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

Strong evolutionary conservation of neuropeptide Y: sequences of chicken, goldfish, and Torpedo marmorata DNA clones.

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is an abundant and widespread neuropeptide in the nervous system of mammals. NPY belongs to a family of 36-amino acid peptides that also includes pancreatic polypeptide and the endocrine gut peptide YY as well as the fish pancreatic peptide Y. To study the evolution of this peptide family, we have isolated clones encoding NPY from central nervous system cDNA libraries of chicken, goldfish, and the ray Torpedo marmorata, as well as from a chicken genomic library. The predicted chicken NPY amino acid sequence differs from that of rat at only one position. The goldfish sequence differs at five positions and shows that bony fishes have a true NPY peptide in addition to their pancreatic peptide Y. The Torpedo sequence differs from that of rat at three positions. As Torpedo NPY has no unique positions when compared with the other sequences, it seems to be identical to the NPY of the common ancestor of cartilaginous fishes, bony fishes, and tetrapods after 420 million years of evolution. The 30-amino acid carboxyl-terminal extension of the NPY precursor also displays considerable sequence conservation. These results show that NPY is one of the most highly conserved neuroendocrine peptides.[1]

References

  1. Strong evolutionary conservation of neuropeptide Y: sequences of chicken, goldfish, and Torpedo marmorata DNA clones. Blomqvist, A.G., Söderberg, C., Lundell, I., Milner, R.J., Larhammar, D. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (1992) [Pubmed]
 
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