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      Agouti protein is an antagonist of the melanocyte-stimulating-hormone receptor.

      Nature
      Adenylate Cyclase, metabolism, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, Agouti Signaling Protein, Animals, Baculoviridae, Cattle, Cell Line, Enzyme Activation, Hair, Humans, Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins, Mice, Obesity, etiology, Proteins, physiology, Receptors, Pituitary Hormone, antagonists & inhibitors, Recombinant Proteins, Tumor Cells, Cultured

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          Abstract

          The genetic loci agouti and extension control the relative amounts of eumelanin (brown-black) and phaeomelanin (yellow-red) pigments in mammals: extension encodes the receptor for melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and agouti encodes a novel 131-amino-acid protein containing a signal sequence. Agouti, which is produced in the hair follicle, acts on follicular melanocytes to inhibit alpha-MSH-induced eumelanin production, resulting in the subterminal band of phaeomelanin often visible in mammalian fur. Here we use partially purified agouti protein to demonstrate that agouti is a high-affinity antagonist of the MSH receptor and blocks alpha-MSH stimulation of adenylyl cyclase, the effector through which alpha-MSH induces eumelanin synthesis. Agouti was also found to be an antagonist of the melanocortin-4 receptor, a related MSH-binding receptor. Consequently, the obesity caused by ectopic expression of agouti in the lethal yellow (Ay) mouse may be due to the inhibition of melanocortin receptor(s) outside the hair follicle.

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