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.

Highlights

  • Corin is a transmembrane protease containing 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites

  • 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

  • Because corin is activated on the cell surface [26], the corin-p band serves as an indicator for corin cell surface targeting and activation

Read more

Summary

Background

Corin is a transmembrane protease containing 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites. Results: Corin mutants lacking individual N-glycosylation sites were studied for their biosynthesis and processing. It has been shown that N-glycans are required for corin cell surface expression and zymogen activation. 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. Similar roles of N-glycosylation in regulating cell surface expression and zymogen activation have been reported in other type II transmembrane serine proteases, such as enteropeptidase [30], matriptase [31], and matriptase-2 [32], which are involved in food digestion, epithelial function, and iron metabolism, respectively [33, 34]. Our results indicate that N-glycans at individual sites have different roles in regulating corin cell membrane targeting, zymogen activation, and ectodomain shedding

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call