Literature DB >> 7913035

Cloning and expression of eel natriuretic-peptide receptor B and comparison with its mammalian counterparts.

T Katafuchi1, A Takashima, M Kashiwagi, H Hagiwara, Y Takei, S Hirose.   

Abstract

A comparative study of the natriuretic-peptide receptor NPR-B was performed by cloning and expressing, in COS-1 cells, the NPR-B receptor subtype from the eel gill which exhibited a strong C-type-natriuretic-peptide (CNP)-induced guanylate cyclase activity. Like other mammalian NPR-B receptors, the eel NPR-B receptor consisted of a ligand-binding extracellular domain, a hydrophobic transmembrane domain, a kinase-like domain and a guanylate cyclase domain. Sequence comparison among the eel and mammalian receptors revealed a relatively low similarity (approximately 44%) in the extracellular domain compared to a very high similarity (approximately 84%) in the cytoplasmic regulatory and catalytic domains. This low similarity allowed identification of the amino acid residues or candidate regions important for the ligand-binding activity. RNase protection analysis of the eel NPR-B mRNA demonstrated that the message was predominantly expressed in the liver and atrium as well as in the gill with moderate-to-small amounts in the brain, ventricle, esophageal sphincter, stomach, posterior intestine and kidney. The high NPR-B mRNA levels in the liver, atrium and gill were found to decrease markedly when eels were transferred from fresh water to seawater and kept there for 2 weeks. Since similar changes are known to occur in the ligand CNP levels when eels are facing osmotic challenges, the CNP/NPR-B system appears to play an important role in their successful adaptation to salinity changes.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7913035     DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1994.tb18930.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Biochem        ISSN: 0014-2956


  8 in total

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  8 in total

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