Ghrelin, a circulating appetite-inducing hormone, is derived from a prohormone by posttranslational processing. On the basis of the bioinformatic prediction that another peptide also derived from proghrelin exists, we isolated a hormone from rat stomach and named it obestatin-a contraction of obese, from the Latin "obedere," meaning to devour, and "statin," denoting suppression. Contrary to the appetite-stimulating effects of ghrelin, treatment of rats with obestatin suppressed food intake, inhibited jejunal contraction, and decreased body-weight gain. Obestatin bound to the orphan G protein-coupled receptor GPR39. Thus, two peptide hormones with opposing action in weight regulation are derived from the same ghrelin gene. After differential modification, these hormones activate distinct receptors.
The mission of the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Project is to enable the scientific and medical communities to interpret the human genome sequence and apply it to understand human biology and improve health. The ENCODE Consortium is integrating multiple technologies and approaches in a collective effort to discover and define the functional elements encoded in the human genome, including genes, transcripts, and transcriptional regulatory regions, together with their attendant chromatin states and DNA methylation patterns. In the process, standards to ensure high-quality data have been implemented, and novel algorithms have been developed to facilitate analysis. Data and derived results are made available through a freely accessible database. Here we provide an overview of the project and the resources it is generating and illustrate the application of ENCODE data to interpret the human genome.
1. A third native hormone-binding protein, neurophysin-C, has been isolated from acetone-desiccated bovine pituitary posterior lobes. 2. This protein was detected in lysates of neurosecretory granules isolated from bovine pituitary posterior lobes. 3. The molecular weight appears to be close to 10000. 4. Neurophysin-C is similar in amino acid composition to neurophysin-I and -II; it contains a single residue of tyrosine and of methionine. The N-terminal amino acid in all three neurophysins is alanine. 5. Neurophysin-C accounts for approximately 15% of the total hormone-binding protein present in the pituitary posterior lobes. 6. The new neurophysin forms complexes with oxytocin as well as with [8-arginine]-vasopressin. The complex with vasopressin has been crystallized. 7. Bioassay of the pressor and oxytocic activities of the protein-hormone complexes shows that neurophysin-C binds one molecule of either vasopressin or oxytocin.
Intercellular communication in multicellular organisms requires the relay of extracellular signals by cell surface proteins to the interiors of cells. The availability of genome sequences from humans and several model organisms has facilitated the identification of several human plasma membrane receptor families and allowed the analysis of their phylogeny. This review provides a global categorization of most known signal transduction-associated receptors as enzymes, recruiters, and latent transcription factors. The evolution of known families of human plasma membrane signaling receptors was traced in current literature and validated by sequence relatedness. This global analysis reveals themes that recur during receptor evolution and allows the formulation of hypotheses for the origins of receptors. The human receptor families involved in signaling (with the exception of channels) are presented in the Human Plasma Membrane Receptome database.
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