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  • Title: C-terminal processing of human beta-glucuronidase. The propeptide is required for full expression of catalytic activity, intracellular retention, and proper phosphorylation.
    Author: Islam MR, Grubb JH, Sly WS.
    Journal: J Biol Chem; 1993 Oct 25; 268(30):22627-33. PubMed ID: 8226771.
    Abstract:
    beta-Glucuronidase undergoes proteolytic C-terminal processing during or after its transport to lysosomes or endosomes. We determined the C-terminal processing site for human placental beta-glucuronidase to be the peptide bond between Thr633-Arg634. To evaluate the role of the 18-amino acid peptide removed in C-terminal processing, we changed the codon for Arg634 to a stop codon by site-directed mutagenesis and studied expression of the truncated mutant enzyme in COS-7 cells. An increased fraction of newly synthesized enzyme from R634Stop cDNA was secreted. Pulse-chase experiments provided no evidence for increased degradation of the intracellular R634Stop enzyme. The total amount of catalytic activity expressed from the R634Stop mutant cDNA was only half that seen with the wild type cDNA, and the Kcat of the mutant enzyme was 52% that of wild type enzyme. These results indicate that the C-terminal propeptide in the precursor is important for beta-glucuronidase to achieve maximal activity. The truncated enzyme formed hybrid tetramers in cotransfection experiments with the cDNA for rat beta-glucuronidase. There appeared to be no decrease in stability of the R634Stop enzyme, since chaotropic agents, heat treatment, and pH had similar effects on the mutant and the wild type enzymes. The uptake rate of the truncated mutant (R634Stop) enzyme by beta-glucuronidase-deficient human fibroblast cells was only 55-60% that of the wild type enzyme. Binding to the immobilized cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor and measurement of the 32P-labeled phosphorylated oligosaccharides revealed that the truncated mutant enzyme was 32-34% less phosphorylated and appeared to contain proportionately more covered phosphate groups than the wild type enzyme. These results suggest that the propeptide influences the accessibility to both processing enzymes that produce the mannose-6-phosphate recognition marker on beta-glucuronidase.
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