Vol. 282, Issue 5, G766-G775, May 2002
Gastrin biosynthesis in canine G cells
Vinzenz
Stepan1,
Kentaro
Sugano2,
Tadataka
Yamada3,
Jung
Park2, and
Chris J.
Dickinson1
Departments of 1 Pediatrics and
2 Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48109-0656; 3 GlaxoSmithKline, King of Prussia,
Pennsylvania 19406-0939
Gastrin requires extensive
posttranslational processing for full biological activity. It is
presumed that progastrin is cleaved at pairs of basic amino acids by a
prohormone convertase to form a glycine-extended intermediate (G-Gly)
that serves as a substrate for peptidyl-glycine
-amidating
monooxygenase (PAM), resulting in COOH-terminally amidated gastrin. To
confirm the nature of progastrin processing in a primary cell line, we
performed [35S]methionine-labeled pulse-chase
biosynthetic experiments in canine antral G cells. Radiolabeled
progastrin reached a peak earlier than observed for G-Gly or amidated
gastrin. G-Gly radioactivity accumulated in G cells and preceded the
appearance of radioactivity in amidated gastrin. The conversion of
G-Gly to amidated gastrin was enhanced by the PAM cofactor ascorbic
acid. To determine whether one member of the prohormone convertase
family (PC2) was responsible for progastrin cleavage, G cells were
incubated with PC2 antisense oligonucleotide probes. Cells treated with
antisense probes had reduced PC2 expression, an accumulation of
radiolabeled progastrin, and a delay in the formation of amidated
gastrin. Progastrin in antral G cells is cleaved via PC2 to form G-Gly
that is converted to amidated gastrin via the actions of PAM.
COOH-terminally amidated gastrin; prohormone convertase; peptidyl-glycine
-amidating monooxygenase; glycine