L to D amino acid isomerization in a peptide hormone is a late post-translational event occurring in specialized neurosecretory cells

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Abstract

Modification of the chirality of a single amino acid residue within a peptide chain appears to be novel additional mechanism leading to structural and functional diversification of eukaryotic bioactive peptides. This phenomenon has been studied at the cellular level in a neuroendocrine organ which elaborates a mixture of diastereoisomers of a 72-residue neuropeptide, crustacean hyperglycemic hormone. For the first time, amino acid isomerization has been shown to occur in the perikarya of fully specialized neurosecretory cells, as a late step of the maturation of the hyperglycemic hormone precursor and after propeptide cleavage. The specificity and efficiency of this phenomenon indicates the existence of a new enzyme family involved in the biogenesis of peptide hormones.

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Soyez, D., Toullec, J. Y., Ollivaux, C., & Géraud, G. (2000). L to D amino acid isomerization in a peptide hormone is a late post-translational event occurring in specialized neurosecretory cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(48), 37870–37875. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M007302200

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