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Title: Characterization of dopuin, a polypeptide with special residue distributions. Author: Chen ZW, Bergman T, Ostenson CG, Efendic S, Mutt V, Jörnvall H. Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1997 Oct 15; 249(2):518-22. PubMed ID: 9370362. Abstract: A 62-residue polypeptide, dopuin, has been isolated from pig small intestine. It is distinguished by an N-terminal part with a high content of proline (7 in a 26-residue segment), a C-terminal part with a high proportion of histidine (3 in a 9-residue segment), and six half-cystine residues in three intrachain disulphide bridges (connecting positions 22-25, 23-54 and 35-44). The Cys and Pro distributions suggest a tight and special conformation. In contrast to PEC-60 and somatostatin, it has no established inhibitory effect on insulin secretion. At 10 nM concentration, a weak inhibitory tendency is less than half of that of the other two peptides. Like gastrointestinal trefoil peptides, dopuin has three disulphide bridges, Ala-Pro segments, and many charged residues, but they are differently distributed and dopuin belongs to a separate, apparently novel family. However, dopuin is similar to a peptide corresponding to an expressed-sequence-tag cDNA of human fetal liver and spleen, establishing the nature of the mature form of the product of this cDNA, and showing a general tissue, age, and species distribution of this peptide. A truncated form of vimentin, composed of its C-terminal 37 residues, vimentin-C37, was also purified and structurally characterized. These two peptides increase the complexity of known intestinal polypeptides and at least dopuin has properties compatible with specific biofunctions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]