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Production, secretion, and biological activity of the C-terminal flanking peptide of human progastrin
Authors:Smith Kelly A  Patel Oneel  Lachal Shamilah  Jennings Ian  Kemp Bruce  Burgess John  Baldwin Graham S  Shulkes Arthur
Institution:Department of Surgery, University of Melbourne, Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia.
Abstract:BACKGROUND & AIMS: Processing of progastrin, the 80-amino acid precursor of the hormone gastrin, generates a variety of peptides with distinct distributions and biological activities. However, little is known regarding the expression, secretion, and biological activity of the 6-amino acid C-terminal flanking peptide (CTFP) of progastrin. The objectives were to determine the concentration of CTFP in normal subjects and patients with gastrointestinal diseases and to investigate the biological activity of CTFP. METHODS: CTFP, gastrin-amide (Gamide), glycine-extended gastrin (Ggly), and progastrin were measured using region-specific radioimmunoassay (RIA) in antral extracts and resected colorectal cancers (CRC) and in plasma from normal subjects (fasting and meal stimulated) and from patients with CRC, multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1), or pernicious anemia. The effect of CTFP on proliferation, migration, and activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway in several types of gastrointestinal cell lines was determined. RESULTS: CTFP is by far the predominant progastrin-derived peptide found in the antrum (4-fold higher than Gamide), resected CRC, and circulation (60-fold higher than Gamide) and is released after meal stimulation. The hypergastrinemic patients (MEN-1, pernicious anemia) had elevated plasma Gamide but unaltered CTFP demonstrating differential secretion of these 2 progastrin-derived peptides. Finally, CTFP stimulated proliferation and migration and activated MAPK of cells in culture. CONCLUSIONS: The high and regulated expression of CTFP in healthy and diseased subjects combined with the evidence for biological activity of CTFP demonstrates that CTFP is not an inactive metabolite of progastrin processing but is a bioactive peptide with potential roles in the normal and diseased gastrointestinal tract.
Keywords:ACN  acetonitrile  CTFP  C-terminal flanking peptide  ER  endoplasmic reticulum  Gamide  gastrin amide  Ggly  gastrin glycine  CRC  colorectal cancer  MAPK  mitogen-activated protein kinase  MEN-1  multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1  RIA  radioimmunoassay
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