicate that determinants in the C region of hIGF-I are involved in maintaining high affinity binding to the type 1 IGF receptor and that neither the C region nor the D region are required for high affinity binding to the type 2 IGF receptor or to IGF serum-binding proteins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]