Abstract

Site-directed mutagenesis in which individual cleavage site P1 amino acids were changed to Ala was performed to delineate their importance in the processing of pro-CCK in mouse pituitary tumor AtT-20 cells. Individual substitution of cleavage sites on pro-CCK, viz., CCK 58 cleavage site R/A to A/A, CCK 33 cleavage site R/K to A/K, CCK 22 cleavage site K/N to A/N, and CCK 8 cleavage site R/D to A/D, did not inhibit pro-CCK expression or the production of some form of amidated CCK. Wild-type CCK cDNA expression in these cells results in production and secretion of CCK 8 and CCK 22. Substitution of the 58R/A cleavage site with A/A produces only CCK 33; 33A/K and 22A/N produce only CCK 8, whereas 8A/D produces CCK 12 and some CCK 22. Where the GRR residues on the C-terminus of CCK 8 were mutated to GAA, no amidated CCK was produced. Significant amounts of the pro-CCK, C-terminal peptide S9S was found in the medium of cells transfected with GAA mutant cDNA, indicating that this pro-CCK was cleaved at the GAA site probably by a nonprohormone convertase enzyme. Further analysis of the cells expressing the GAA mutant demonstrated that it is not extensively cleaved at other sites to produce CCK 8 GAA or larger peptides. In the mutant where the entire pro-CCK, C-terminal S9S was deleted, CCK 8 is processed and secreted normally. Thus, the cleavage at the C-terminal GRR site is essential for subsequent cleavages, and modification of other cleavage sites (58, 33, 22, and 8) has a major impact on pro-CCK processing. These results suggest that there is a temporal order of cleavages, and the structure of pro-CCK has a strong influence on where and whether pro-CCK is processed.

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