Abstract
Studies on humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy have shown that tumors produce a protein that acts through the parathyroid hormone (PTH) receptor but is immunologically distinct from PTH. We have recently purified and cloned a parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) from a human lung cancer cell line. Full length cDNA clones were isolated and found to encode a prepropeptide of 36 amino acids and a mature protein of 141 amino acids. Eight of the first 13 amino terminal residues are identical with human PTH, although antisera directed at the amino terminus of PTHrP do not recognize PTH. A 34-amino acid synthetic peptide, PTHrP(1-34), was several times more potent than bovine or human PTH(1-34) in bioassays promoting the formation of cAMP and plasminogen activity in osteogenic sarcoma cells and activation of adenylate cyclase in chick kidney membranes. PTHrP(1-34) was also more potent than PTH(1-34) in stimulating cAMP and phosphate excretion and reducing calcium excretion in the isolated perfused rat kidney. PTHrP has been consistently demonstrated by immunohistochemistry in squamous cell carcinomas and in keratinocytes present in normal skin, but not in normal or hyperplastic parathyroid tissues or other tumors. PTHrP-like activity has been extracted from ovine placenta and fetal parathyroid tissue, suggesting that PTHrP may play a role in fetal calcium homeostasis.
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