PACAP38, consisting of 38 aa residues, was the first
isolated, followed by PACAP27, lacking 11 aa residues
from the C-terminal of PACAP38. The C-terminal of both
PACAPs was amidated. PACAP belongs to the secretin/
glucagon superfamily, and its closest member is the vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), which shows 68% aa
sequence identity. Human PACAPs are derived from a
176-aa residue precursor, located in the C-terminus, next
to the PACAP-related peptide (PRP) . The
PACAP precursor is cleaved by various prohormone convertases (PCs) to generate PACAP27 or PACAP38. From
the evolutionary aspect of the superfamily, the ancestral
peptide emerged about 700 million years ago, and
PACAP was established by gene duplication, exon duplication, and exon deletion. The PACAP sequence is well
conserved in vertebrates, and is perfectly conserved in
mammals. Stingray PACAP has 44 aa residues with two predicted processing sites, suggesting that
the processing site of preproPACAP shows diversity in
species. Human PACAP27, theoretical Mr 3147.6, pI 9.70;
human PACAP38, theoretical Mr 4534.3, pI 10.41.
PACAP is freely soluble in water and ethanol. PACAP
solution in water is unstable at 4°C, but is stable for a year
at -80°C at 0.1mM.