Abstract

Neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY) is one of the most abundant and widespread peptides in the mammalian nervous system. Recent isolation and sequencing of the DNA encoding NPY has predicted the existence of a 97 amino acid precursor peptide. Proteolytic processing of this precursor could yield three separate peptide products, an N-terminal signal peptide, neuropeptide tyrosine and a 30 amino acid C-terminal flanking peptide (C-PON). Here, we present evidence that the predicted C-flanking peptide of NPY is widely distributed in both the central and peripheral nervous systems of several mammalian species including man, and has an identical distribution to NPY. It was also demonstrated, using correlative light microscopic immunostaining on serial sections and double electron microscopic immunocytochemistry, that C-PON and NPY immunoreactivities are co-localized in neuronal cell bodies of the brain cortex, sympathetic ganglion cells, norepinephrine-containing granules of the adrenal medulla and in human pheochromocytoma tumor cells.

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