Role of prohormone convertases in the tissue-specific processing of proglucagon.

S Dhanvantari, NG Seidah… - Molecular …, 1996 - academic.oup.com
Molecular endocrinology, 1996academic.oup.com
Proglucagon (proG) is processed in a tissue-specific manner to glucagon in the pancreas
and to gilcentin, oxyntomodulin, glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1, and GLP-2 in the intestine.
Recombinant vaccinia virus (vv) vectors were used to infect prohormone convertase 1 (PC1)
or PC2 into nonendocrine (BHK-proG) cells, which stably express proG. Similarly, endocrine
(GH3, AtT-20) cells were coinfected with proG along with PC1 or PC2 alone, or in
combination with furin, PACE4, PC5a, or PC5b. Cell extracts were analyzed for various proG …
Abstract
Proglucagon (proG) is processed in a tissue-specific manner to glucagon in the pancreas and to gilcentin, oxyntomodulin, glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1, and GLP-2 in the intestine. Recombinant vaccinia virus (vv) vectors were used to infect prohormone convertase 1 (PC1) or PC2 into nonendocrine (BHK-proG) cells, which stably express proG. Similarly, endocrine (GH3, AtT-20) cells were coinfected with proG along with PC1 or PC2 alone, or in combination with furin, PACE4, PC5a, or PC5b. Cell extracts were analyzed for various proG-derived peptides by RIA of fractions obtained from HPLC. Upon infection of BHK-proG cells with either vv: furin or vv:PC1, glicentin was produced, while vv: PC2 did not process proG. In GH3 and AtT-20 cells, vv:PC1 produced glicentin, oxyntomodulin, GLP-1(1-37), GLP-1(7-37), and GLP-2. All other enzymes tested produced only glicentin. Interestingly, no enzyme or combination produced glucagon. Coinfection of GH3 cells with vv:PC2 and members of the chromogranin family of peptides, including chromogranin A and B and secretogranin II, as well as the PC2-binding protein 7B2, did not result in processing to glucagon. It is concluded that: 1) PC1 is responsible for the processing of proG to produce the intestinal peptides glicentin, oxyntomodulin, GLP-1(1-37), GLP-1(7-37), and GLP-2, and 2) PC2 processes proG to glicentin but does not produce glucagon, alone or in combination with other enzymes or with known molecular chaperones.
Oxford University Press