PMID: 8988514Dec 17, 1996Paper

Canine prosomatostatin: isolation of a cDNA, regulation of gene expression, and characterization of post-translational processing intermediates

Regulatory Peptides
C J DickinsonT Yamada

Abstract

Somatostatin is a tetradecapeptide (SS-14) initially isolated from the hypothalamus that is also found in D cells of the stomach and pancreas where it exerts an inhibitory action on a variety of gastrointestinal functions. Since many of concepts important to an understanding of gastrointestinal physiology are derived from experiments in the dog we examined somatostatin gene expression and post-translational processing in the canine fundus, antrum and pancreas. The canine somatostatin cDNA which is highly homologous to other known mammalian somatostatins was used to examine somatostatin expression in isolated canine fundic D-cells. Somatostatin expression induced by cholecystokinin (10(-8) M) was inhibited by the somatostatin analog, octreotide (10(-7) M). To examine somatostatin processing in the canine gut we noted that synthesis of SS-14 and somatostatin octacosapeptide (SS-28) involves endoproteolytic cleavage of prosomatostatin (proSS) at both paired and single basic amino-acid residues, respectively. Antisera capable of recognizing the amino-terminal residues of SS-28, SS-28(1-14) and SS-28(1-12) were characterized and identified concentrations of SS-28(1-12) but not SS-28(1-14) in the fundus, antrum and pancreas equivalen...Continue Reading

References

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Citations

May 18, 1999·The American Journal of Physiology·K A LacourseL C Samuelson

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