Parathyroid hormone degradation is intimately connected with its action. By the action of the unique renal neutral cytosolic PTH ase, PTH is split into 1-34 and 35-84 fragments, and further into 35-70 and 71-84 fragments. Amino-terminal 1-34 peptide was found to participate in the autoregulation of PTH secretion, suppressing the intact PTH secretion both in vivo in humans and in vitro in the dispersed bovine parathyroid cells. C-terminal fragment 35-84 and N-terminal fragment 1-34 both suppress the alkaline phosphatase production by ROS 17/2.8 cells to a lesser extent than the intact PTH 1-84, and the sum of the effects of the two fragments approximately equaled that of the intact hormone. Fragments 35-70 and 71-84 were devoid of such activity. Intracellular free calcium of human vascular endothelial cells was raised by intact 1-84, lowered on the contrary by C-terminal 35-84 fragment, but fragments 1-34, 35-70 and 71-84 had no effect. Fragments generated by the actions, supporting the physiological significance of PTH degradation by its target cells.

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