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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Binding of parathyroid hormone to bovine kidney-cortex plasma membranes.

TLDR
Plasma membranes were purified from bovine kidney cortex, with a fourfold increase in specific activity of parathyroid hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase over that in the crude homogenate, and the labelled hormone shown to bind to the plasma membranes and to be specifically displaced by unlabelled hormone.
Abstract
1. Plasma membranes were purified from bovine kidney cortex, with a fourfold increase in specific activity of parathyroid hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase over that in the crude homogenate. The membranes were characterized by enzyme studies. 2. Parathyroid hormone was labelled with 125I by an enzymic method and the labelled hormone shown to bind to the plasma membranes and to be specifically displaced by unlabelled hormone. Parathyroid hormone labelled by the chloramine-t procedure showed no specific binding. 75Se-labelled human parathyroid hormone, prepared in cell culture, also bound to the membranes. 3. Parathyroid hormone was shown to retain biological activity after iodination by the enzymic method, but no detectable activity remained after chloramine-t treatment. 4. High concentration of pig insulin inhibited binding of labelled parathyroid hormone to plasma membranes and partially inhibited the hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity in a crude kidney-cortex preparation. 5. EDTA enhanced and Ca2+ inhibited binding of labelled parathyroid hormone to plasma membranes. 6. Whereas rat kidney homogenates were capable of degrading labelled parathyroid hormone to trichloroacetic acid-soluble fragments, neither crude homogenates nor purified membranes from bovine kidney showed this property. 7. Binding of parathyroid hormone is discussed in relation to metabolism and initial events in hormone action.

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Book ChapterDOI

Membrane receptors and hormone action.

TL;DR: This chapter describes the relation between biological activity and binding, physicochemical detection and assay of receptors, solubilization of membrane receptors, examples of membrane-localized receptors, affinity techniques, polyvalent hormone derivatives, and receptor studies, and theoretical mechanisms of hormone–receptor binding and action.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Peripheral Metabolism of Parathyroid Hormone

TL;DR: The radioimmunoassay for parathyroid hormone (PTH) was introduced by Berson et al. in 1963, and initial enthusiasm for its clinical application was tempered because widely differing results were reported.
Book ChapterDOI

Parathyroid hormone: chemistry, biosynthesis, and mode of action.

TL;DR: The chemistry, biosynthesis, and mode of action of parathyroid hormone is discussed, and the role of PTH in mineral ion metabolism is focused on through consideration of the basic protein chemistry of the hormone as well as its biosynthetic, metabolism, and Mode of action.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the requirements for parathyroid hormone action in renal membranes with the use of inhibiting analogues.

TL;DR: A dichotomy between receptor binding and adenylyl cyclase activation was demonstrated only by alterations or deletions involving the first 2 NH2-terminal residues of the hormone and emphasizes the importance of these residues in eliciting the biological activity of parathyroid hormone.
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