The presence and molecular forms of cardiodilatin immunoreactivity in the human and rat right atrium

Publication date

1988

Authors

Meleagros, L.
Ghatei, M.A.
Anderson, J.V.
Wharton, J.
Taylor, K.M.
Meijler, F.L.
Polak, J.M.
Bloom, S.R.

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DOI

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

A sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay has been developed for cardiodilatin; the N-terminal peptide sequence of the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) prohormone. Cardiodilatin-immunoreactivity (-IR) concentrations in the human right atrial appendage were found to correlate with ANP-IR concentrations, determined by an established radioimmunoassay, (cardiodilatin-IR = 13.2 ± 1.2 nmol/g, ANP-IR = 19.8 ± 2.0 nmol/g, r = 0.80, p < 0.001). Characterisation of the cardiodilatin-IR in the human and rat right atrium by gel permeation and fast protein liquid chromatography revealed only two cardiodilatin-IR molecular forms. The larger more hydrophobic form, the majority of the cardiodilatin-IR, contained in addition ANP-IR and therefore represents the prohormone. The smaller, less hydrophobic form, lacked ANP-IR and thus represents the cleaved N-terminal peptide sequence of the prohormone. These findings indicate that the prohormone is the major molecular form in the human and rat atrium. Furthermore, they demonstrate that a single large N-terminal peptide, cardiodilatin, derived from the prohormone, may exist as a distinct molecular form in the atrium of these species.

Keywords

Cardiodilatin, N-terminal pro-ANP, Radioimmunoassay, Chromatography, Atrium

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