Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
1993 pubmed

A novel 77-residue peptide from porcine brain contains a leucine-zipper motif and is recognized by an antiserum to delta-sleep-inducing peptide.

Sillard. R R; Schulz-Knappe. P P; Vogel. P P; Raida. M M; Bensch. K W KW; Forssmann. W G WG; Mutt. V V

Key Findings

  • A 77‑residue peptide (DIP) was isolated from porcine brain and binds to DS‑P‑specific antibodies.
  • The peptide’s sequence is unrelated to the original DS‑P but contains a leucine‑zipper motif and possible phosphorylation sites.
  • Its similarity to other proteins suggests it may play a role in gene‑regulation\xa0\u200b\xa0\xa0

Summary

The study describes a new 77‑amino‑acid peptide from pig brain that reacts with antibodies made for a tiny sleep‑inducing peptide, but it doesn’t show any real‑world use or health benefit.

Abstract

In 1977 a nonapeptide, called delta-sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) was characterized in rabbit cerebral venous blood plasma during thalamic stimulation to induce sleep. Evidence for the existence of DSIP in the central nervous system and in numerous peripheral organs of various mammalian species has been obtained using immunochemical techniques. Later findings have revealed the existence of large forms of DSIP-like immunoreactivity. We decided to investigate the molecular identity of such large forms of DSIP-like immunoreactivity by direct isolation. We have purified and characterized using amino acid analysis, sequencing, mass spectrometry and radioimmunoassay a 77-residue peptide, denoted DIP (DSIP-immunoreactive peptide), from an acid extract of porcine brain. DIP is recognized by an antiserum raised against synthetic rabbit DSIP. The amino acid sequence of DIP, however, is not related to that of DSIP, but it contains a putative leucine-zipper motif, a proline/glutamic-acid-rich domain, three potential phosphorylation sites and exhibits an acetylated N-terminus. The N-terminal but not the C-terminal part of the newly isolated peptide shares clear homology with the sequence of a protein induced by transforming growth factor beta 1 and other growth factors in mouse osteoblastic cells. DIP is also structurally similar to a baculoviral protein p10. The function of DIP remains unclear but its involvement in transcriptional regulation is probable.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1993

Date

1993-09-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb18160.x