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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Salusins: newly identified bioactive peptides with hemodynamic and mitogenic activities.

The discovery of endogenous bioactive peptides has typically required a lengthy identification process. Computer-assisted analysis of cDNA and genomic DNA sequence information can markedly shorten the process. A bioinformatic analysis of full-length, enriched human cDNA libraries searching for previously unidentified bioactive peptides resulted in the identification and characterization of two related peptides of 28 and 20 amino acids, which we designated salusin-alpha and salusin-beta. Salusins are translated from an alternatively spliced mRNA of TOR2A, a gene encoding a protein of the torsion dystonia family. Intravenous administration of salusin-alpha or salusin-beta to rats causes rapid, profound hypotension and bradycardia. Salusins increase intracellular Ca2+, upregulate a variety of genes and induce cell mitogenesis. Salusin-beta stimulates the release of arginine-vasopressin from rat pituitary. Expression of TOR2A mRNA and its splicing into preprosalusin are ubiquitous, and immunoreactive salusin-alpha and salusin-beta are detected in many human tissues, plasma and urine, suggesting that salusins are endocrine and/or paracrine factors.[1]

References

  1. Salusins: newly identified bioactive peptides with hemodynamic and mitogenic activities. Shichiri, M., Ishimaru, S., Ota, T., Nishikawa, T., Isogai, T., Hirata, Y. Nat. Med. (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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