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: The isolation of neurophysin-I and-II from bovine pituitary neurosecretory granules separated on a large scale from other subcellular organelles. Demonstration of slow equilibration of neurosecretory granules during centrifugation in a sucrose density gradient. Author: Dean CR, Hope DB. Journal: Biochem J; 1968 Jan; 106(2):565-73. PubMed ID: 5637360. Abstract: 1. An improved procedure for the isolation of neurosecretory granules from the posterior lobe of the bovine pituitary gland is described. 2. Of the total oxytocic and pressor activities present in the original tissue 80% was sedimentable. 3. The granules were separated from mitochondria by prolonged centrifugation in a sucrose density gradient. During a sedimentation period of 5hr. the granules moved progressively into denser regions of the gradient and the mitochondria remained at the top. 4. The biological activities of the granules were measured: the oxytocic activity was 11.56+/-1.63 and the pressor activity was 15.60+/-3.91 units/mg. of protein. 5. A protein was isolated from a lysate of granules prepared from 40 pituitary glands. Amino acid analysis showed that it consisted of a mixture of neurophysin-I and neurophysin-II in equal proportions. It accounted for 60% of the soluble granule protein and for 50% of the total granule protein. 6. The neurophysins present in the granules are associated with 19.1 units of oxytocic and 21.1 units of pressor activity/mg. of protein. 7. Starch-gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of both neurophysins in extracts of 15 pituitary glands studied individually. 8. We conclude that the polypeptide hormones, oxytocin and [8-arginine]-vasopressin, are normally closely associated with the two neurophysins within neurosecretory granules of the pituitary gland.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]