Abstract
Corin is a cardiac transmembrane serine protease. In cell-based studies, corin converted pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (pro-ANP) to mature ANP, suggesting that corin is potentially the pro-ANP convertase. In this study, we evaluated the importance of the transmembrane domain and activation cleavage in human corin. We showed that a soluble corin that consists of only the extracellular domain was capable of processing recombinant human pro-ANP in cell-based assays. In contrast, a mutation at the conserved activation cleavage site, R801A, abolished the function of corin, demonstrating that the activation cleavage is essential for corin activity. These results allowed us to design, express, and purify a mutant soluble corin, EKsolCorin, that contains an enterokinase recognition sequence at the activation cleavage site. Purified EKsolCorin was activated by enterokinase in a dose-dependent manner. Activated EK-solCorin had hydrolytic activity toward peptide substrates with a preference for Arg and Lys residues in the P-1 position. This activity of EKsolCorin was inhibited by trypsin-like serine protease inhibitors but not inhibitors of chymotrypsin-like, cysteine-, or metallo-proteases. In pro-ANP processing assays, purified active EKsolCorin converted recombinant human pro-ANP to biologically active ANP in a highly sequence-specific manner. The pro-ANP processing activity of EKsolCorin was not inhibited by human plasma. Together, our data indicate that the transmembrane domain is not necessary for the biological activity of corin but may be a mechanism to localize corin at specific sites, whereas the proteolytic cleavage at the activation site is an essential step in controlling the activity of corin.
Highlights
Corin is a mosaic serine protease that was recently identified from the human heart [1, 2]
We showed that a soluble corin that consists of only the extracellular domain was capable of processing recombinant human pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (pro-ANP) in cell-based assays
We examined the importance of the transmembrane domain and the activation cleavage of human corin for its activity in the processing of pro-ANP
Summary
Does not convert pro-C-type natriuretic peptide to mature C-type natriuretic peptide [25], the third member of the natriuretic peptide family [26], which may play a role in angiogenesis and arterial restenosis The results from these experiments suggest that corin is the pro-ANP/pro-brain natriuretic peptide convertase in the heart. Our results showed that the transmembrane domain is not required for corin to process pro-ANP, but proteolytic cleavage of corin at its conserved activation site is essential. Based on these results, we designed, expressed, and purified a soluble form of human corin and studied its biochemical properties. Our results showed that activated soluble human corin hydrolyzed synthetic peptic substrates and activated human pro-ANP in a highly sequence-specific manner
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