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  • Title: In vitro processing of anthrax toxin protective antigen by recombinant PC1 (SPC3) and bovine intermediate lobe secretory vesicle membranes.
    Author: Friedman TC, Gordon VM, Leppla SH, Klimpel KR, Birch NP, Loh YP.
    Journal: Arch Biochem Biophys; 1995 Jan 10; 316(1):5-13. PubMed ID: 7840657.
    Abstract:
    Protective antigen (PA), an 83-kDa protein produced by Bacillus anthracis, requires proteolytic activation at a tetrabasic site (RKKR167) before it can combine with either edema factor or lethal factor on the cell surface. The complex is then endocytosed and the target cell intoxicated. Previous work has demonstrated that furin, a ubiquitously distributed, subtilisin-like protease, can perform this cleavage. In this study, another member of the furin family, PC1 (SPC3), was tested as a putative processing enzyme for PA. Recombinant PC1, partially purified from the medium of stably transfected L-cells, cleaved PA to a 63-kDa fragment (PA63) and a 20-kDa fragment (PA20). Amino-terminal sequence analysis of the 63 kDa product demonstrated that cleavage occurred between Arg167 and Ser168. The pH optimum for in vitro PA cleavage was 6.0 and the enzymatic activity was calcium-dependent. Medium from untransfected L-cells did not cleave PA. Site-directed mutagenesis of the tetrabasic cleavage site revealed that PC1 preferred to cleave sequences containing basic residues at positions -1 and -4 relative to the wild-type cleavage site, demonstrating that PC1 can cleave substrates at a monobasic residue site in vitro. Substrates having basic residues at the -1 and -2 positions were cleaved with approximately twofold less efficiency than wild-type PA. Mutants of PA containing basic residues in positions -1 and either -2 or -4 of the cleavage site were predicted to be substrates for PC1 and were more toxic to L-cells expressing PC1 than to untransfected L-cells. These results demonstrate that PA is cleaved by PC1 in vivo. Membranes from bovine intermediate lobe secretory vesicles which contain both prohormone convertases, PC1 and PC2, also cleaved PA to PA63 with a pH optimum of 5.5. Immunodepletion studies using antisera against PC1 and PC2 showed that these are the enzymes primarily responsible for the cleavage of PA in the membrane preparation. Thus, both recombinant PC1 and a membrane preparation containing endogenous PC1 can activate PA.
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