AnaSpec Includes Ghrelin and Obestatin Peptides in GO® Collection
AnaSpec, EGT Group, a leading provider of integrated proteomic and genomic solutions, offers a wide range of ghrelin and obestatin GO® (catalog) peptides for research use.
In
1999, Kojima and his group (1) reported the discovery of a growth hormone
secretagogue that is involved in the release of growth hormone from the
anterior pituitary through activation of the growth hormone secretagogue
receptor (GHS-R), which they termed Ghrelin (ghre from a
Proto-Indo-European root meaning to grow). Ghrelin, a 28-amino-acid
peptide hormone produced by the stomach of mammals, is a peptide with an
n-octanoyl modification at Ser3 (n-octanoylation is essential for its
activity). It stimulates appetite and food intake and decreases fat
utilization. The secretion of ghrelin is augmented under conditions of both
gastric emptying and filling, and its release stimulated by intestinal hormones
(1-5).
In 2005, Hsueh’s group (6) found a peptide fragment from the same ghrelin gene
that has opposite effects from those of Ghrelin. They named this peptide
Obestatin (obedere from Latin, meaning to devour, and statin
denoting suppression). Obestatin binds to the orphan G protein-coupled receptor
GPR39 and suppresses food intake, inhibits jejunal contraction and decreases
body weight gain (6).
References:
1. Kojima, M. et al. Nature 402, 656 (1999).
2. Kleinz, MJ. et al. Cardiovasc Res. 69, 227 (2006).
3. Murakami, N. et al. J. Endocrinol. 174, 283 (2002).
4. Nishi, Y. et al. Endocrinol. 146, 2709 (2005).
5. Cowley, MA. et al. Neuron 37, 649 (2003).
6. Zhang, JV. et al. Science 310, 996 (2005).
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