화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.290, No.1, 191-196, 2002
Insertion of dibasic residues directs a constitutive protein to the regulated secretory pathway
The mechanisms for sorting proteins to the regulated secretory pathway (RSP) remains poorly understood. We recently reported that dibasic sequences that are cleaved by pro-protein convertases (PCs) in pro-neurotensin also acted as sorting signal for the precursor. Here we addressed two questions regarding the role of dibasics as sorting signal: (i) Are dibasics sufficient to direct proteins to the RSP? (ii) Do they sort proteins by virtue of their interaction with PCs? The first question was studied by inserting dibasics in beta-lactamase, a constitutively secreted protein and comparing the regulated secretion of beta-lactamase to that of its mutant in transfected endocrine cells. The second question was investigated by comparing the regulated release of pro-neurotensin in PC 12 cells that are devoid of PCs to that in PC1- and PC2-transfected PC 12 cells. The data show that the mutant beta-lactamase was indeed targeted in part to the RSP and that pro-neurotensin was sorted to the RSP without the assistance of the PCs, thus indicating that dibasics can act as sorting signal by themselves independently of their interaction with PCs. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science.