RESUMEN
Two melanotropic peptides, melanin concentration hormone (MCH) and alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH), exert opposing actions on melanosome (melanin granule) movements within teleost pigment cells, melanocytes (melanophores). MCH stimulates melanosome aggregation to the cell center whereas alpha-MSH stimulates pigment organelle dispersion out into the dendritic processes of the melanocytes. The actions of alpha-MSH are dependent upon extracellular calcium (Ca2+), whereas those of MCH are actually enhanced in the absence of the cation. At high concentrations (10(-5)-10(-8) M) MCH also exhibits MSH-like activity (autoantagonism), an effect which is abolished in the absence of Ca2+. Therefore, MCH exhibits MCH-like as well as MSH-like activity depending on the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. An analogue of MCH, [Ala5, Cys10]MCH, has been synthesized which is totally devoid of MCH activity but still exhibits MSH-like activity. These results suggest that the two melanotropic peptides share some component of structural similarity and may be evolutionarily related.