A mitogenic peptide amide encoded within the E peptide domain of the insulin-like growth factor IB prohormone.
Open Access
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 89 (17) , 8107-8111
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.17.8107
Abstract
We have identified an amino acid sequence within the E peptide of the insulin-like growth factor IB (IGF-IB) precursor that is biologically active and designated this peptide insulin-like growth factor IB-(103-124) E1 amide (IBE1). Its existence was predicted by a flanking Gly-Lys-Lys-Lys, a signal sequence for sequential proteolytic cleavage and peptidyl C-terminal amidation. A synthetic analog of the predicted IBE1 peptide, designated Y-23-R-NH2, was generated with tyrosine added at position 0. This peptide at 2-20 nM had growth-promoting effects on both normal and malignant human bronchial epithelial cells. Y-23-R-NH2 bound to specific high-affinity receptors (Kd = 2.8 +/- 1.4 x 10(-11) M) present at 1-2 x 10(4) binding sites per cell. Ligand binding was not inhibited by recombinant insulin or recombinant IGF-I. Furthermore, a monoclonal antibody antagonist to the IGF-I receptor (alpha IR3) did not suppress the proliferative response induced by Y-23-R-NH2. In addition, C-terminal amidation was shown to be important in receptor recognition since the free-acid analog of IBE1 (Y-23-R-OH) did not effectively compete for binding and was not a potent agonist of proliferation. Immunoblot analysis of human lung tumor cell line extracts using an antibody raised against Y-23-R-NH2 detected a low molecular mass band of approximately 5 kDa, implying that a protein product is produced that has immunological similarity to IBE1. Extracts of human, mammalian, and avian livers analyzed on an immunoblot with the anti-Y-23-R-NH2 antibody contained proteins of approximately 21 kDa that were specifically recognized by the antiserum and presumably represent an IGF-I precursor molecule. This implies that in species where an IGF-I mRNA with homology to the human IGF-IB E domain has not yet been described, an alternate mRNA must be produced that contains a sequence similar to that of the midportion of the human IGF-IB E domain. Our findings demonstrate that IBE1 is a growth factor that mediates its effect through a specific high-affinity receptor and is most likely conserved in many species.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mammalian subtilisins: The long-sought dibasic processing endoproteasesCell, 1991
- Expression of insulin‐like growth factor‐IA and factor‐IB mRNA in human liver, hepatoma cells, macrophage‐like cells and fibroblastFEBS Letters, 1991
- The gene structure of the insulin-like growth factor familyProgress in Growth Factor Research, 1989
- Insulin-like growth factor-I can mediate autocrine proliferation of human small cell lung cancer cell lines in vitro.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1988
- Cellular Localization of Somatomedin (Insulin-Like Growth Factor) Messenger RNA in the Human FetusScience, 1987
- Cytotoxicity of chemical carcinogens towards human bronchial epithelial cells evaluated in a clonal assayCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1984
- Sequence of cDNA encoding human insulin-like growth factor I precursorNature, 1983
- Production of a novel neuropeptide encoded by the calcitonin gene via tissue-specific RNA processingNature, 1983
- Somatomedin-C and platelet-derived growth factor stimulate human fibroblast replicationJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1981
- Isolation of two novel candidate hormones using a chemical method for finding naturally occurring polypeptidesNature, 1980