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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The isolation of three neurophysins from porcine posterior pituitary lobes.

L. O. Uttenthal, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 116, Iss: 5, pp 899-909
TLDR
Electrophoretic comparison of the purified proteins, which are homogeneous on starch-gel electrophoresis, with the soluble proteins of fresh porcine posterior pituitary lobes extracted in 0.1m-HCl and in buffer pH8.1 suggests that the isolated proteins are native to the fresh tissue.
Abstract
1. Three neurophysins, proteins that bind the polypeptide hormones oxytocin and vasopressin, have been isolated from acetone-dried porcine posterior pituitary lobes. The proteins have been named porcine neurophysins-I, -II and -III in order of their electrophoretic mobilities at pH8.1. 2. Electrophoretic comparison of the purified proteins, which are homogeneous on starch-gel electrophoresis, with the soluble proteins of fresh porcine posterior pituitary lobes extracted in 0.1m-HCl and in buffer pH8.1 suggests that the isolated proteins are native to the fresh tissue. 3. Neurophysins-I and -II are present in similar amounts in the tissue, whereas neurophysin-III is present only in small quantities. Acetone-dried tissue also contains traces of other hormone-binding neurophysin components. 4. All the neurophysins can bind both oxytocin and [8-lysine]-vasopressin. 5. The apparent molecular weights of the neurophysins increase with increasing protein concentration as measured by equilibrium sedimentation in the ultracentrifuge. 6. Neurophysins-I and -III are of similar molecular dimensions, contain one residue of methionine per molecule and lack histidine. The minimum molecular weight of neurophysin-I obtained by amino acid analysis is 9360. Neurophysin-II is of larger molecular dimensions than neurophysins-I and -III and can be separated from these by gel filtration on Sephadex G-75. It contains no histidine or methionine, and its minimum molecular weight has been estimated as 14020 by amino acid analysis. 7. Each of the three neurophysins possesses N-terminal alanine. 8. The possible biological significance of the existence of several neurophysins within one species is discussed.

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Physical and chemical properties of the bovine neurophysins.

TL;DR: H+ ion titration studies confirm previous conclusions from optical activity studies that high concentrations of calcium ion do not significantly diminish the interaction of the hormones with bovine neurophysin.
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Tentative identification of a vasopressin–neurophysin and an oxytocin–neurophysin in the rat

TL;DR: It is suggested that two proteins present in the gland in the same ratio as the hormones vasopressin and oxytocin-neurophysin of theRat neurohypophysial extracts are the vasoppressin-Neurophys in the rat.
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The role of neurophysin proteins: suggestions from the study of their transport and turnover.

TL;DR: The aim of this work is to use neurophysin as a tool to follow the intracellular events associated with the formation, transport, and release of neurosecretory granules in the rat, but in order to do so the authors need to know some characteristics of the molecule they are following.
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Arginine vasopressin (AVP) and AVP-like immunoreactivity in peripheral tissues.

TL;DR: Recently, the presence of many neuropeptides, including AVP, has been demonstrated in a number of peripheral, mainly endocrine tissues, largely on immunochemical criteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Localization of neurophysin-II in the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system of the pig by immunofluorescence histochemistry.

TL;DR: Sensitive and specific immunofluorescence techniques have been used to show that the hormonebinding protein for lysine vasopressin (porcine neurophysin-n) occurs throughout the hypothalamoneurohypophysial system of the adult and neonatal pig and is localized principally in the neurosecretory neurons arising from the supraoptic nucleus.
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