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Apelin

APLN
Identifiers
Aliases APLN, APEL, XNPEP2, apelin
External IDs OMIM: 300297 MGI: 1353624 HomoloGene: 8498 GeneCards: APLN
Orthologs
Species Human Mouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_017413

NM_013912

RefSeq (protein)

NP_059109

NP_038940.1
NP_038940

Location (UCSC) Chr X: 129.65 – 129.65 Mb Chr X: 48.03 – 48.03 Mb
PubMed search

NM_017413

NM_013912

NP_059109

NP_038940.1
NP_038940

Apelin (also known as APLN) is a peptide that in humans is encoded by the APLN gene. Apelin is the endogenous ligand for the G-protein-coupled APJ receptor that is expressed at the surface of some cell types. It is widely expressed in various organs such as the heart, lung, kidney, liver, adipose tissue, gastrointestinal tract, brain, adrenal glands, endothelium, and human plasma.

Apelin is a new peptide that was identified in 1998 by Professor M. Fujino’s team.

Apelin gene encodes a pre-proprotein of 77 amino acids, with a signal peptide in the N-terminal region. After translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum and cleavage of the signal peptide, the proprotein of 55 amino acids may generate several active fragments: a 36 amino acid peptide corresponding to the sequence 42-77 (apelin 36), a 17 amino acid peptide corresponding to the sequence 61-77 (apelin 17) and a 13 amino acid peptide corresponding to the sequence 65-77 (apelin 13). This latter fragment may also undergo a pyroglutamylation at the level of its N-terminal glutamine residue. However the presence and/or the concentrations of those peptides in human plasma has been questioned. Recently, 46 different apelin peptides ranging from apelin 55 (proapelin) to apelin 12 have been identified in bovine colostrum, including C-ter truncated isoforms.


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