Hepatic processing of cholecystokinin peptides. I. Structural specificity and mechanism of hepatic extraction
- PMID: 3953818
- DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.1986.250.3.G344
Hepatic processing of cholecystokinin peptides. I. Structural specificity and mechanism of hepatic extraction
Abstract
Since the liver is a target tissue of many biologically important molecules, we have studied the hepatic uptake of cholecystokinin (CCK) with the isolated, perfused rat liver and a series of radioiodinated and unlabeled CCK peptides. Of the naturally occurring forms of CCK, cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) was extensively extracted (26 +/- 0.7% of Bolton-Hunter-labeled CCK-8, 59% of unlabeled CCK-8) in a single pass through the liver, while CCK-33 was minimally extracted (3.1 +/- 1.2% of Bolton-Hunter-labeled CCK-33). Studies of structural specificity showed that the sulfate ester on the tyrosine residue of CCK-8 decreased its hepatic extraction, that the carboxyl-terminal tetrapeptide region of CCK-8 was more important for this uptake process than was the amino-terminal tetrapeptide region, and that oxidation reduced uptake of CCK. First-pass hepatic extraction of unlabeled CCK-8 was shown to be a high-capacity process; however, uptake of radioiodinated CCK-8 was partially saturable with unlabeled CCK-4. Specific lectins (wheat-germ agglutinin, concanavalin A) and a bile acid (taurocholate) inhibited hepatic extraction of CCK-8 in a concentration-dependent manner. These data are consistent with a highly specific cellular extraction process for CCK in the liver.
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