Abstract
beta-Endorphin, the most potent known naturally occurring analgesic agent, is found in pituitary and brain in company with a series of structurally and biosynthetically related peptides that are essentially devoid of opiate activity. In studies of beta-endorphin it is important to discriminate between the active and inactive forms of the peptide. This review describes the use of chemical and immunological methods for localizing the peptides in the tissues, extracting and resolving the peptides by chromatography, and determining the concentrations of the peptides by radioimmunoassay. These approaches have allowed the distribution of beta-endorphin and its related peptides to be assigned unequivocally in regions of rat pituitary and brain. It has been found that the multifunctional corticotropin-endorphin prohormone can undergo processing by different mechanisms in different tissues, permitting the intrinsic activities of its fragments to be expressed selectively. The different processing patterns can be attributed to the existence of highly specific enzymes, characteristic of individual cells, which regulate the formation of this potent opiate.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
141 articles.
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