Proteins of the troponin superfamily use homologous amino acid sequences as binding sites for Ca2+ and seem to have evolved from an ancestral Ca2+ binding site. We have utilized this ancestral sequence to construct a peptide (Ca2+-like peptide) with inverted hydropathy to the calcium-coordinating region of this protein. This synthetic peptide acted like Ca2+ in that (i) it increased the calmodulin-dependent hydrolysis of cAMP by phosphodiesterase, (ii) it interacted with EDTA, and (iii) it enhanced contraction of urinary bladder smooth muscle in vitro. Unlike Ca2+, the peptide's effects were destroyed by acid hydrolysis. These findings demonstrate the synthesis of a peptide that can substitute for Ca2+ and may have considerable utility for the study of Ca2+-regulated pathways and possible therapeutic value as a pharmacologic agent.
CITATION STYLE
Dillon, J., Thomas Woods, W., Guarcello, V., Leboeuf, R. D., & Blalock, J. E. (1991). A peptide mimetic of calcium. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(21), 9726–9729. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.21.9726
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