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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 258, Issue 15, 9093-9099, Aug, 1983
JT Dunn, PS Kim, AD Dunn, DG Heppner Jr and RC Moore
Reduced thyroglobulins from several animal species contain hormone-rich
iodopeptides of 20,000-26,000 and 15,000-18,000 daltons. The present study
has investigated the role of iodination in their production. Experimental
approaches have included: iodination in vitro of thyroglobulin from rabbit
thyroid slices incubated with [3H]leucine and subsequent analysis of 3H
distribution by gel electrophoresis; iodination in vitro of low iodine
thyroglobulin from a human goiter, followed by isolation of the major
iodopeptides and quantitation of their peptide content; and injection of
iodine-deficient rats with Na125I and assessment of the distribution of
isotope among the iodopeptides at successive time intervals. From these
experiments the following general pattern has emerged: 1) at low levels of
iodine (less than 5 atoms/molecule of thyroglobulin) in vitro or at short
time intervals after iodine administration in vivo (less than 4 h), the
principal iodinated component of reduced thyroglobulin is a approximately
230,000-dalton peptide; 2) with moderate increases in iodine (5-40
atoms/molecule) or longer time intervals after administration (greater than
or equal to 4 h) there is less of the 230,000-dalton iodopeptide, and an
iodothyronine-rich approximately 20,000- to 26,000-dalton iodopeptide
appears; 3) at higher levels of iodine (greater than 40 atoms/molecule) the
amount of approximately 230,000-dalton iodopeptide decreases further, the
amount of 20,000- to 26,000-dalton iodopeptides may decrease, and an
iodothyronine-rich 15,000- to 18,000-dalton peptide appears. Progressive
iodination gives the same changes in distribution of peptide material among
these iodopeptides as it does in iodine distribution, and the changes seen
with iodination in vitro are similar to those occurring over time in vivo.
We conclude that during the process of iodination discrete peptide bonds of
thyroglobulin are cleaved to produce the hormone-rich iodopeptides. This is
probably a normal part of thyroglobulin maturation in vivo and may be a
necessary event preceding hormone formation.
The role of iodination in the formation of hormone-rich peptides from thyroglobulin
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