[No authors listed]
The structure of chicken osteostatin or parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) (residues 107-139) containing an Ala/Thr substitution at the N-terminus was studied using two-dimensional proton NMR spectroscopy in an aqueous environment. Osteostatin is a separate circulating domain responsible for a range of activities related to the modulation of bone formation as well as keratinocyte proliferation. Anti-mitogenic properties of osteostatin have been detected in breast cancer cells and cytosolic calcium is used by osteostatin to signal in some neurons through a non-PTH receptor, unlike the separate circulating N-terminal domain. A structural basis for the activity is presented with particular emphasis given to the conformation of the bioactive segment 107-111, forming part of a finger-like projection capable of binding to the non-PTH receptor both in the presence and absence of the remainder of the molecule which appears simply to act as a largely globular carrier.
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