XB-ART-29180
Eur J Biochem
1985 Jun 18;1493:531-5.
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Solid-phase synthesis of PYLa and isolation of its natural counterpart, PGLa [PYLa-(4-24)] from skin secretion of Xenopus laevis.
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From the nucleotide sequence of clones isolated from a cDNA library constructed from skin of Xenopus laevis, the existence of PYLa, a peptide comprised of 24 amino acids, was predicted. This peptide was synthesized by solid-phase methods and purified to homogeneity with an overall yield of 61%. The synthetic peptide was used as reference substance to search for its natural counterpart in skin secretion of Xenopus. Two peptides were found which were very similar to PYLa except for the absence of the first three amino acids. These 21-amino-acid peptides, termed PGLa, can be generated from PYLa by cleavage after the single arginine residue present in the latter. The two forms of PGLa differ in their retention time on HPLC but have identical amino acid compositions and terminal sequences. Tryptic hydrolysis of synthetic PYLa after the single arginine yields exclusively PGLa with the shorter retention time on HPLC. The chemical difference between the two forms of PGLa is currently not known. The possible biological role of these newly discovered constituents of frog skin secretion is discussed.
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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: pgla