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Pro-protein convertases in intermediary metabolism: islet hormones, brain/gut hormones and integrated physiology

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JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM
卷 85, 期 7, 页码 673-684

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00109-007-0167-4

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pro-protein convertase; prohormones; prohormone convertase

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Many peptide hormones implicated in the regulation of intermediary metabolism arise from larger precursors called prohormones. These precursors are cut into pieces by proprotein convertases, more precisely those called prohormone convertases (PCs) that cleave at the C tenninus of basic doublets. The remaining basic amino acids are eliminated by a specialized carboxypeptidase, leading to the active hormone. This processing may provide, from a single precursor, several peptides with different biological activities depending on the site(s) of cleavage on the precursor. When the processing is tissue-specific, this mechanism allows to produce, from a single protein, different sets of hormones depending on the tissue considered, leading to novel regulatory processes. The archetype of such a pluripotent prohormone in the field of intemediary metabolism is pro-glucagon that, when cut by PCI in intestinal L cells, produces four different peptides with different specificities [glicentin, oxyntomodulin (OXM), glucagon-like peptide-1, and glucagon-like peptide-2], whereas, when cut by PC2 in the a cells of the endocrine pancreas, glucagon is produced and, through the supplementary action of NRD convertase, a fragment of glucagon (miniglucagon) with original properties.

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