The novel pituitary polypeptide 7B2 is a highly‐conserved protein coexpressed with proopiomelanocortin
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 181 (1) , 75-79
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1989.tb14695.x
Abstract
In the amphibian intermediate pituitary gland the biosynthetic activity for production of the precursor protein proopiometlanocortin (POMC) can be physiologically manipulated; POMC synthesis is high in animals adapted to a black background and low in white-adapted animals. In order to study genes associated with POMC gene expression we applied a differential hybridization technique involving screening of a pituitary cDNA library with probes derived from RNA of inactive and physiologically activated intermediate pituitary cells of the amphibian. A differentially hybridizing pituitary cDNA clone encoded the novel polypeptide 7B2. This Mr-21,000 secretory granule-associated protein of unknown function is shown to be highly conserved between Xenopus and human (83% amino acid sequence similarity). Conserved segments within the 7B2 structure included the N-terminal portion, three pairs of basic amino acids which are potential recognition sites for proteolytic enzymes, and three regions sharing similarity with putative GTP-binding domains. Levels of 7B2 mRNA were about 3% of POMC mRNA levels in Xenopus pituitary glands. In the intermediate pituitary the amount of both POMC and 7B2 mRNA was much higher in black-adapted toads than in white-adapted animals. These physiologically-induced changes in POMC and 7B2 mRNA levels were not found in the anterior pituitary. We conclude that the POMC and 7B2 genes are coexpressed and that modulation of the activity of these gene is tissue-specific.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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