Abstract

Bone morphogenetic protein 10 (BMP10) is a member of the TGF-β superfamily and plays a critical role in heart development. In the postnatal heart, BMP10 is restricted to the right atrium. The inactive pro-BMP10 (∼60 kDa) is processed into active BMP10 (∼14 kDa) by an unknown protease. Proteolytic cleavage occurs at the RIRR(316)↓ site (human), suggesting the involvement of proprotein convertase(s) (PCs). In vitro digestion of a 12-mer peptide encompassing the predicted cleavage site with furin, PACE4, PC5/6, and PC7, showed that furin cleaves the best, whereas PC7 is inactive on this peptide. Ex vivo studies in COS-1 cells, a cell line lacking PC5/6, revealed efficient processing of pro-BMP10 by endogenous PCs other than PC5/6. The lack of processing of overexpressed pro-BMP10 in the furin- and PACE4-deficient cell line, CHO-FD11, and in furin-deficient LoVo cells, was restored by stable (CHO-FD11/Fur cells) or transient (LoVo cells) expression of furin. Use of cell-permeable and cell surface inhibitors suggested that endogenous PCs process pro-BMP10 mostly intracellularly, but also at the cell surface. Ex vivo experiments in mouse primary hepatocytes (wild type, PC5/6 knock-out, and furin knock-out) corroborated the above findings that pro-BMP10 is a substrate for endogenous furin. Western blot analyses of heart right atria extracts from wild type and PACE4 knock-out adult mice showed no significant difference in the processing of pro-BMP10, implying no in vivo role of PACE4. Overall, our in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo data suggest that furin is the major convertase responsible for the generation of BMP10.

Highlights

  • The heart is the first organ to be formed during embryogenesis and it develops via a complex and sequential process that involves simultaneous morphogenesis and differentiation

  • The restricted expression of Bone morphogenetic protein 10 (BMP10) mRNA to the right atrium (RA) of the heart in adult mice, and heart-specific phenotypes observed in mice lacking furin, PC5/6, or PACE4, led us to test the implication of these convertases in the generation of mature BMP10

  • Bioinformatic Analysis of Potential Secretory proprotein convertase(s) (PCs) Substrates Exhibiting Asn at P1Ј, and Whose Gene Deletion Is Associated with Heart Defects—Genetic evidence indicated that the proprotein convertases play key roles in cardiogenesis and leftright or antero-posterior patterning (PC5/6) [5,6,7,8]

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Summary

Introduction

The heart is the first organ to be formed during embryogenesis and it develops via a complex and sequential process that involves simultaneous morphogenesis and differentiation. We first expressed a recombinant human proBMP10 in COS-1 cells and analyzed the secreted products by SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions, followed by Western blotting using an antibody that only recognizes the native precursor and its mature BMP10 form (nonreducing conditions are recommended by the R&D manufacturer of the BMP10 antibody) (Fig. 1A, left panel).

Results
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