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Dive into the research topics where Timothy K. Hayes is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy K. Hayes.


FEBS Letters | 1990

Locustatachykinin I and II, two novel insect neuropeptides with homology to peptides of the vertebrate tachykinin family

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Timothy K. Hayes; Ronald J. Nachman; Arnold De Loof

Two myotropic peptides termed locustatachykinin I (Gly‐Pro‐Ser‐Gly‐Phe‐Tyr‐Gly‐Val‐Arg‐NH2) and locustatachykinin II (Ala‐Pro‐Leu‐Ser‐Gly‐Phe‐Tyr‐Gly‐Val‐Arg‐NH2) were isolated from brain‐corpora cardiaca‐corpora allata‐suboesophageal ganglion extracts of the locust, Locusta migratoria. Both peptides exhibit sequence homologies with the vertebrate tachykinins. Sequence homology is greater with the fish and amphibian tachykinins (up to 45%) than with the mammalian tachykinins. In addition, the intestinal myotropic activity of the locustatachykinins is analogous to that of vertebrate tachykinins. The peptides discovered in this study may just be the first in a whole series of substances from arthropod species to be identified as tachykinin family peptides. Moreover, both chemical and biological similarities of vertebrate and insect tachykinins substantiate the evidence for a long evolutionary history of the tachykinin peptide family.


Life Sciences | 1989

Leucokinins, a new family of ion transport stimulators and inhibitors in insect Malpighian tubules

Timothy K. Hayes; Thomas L. Pannabecker; D.J. Hinckley; G.M. Holman; Ronald J. Nachman; D.H. Petzel; Klaus W. Beyenbach

Leucokinins are octapeptides isolated from heads of the cockroach Leucophaea maderae. In the cockroach they increase motility of the isolated hindgut. Surprisingly, synthetic leucokinins have biological activity in a different insect and in a different tissue. In isolated Malpighian tubules of the yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti, leucokinins depolarize the transepithelial voltage. This effect on voltage is dependent on extracellular Cl. One leucokinin, LK-8, the effects of which were studied further in isolated Malpighian tubules, was found to inhibit transepithelial fluid secretion at low concentrations (10(-11) M threshold), and to stimulate fluid secretion at high concentrations (3.5 x 10(-9) M threshold). Together, the depolarizing effects on voltage and the stimulation of fluid secretion suggest that leucokinins increase the Cl permeability of the tubule wall thereby increasing the availability of Cl for secretion with Na, K and water. Structure-function comparisons of the seven leucokinins studied suggest that the active region of the octapeptide is segregated to the C-terminal pentapeptide. In view of the known effects of leucokinins on hindgut motility in the cockroach, our finding of effects in mosquito Malpighian tubules suggests that leucokinins may be widely distributed in insects where they may have diverse functions in a variety of organs.


Regulatory Peptides | 1991

Isolation, identification and synthesis of locustamyoinhibiting peptide (LOM-MIP), a novel biologically active neuropeptide from Locusta migratoria.

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Timothy K. Hayes; Ronald J. Nachman; Arnold De Loof

A novel peptide termed locustamyoinhibiting peptide (LOM-MIP) was isolated from brain-corpora cardiaca-corpora allata-suboesophageal ganglion extracts of the locust, Locusta migratoria. The primary structure of this nonapeptide has been determined Ala-Trp-Gln-Asp-Leu-Asn-Ala-Gly-Trp-NH2. LOM-MIP suppresses the spontaneous contractions of the hindgut and oviduct of Locusta migratoria and of the hindgut of Leucophaea maderae. This novel peptide is, however, structurally different from leucomyosuppressin, a hindgut suppressing peptide isolated from Leucophaea maderae heads. LOM-MIP has a Gly-TrpNH2 carboxy-terminal in common with APGWamide, a penis retractor muscle inhibiting peptide isolated from the snail, Lymnea stagnalis. In addition, it shows carboxy-terminal sequence similarities with locust AKH II which ends in AGWamide. No sequence similarities were found with other vertebrate or invertebrate peptides. Synthetic LOM-MIP showed biological as well as chemical characteristics indistinguishable from those of native LOM-MIP.


Regulatory Peptides | 1990

Locustatachykinin III and IV : two additional insect neuropeptides with homology to peptides of the vertebrate tachykinin family

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Timothy K. Hayes; Jan Kochansky; Ronald J. Nachman; Arnold De Loof

Two myotropic peptides termed locustatachykinin III and IV were isolated from 9000 brain-corpora cardiaca-corpora allata-suboesophageal ganglion extracts of the locust, Locusta migratoria. The primary structures of Lom-TK III and IV were established as amidated decapeptides: Ala-Pro-Gln-Ala-Gly-Phe-Tyr-Gly-Val-Arg-NH2 (Lom-TK III) and Ala-Pro-Ser-Leu-Gly-Phe-His-Gly-Val-Arg-NH2 (Lom-TK IV). The locustatachykinins were synthesized and shown to have chromatographic and biological properties identical with those of the native materials. They stimulate visceral muscle contractions of the oviduct and the foregut of Locusta migratoria and of the hindgut of Leucophaea maderae. Both peptides exhibit sequence homologies with the vertebrate tachykinins. Sequence similarity is greater with the fish and amphibian tachykinins (up to 40%) than with the mammalian tachykinins. In addition, the intestinal and oviducal myotropic activity of the locustatachykinins is analogous to that of vertebrate tachykinins. Both chemical and biological similarities of vertebrate and insect tachykinins substantiates the evidence for a long evolutionary history of the tachykinin peptide family.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 1991

Isolation, primary structure, and synthesis of locustapyrokinin: a myotropic peptide of Locusta migratoria.

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Timothy K. Hayes; Ronald J. Nachman; Arnold De Loof

A neuropeptide which stimulates the motility of the cockroach hindgut has been isolated from an extract of 9000 brain-corpora cardiaca-corpora allata-subesophageal ganglion complexes of Locusta migratoria. Biological activity was monitored during HPLC purification by observing the myotropic effect of column fractions on the isolated hindgut of Leucophaea maderae. The primary structure of this myotropic peptide was established as a blocked 16-residue peptide: pGlu-Asp-Ser-Gly-Asp-Gly-Trp-Pro-Gln-Gln-Pro-Phe-Val-Pro-Arg-Leu-NH2. This novel locust peptide was designated as locustapyrokinin, or Lom-PK. Lom-PK was synthesized and shown to have chromatographic and biological properties identical to those of the native material. Lom-PK has a Phe-X-Pro-Arg-Leu-NH2 carboxy terminal in common with leucopyrokinin (or Lem-PK), a blocked myotropic neuropeptide isolated from the cockroach hindgut. The constituent amino acids of this C-terminal are important for biological activity on the Leucophaea hindgut. The primary structure of this novel insect peptide is, however, substantially different from Lem-PK at the amino-terminal sequence.


Regulatory Peptides | 1992

Locustakinin, a novel myotropic peptide from Locusta migratoria, isolation, primary structure and synthesis.

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Paul Proost; Jo Van Damme; Timothy K. Hayes; Arnold De Loof

The isolated hindgut of the cockroach, Leucophaea maderae is a very efficient bioassay tool for the monitoring of certain structural types of insect myotropic peptides during HPLC purification. Using this detection system, a six residue peptide has been isolated from an extract of 9000 brain corpora cardiaca-corpora allata suboesophageal ganglion complexes of Locusta migratoria. Amino acid composition and sequence analysis combined with enzymatic digestion data established the structure of the novel peptide as Ala-Phe-Ser-Ser-Trp-Gly-amide. The chromatographic and biological properties of the synthetic peptide were the same as those of the native peptide, thus confirming structural analysis. The carboxy-terminal pentamer sequence is the active core of leucokinins II, V and VII and of achetakinin III (myotropic neuropeptides isolated from Leucophaea m. and from Acheta domesticus; Holman et al., 1990). Furthermore, the octapeptide leucokinin VII contains the novel sequence as its carboxy-terminal hexamer and Achetakinin V (AFHSWGamide) differs from it by one residue. This new peptide designated as locustakinin I (locusts) may therefore represent an evolutionary molecular link between leucokinin VII (cockroaches) and achetakinin V (crickets). Using synthetic locustakinin, physiological studies will be performed in the locust. In view of the known effects of leucokinins, locustakinin may be important in the stimulation of ion transport and inhibition of diuretic activity in Malpighian tubules. This study indicates that the AFXSWGamide sequence appears to have been well conserved and that members of this peptide family may be widely distributed among insects and posses a number of functions.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

Insect hypertrehalosemic hormone: Isolation and primary structure from Blaberusdiscoidalis cockroaches

Timothy K. Hayes; Larry L. Keeley; Dan W. Knight

A new neurohormone was isolated and structurally characterized that increased hemolymph carbohydrate (trehalose) levels in the cockroach, Blaberus discoidalis. The hormone was isolated in high yield by a rapid HPLC procedure. The sequence, pGlu-Val-Asn-Phe-Ser-Pro-Gly-Trp-Gly-Thr-NH2, was suggested from gas-phase Edman degradation of a peptide fragment of the natural peptide after deblocking with pyroglutamate aminopeptidase. The structure was confirmed by synthesis of the suggested sequence. The synthetic peptide had identical chromatographic and biological properties as the natural peptide.


Insect Biochemistry | 1990

Isolation, identification and synthesis of locustamyotropin II, an additional neuropeptide of Locusta migratoria: Member of the cephalomyotropic peptide family

Liliane Schoofs; G. Mark Holman; Timothy K. Hayes; Ronald J. Nachman; Arnold De Loof

Abstract An eight residue neuropeptide (Glu-Gly-Asp-Phe-Thr-Pro-Arg-Leu-NH 2 ) has been isolated from an extract of 9000 brain corpora cardiaca-corpora allata-suboesophageal ganglion complexes of Locusta migratoria . Biological activity was monitored during HPLC purification by observing the myotropic effect of column fractions on the isolated hindgut of Leucophaea maderae . The peptide designated as locustamyotropin II, or Lom-MT II according to Raina and Gade ( Insect Biochem. 18, 785–787, 1988), has a Phe- X -Pro-Arg-Leu-NH 2 carboxyl-terminal in common with the previously identified locustamyotropin I. Locustamyotropin II is also related to leucopyrokinin (Lem-PK), a blocked myotropic neuropeptide isolated from cockroach heads. Both peptides have identical carboxyterminal pentapeptide sequences. The constituent amino acids of this C-terminal are important for biological activity on the Leucophaea hindgut. Lom-MT II differs from Lem-PK in the first three aminoterminal residues. In contrast to Lem-PK and like Lom-MT I, the novel locust peptide is not N-terminally blocked. Lom-MT II has a stimulatory effect on the motility of the oviduct of Locusta but not on the hindgut.


Regulatory Peptides | 1994

Culekinin depolarizing peptide: a mosquito leucokinin-like peptide that influences insect Malpighian tubule ion transport

Timothy K. Hayes; G. Mark Holman; Thomas L. Pannabecker; Mark S. Wright; Allison Strey; Ronald J. Nachman; David F. Hoel; Jimmy K. Olson; Klaus W. Beyenbach

A peptide termed culekinin depolarizing peptide (CDP) was isolated from approximately 1.2 million mosquitos (94% Culex salinarius). The peptide was isolated on the basis of a rapid myotropic assay that utilized a hindgut preparation from Leucophaea maderae and a transepithelial voltage assay that used mosquito Malpighian tubules from Aedes aegypti. A 15% trifluoroacetic acid extraction from the mosquitos, two solid phase extraction steps, and six HPLC steps resulted in the isolation of 9.7 nmol of CDP. This value corresponds to approximately 8 fmol/mosquito. Edman degradation indicated the following sequence for CDP: Asn-Pro-Phe-His-Ser-Trp-Gly-NH2. The sequence was confirmed as the suspected C-terminal amide form of the peptide, since native and synthetic CDP had identical chemical and biological properties. CDP is a member of the leucokinin family of neuropeptides. The leucokinins have been found in three other insect species (Leucophaea maderae, Acheta domesticus and Locusta migratoria) where these peptides were isolated by their myotropic properties alone. CDP shares a C-terminal sequence homology (i.e., Phe-X-Ser-Trp-Gly-NH2) with the rest of the leucokinins. CDP corresponds to the strongest tubule depolarizing activity in the C. salinarius extract. These findings agree with previous structure-activity studies that suggest that mosquitos would contain a leucokinin-like factor that had Phe-His-Ser-Trp-Gly-NH2 as the C-terminal pentapeptide. This is the first leucokinin isolated from blood feeding or holometabolous insects.


Peptides | 1994

Isolation and characterization of a diuretic peptide common to the house fly and stable fly

Frank L. Clottens; G. Mark Holman; Geoffrey M. Coast; Nicholas F. Totty; Timothy K. Hayes; Iain Kay; Anthony I. Mallet; Mark S. Wright; Jum-Sook Chung; Oanh Truong; Don L. Bull

An identical CRF-related diuretic peptide (Musca-DP) was isolated and characterized from whole-body extracts of the house fly, Musca domestica, and stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans. The peptide stimulates cyclic AMP production in Manduca sexta Malpighian tubules and increases the rate of fluid secretion by isolated Musca domestica tubules. The 44-residue peptide, with a mol.wt. of 5180, is amidated, and has the primary structure: NKPSLSIVNPLDVLRQRLLLEIARRQMKENTRQVELNRAILKNV-NH2. Musca-DP has a high percentage of sequence identity with other characterized CRF-related insect diuretic peptides.

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G. Mark Holman

United States Department of Agriculture

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Ronald J. Nachman

United States Department of Agriculture

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Arnold De Loof

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Liliane Schoofs

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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