Abstract

This study examined whether the neurointermediate lobe (NIL) of the rat pituitary contains latent kallikrein- and thrombin-like proteases activated by trypsin. Partial characterization of such proteases was attempted. Also examined were the distribution of proteolytic activity within the NIL and levels in both male and female lobes. NIL homogenates were assayed for proteolytic activity at pH 8.0 before and after incubation with trypsin (10 micrograms/ml). Trypsin caused a 10-fold activation of kallikrein-like activity and a 40-fold activation of thrombin-like activity in NIL homogenates. The kallikrein-like activity was separated into two components using diethylaminoethyl-Sephadex. The predominant kallikrein-like protease was a potent kininogenase closely related or identical to glandular kallikrein and was almost exclusively localized to the intermediate lobe. The second kallikrein-like protease (kallikrein A) was a weak kininogenase sensitive to inhibition by both soybean trypsin inhibitor and aprotinin and was similarly concentrated in both the neural lobe and the intermediate lobe. The thrombin-like protease was sensitive to inhibition by hirudin (a specific thrombin inhibitor), clotted fibrinogen, and was slightly more concentrated in the neural lobe than in the intermediate lobe. NILs from female rats contained approximately 40% less kallikrein activity than NILs from male rats but did not differ in their content of thrombin-like activity.

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