| Literature DB >> 25451932 |
Hao Wang1, Tiantian Zhou2, Jianhao Peng3, Ping Xu3, Ningzheng Dong2, Shenghan Chen3, Qingyu Wu4.
Abstract
Corin is a membrane-bound protease essential for activating natriuretic peptides and regulating blood pressure. Human corin has 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites in its extracellular domains. It has been shown that N-glycans are required for corin cell surface expression and zymogen activation. It remains unknown, however, how N-glycans at different sites may regulate corin biosynthesis and processing. In this study, we examined corin mutants, in which each of the 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites was mutated individually. By Western analysis of corin proteins in cell lysate and conditioned medium from transfected HEK293 cells and HL-1 cardiomyocytes, we found that N-glycosylation at Asn-80 inhibited corin shedding in the juxtamembrane domain. Similarly, N-glycosylation at Asn-231 protected corin from autocleavage in the frizzled-1 domain. Moreover, N-glycosylation at Asn-697 in the scavenger receptor domain and at Asn-1022 in the protease domain is important for corin cell surface targeting and zymogen activation. We also found that the location of the N-glycosylation site in the protease domain was not critical. N-Glycosylation at Asn-1022 may be switched to different sites to promote corin zymogen activation. Together, our results show that N-glycans at different sites may play distinct roles in regulating the cell membrane targeting, zymogen activation, and ectodomain shedding of corin.Entities:
Keywords: Corin; Ectodomain Shedding; Intracellular Trafficking; Membrane Protease; N-Linked Glycosylation; Proteolytic Enzyme; Serine Protease; Shedding
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25451932 PMCID: PMC4340409 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.606442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157