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Title: Peripheral metabolism of PTH: fate of biologically active amino terminus in vivo. Author: Bringhurst FR, Stern AM, Yotts M, Mizrahi N, Segre GV, Potts JT. Journal: Am J Physiol; 1988 Dec; 255(6 Pt 1):E886-93. PubMed ID: 3202165. Abstract: Clearance of intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) from blood is associated with rapid uptake by liver and kidney, limited proteolysis by tissue endopeptidases and, within minutes, appearance of circulating carboxyl-(COOH)-terminal PTH fragments. The fate of the corresponding amino(NH2)-terminal portion of the hormone during this peripheral metabolism is still unknown, however. To determine this, we have employed [35S]bovine PTH (bPTH) labeled to high specific activity at NH2-terminal methionines, which permits direct monitoring of the fate of the PTH NH2-terminus during metabolism in vivo. The [35S]PTH was administered by bolus or continuous intravenous infusion to anesthetized normal rats, to rats subjected to acute ablation of the liver, the kidneys, or both, and to rats receiving co-infusions of excess synthetic bPTH(1-34) NH2-terminal fragments. Analysis by high-resolution chromatographic techniques sensitive to 10(-13) M [35S]PTH peptides in plasma yields no evidence that peripheral metabolism of PTH generates circulating NH2-terminal fragments, even when special measures are taken to block clearance of such putative fragments from blood. We find that the NH2-terminus of PTH is rapidly degraded in situ by the liver but that both liver and especially kidney nevertheless contain low levels of NH2-terminal PTH fragments that, although not released into the blood, are large enough to be potentially active. Thus, the peripheral metabolism of PTH in normal animals does not normally lead to the formation of circulating amino terminal fragments of the hormone that might act independently of intact PTH on peripheral target tissues.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]