Biosynthesis and processing of delta sleep-inducing peptide-like precursors in primary cultures of mouse anterior pituitary cells.
Bjartell. A A; Ekman. R R; Loh. Y P YP
Key Findings
- Mouse pituitary cells produce a small (<3 kDa) DSIP‑like glycopeptide.
- The peptide is generated from larger precursor proteins (50‑60 kDa) that are trimmed down to intermediate sizes before the final small peptide appears.
- The mouse DSIP‑like peptide incorporates glycine and a sugar group, and is secreted into the surrounding medium.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study mainly adds basic knowledge about DSIP’s form in mice and shows it’s a glycosylated peptide, but it doesn’t provide dosing guidance, efficacy data, or direct ways to use DSIP for sleep or performance enhancement.
Summary
Scientists discovered that mouse pituitary cells make a tiny, sugar‑attached version of a peptide similar to delta sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP). It comes from larger precursor proteins, gets processed, and is released from the cells, but it isn’t exactly the same as the DSIP found in rabbits.
Abstract
The biosynthesis and processing of material resembling delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) have been studied in mouse anterior pituitary primary cell cultures. Cells were pulse/chase incubated with 3H-labelled amino acids (Gly, Arg or Ala) and cell extracts were immunoprecipitated with DSIP antiserum. Labelled DSIP-related proteins were resolved by SDS/PAGE. Multiple forms of DSIP-immunoprecipitable material were observed, including three precursors of molecular mass 50-60 kDa which were processed to two major groups of intermediates of 35-45 kDa and 9-16.5 kDa. These intermediates appear to be processed to a DSIP-related peptide (molecular mass less than 3 kDa), which co-ran on reversed-phase HPLC with an endogenous form of DSIP in mouse anterior pituitary, but not with rabbit DSIP. This less than 3-kDa peptide incorporated [3H]Gly, but not [3H]Arg or [3H]Ala. In addition, it incorporated [3H]glucosamine, indicating that it was a glycopeptide. Secretion studies showed release of the less than 3-kDa DSIP-like glycopeptide and the 9-16.5-kDa group of intermediates into the medium. The present study demonstrates the biosynthesis of a small DSIP-like glycopeptide in mouse anterior pituitary cells, which is not identical with, but has similarities to, rabbit DSIP.
Study Information
pubmed
1990
1990-05-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1432-1033.1990.tb15555.x