monoiodotyrosine and dehydroalanine

monoiodotyrosine has been researched along with dehydroalanine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for monoiodotyrosine and dehydroalanine

ArticleYear
Hormone formation in the isolated fragment 1-171 of human thyroglobulin involves the couple tyrosine 5 and tyrosine 130.
    Molecular and cellular endocrinology, 1991, Volume: 81, Issue:1-3

    The 22 kDa fragment (Asn1-Met171) purified from iodine-poor human thyroglobulin (hTg) is capable by itself to synthesize thyroxine at Tyr5, the preferential hormonogenic acceptor site of the protein, after iodination in vitro. To identify the corresponding donor site in this model we studied the fate of the six Tyr residues present in the 22 kDa peptide after in vitro hormone synthesis. Structural studies of the tyrosyl peptides showed that Tyr5 was the only thyroxine-forming site, the other tyrosines (29, 89, 97 and 107) were noniodinated and Tyr130 was recovered in alanine form after CNBH4 treatment of the Tyr130-containing peptide. Taking into account that alanine could arise from aminoreduced pyruvate species, these results showed that in the 22 kDa fragment (1) hormone formation involves the couple Tyr5 (acceptor)-Tyr130 (donor), and (2) dehydroalanine, the resultant product of donor tyrosine after hormone synthesis, has evolved in pyruvoyl form. To test whether Tyr130 could also act as donor in hTg hormone synthesis, the 22 kDa peptide was isolated from hTg iodinated under conditions leading to iodotyrosine formation followed or not by hormone formation and the tyrosyl peptides were analyzed. After hTg iodination and before coupling (i.e. hormone synthesis) only Tyr5 and Tyr130 were recovered in iodotyrosine form; after coupling thyroxine was found at Tyr5 whereas Tyr130 disappeared. Taken together these results, correlated with the previously reported cleavage of hTg chain at Tyr130 occurring during in vivo hormone synthesis, support the theory that the couple Tyr5 (acceptor)-Tyr130 (donor) would be the preferential hormonogenic site in human Tg.

    Topics: Alanine; Amino Acid Sequence; Amino Acids; Goiter; Humans; In Vitro Techniques; Molecular Sequence Data; Monoiodotyrosine; Peptides; Pyroglutamyl-Peptidase I; Structure-Activity Relationship; Thyroglobulin; Thyroxine; Trypsin; Tyrosine

1991
Location of dehydroalanine residues in the amino acid sequence of bovine thyroglobulin. Identification of "donor" tyrosine sites for hormonogenesis in thyroglobulin.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 1990, Jun-05, Volume: 265, Issue:16

    Thyroid hormonogenesis in thyroglobulin results in the conversion of an "acceptor" iodotyrosine to a hormone residue and a "donor" iodotyrosine to a dehydroalanine residue. Altogether five acceptor sites have been located as hormone residues in thyroglobulin of different animal species. To search for donor sites, we treated bovine thyroglobulin with 4-aminothiophenol to specifically modify dehydroalanine residues to S-(4-aminophenyl)cysteine (APC) residues, according to the principle of dehydroalanine determination developed by us (Kondo, T., Kondo, Y., and Ui, N. (1988) Mol. Cell. Endocr. 57, 101-106). After digesting thyroglobulin with lysyl endopeptidase, APC-containing peptides were separated from other peptides by trapping them on immobilized naphthylethylenediamine and from each other by size-exclusion and reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The HPLC patterns showed about 10 APC-containing peptides. Among them, four different peptides were purified by repeated reverse-phase HPLC. The results of partial sequencing of the four peptides by manual Edman degradation disclosed that Tyr5, Tyr926, Tyr1375, and Tyr986 or Tyr1008 are available for hormonogenesis as donor sites. These results strongly suggest that only specific tyrosine residues behave as donors.

    Topics: Alanine; Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding Sites; Cattle; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Molecular Sequence Data; Monoiodotyrosine; Peptide Fragments; Phenylthiohydantoin; Serine Endopeptidases; Thyroglobulin

1990