In vivo expression of mutant pre-pro endothelins: Hierarchy of processing events but no strict requirement of Trp-Val at the processing site
Academic Article
Publication Date:
1993
abstract:
Endothelin-1 (ET-1), a 21-residue vasoconstrictor
peptide, originates in human cells from a 212-amino
acid precursor (preproET-1). Big ET-1, an intermediate form
of 38 amino acids, is generated by cleavage at basic-pair
residues of proET-1, while a specific "ET-converting enzyme"
was proposed to process the unusual Trp-Val site at positions
21 and 22 of big ET-1. We have previously shown that
expression of synthetic RNA encoding human preproET-1 in
Xenopus oocytes results in secretion of putative ET-1 and big
ET-1. Here, to further dissect the processing pathway of
preproET-1, we designed and expressed in oocytes a set of
preproET-1 mutants. Four mutants affecting the Trp-Val site
always originated putative ET-1(s) at levels comparable to the
wild type, suggesting that there is only a conformational
requirement for cleavage at this site. An Arg -- Ile mutation at
the basic-pair site after the C terminus of big ET-1 fully
inhibited the formation of both big ET-1 and ET-1, indicating
that processing at this site is an early event and that big ET-1
is an obligate intermediate for the synthesis of ET-1 in vivo.
Also, a truncated mutant bearing a stop codon after the C
terminus of the big ET-1 sequence was totally stable and
further processed into mature big ET-1 and ET-1, indicating
that the second part of the precursor is not necessary for
maturation.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Xenopus oocytes; big-endothelin; basic-pair site processing; endothelin/endothelin-converting enzyme
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