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Comparative Study
. 1995 Dec 22;270(51):30315-21.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.51.30315.

Molecular cloning and expression of serum calcium-decreasing factor (caldecrin)

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Free article
Comparative Study

Molecular cloning and expression of serum calcium-decreasing factor (caldecrin)

A Tomomura et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

We previously reported on the purification of a serum calcium-decreasing factor, referred to as caldecrin, from porcine pancreas, that is thought to be a serine protease (Tomomura, A., Fukushige, T., Noda, T., Noikura, T., and Saheki, T. (1992) FEBS Lett. 301, 277-281). In the present study, we purified caldecrin from rat pancreas and determined its primary structure by cDNA cloning. The predicted caldecrin protein is presumed to be synthesized as a preproenzyme of 268 amino acids with a signal peptide of 16 amino acids and an activation peptide of 13 amino acids, and is, with the exception of a central region, almost identical to the reported rat pancreatic elastase IV sequence. The caldecrin gene is selectively expressed in the pancreas, as judged by Northern blot analysis. After expression in BMT-10 cells, immunoreactive caldecrin was found in the culture supernatant, and it inhibited the parathyroid hormone-stimulated 45Ca release from cultured fetal long bones. Catalytic site mutants were synthesized in a baculovirus system, and recombinant mutants also decreased the serum calcium level of mice. These data implicate caldecrin, a protease closely related to elastase IV, in the regulation of blood calcium levels.

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