Prabhu Yogikala, Blanco Elias H, Liu Ming, Peinado Juan R, Wheeler Matthew C, Gekakis Nicholas, Arvan Peter, Lindberg Iris
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology (Y.P., E.H.B., J.R.P., I.L.), University of Maryland-Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland 21201; Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Diabetes (M.L., P.A.), University of Michigan, Michigan 48105; and Department of Cell and Molecular Biology (M.C.W., N.G.), The Scripps Research Institute, San Diego, California 92037.
Endocrinology. 2014 Jul;155(7):2391-401. doi: 10.1210/en.2013-1985. Epub 2014 May 14.
Mutations in the PCSK1 gene encoding prohormone convertase 1/3 (PC1/3) are strongly associated with obesity in humans. The PC1/3(N222D) mutant mouse thus far represents the only mouse model that mimics the PC1/3 obesity phenotype in humans. The present investigation addresses the cell biology of the N222D mutation. Metabolic labeling experiments reveal a clear defect in the kinetics of insulin biosynthesis in islets from PC1/3(N222D) mutant mice, resulting in an increase in both proinsulin and its processing intermediates, predominantly lacking cleavage at the Arg-Arg site. Although the mutant PC1/3 zymogen is correctly processed to the 87-kDa form, pulse-chase immunoprecipitation experiments, labeling, and immunohistochemical experiments using uncleavable variants all demonstrate that the PC1/3-N222D protein is largely mislocalized compared with similar wild-type (WT) constructs, being predominantly retained in the endoplasmic reticulum. The PC1/3-N222D mutant also undergoes more efficient degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome system than the WT enzyme. Lastly, the mutant PC1/3-N222D protein coimmunoprecipitates with WT PC1/3 and exerts a modest effect on intracellular retention of the WT enzyme. These profound alterations in the cell biology of PC1/3-N222D are likely to contribute to the defective insulin biosynthetic events observed in the mutant mice and may be relevant to the dramatic contributions of polymorphisms in this gene to human obesity.
编码激素原转化酶1/3(PC1/3)的PCSK1基因突变与人类肥胖密切相关。迄今为止,PC1/3(N222D)突变小鼠是唯一能模拟人类PC1/3肥胖表型的小鼠模型。本研究探讨了N222D突变的细胞生物学特性。代谢标记实验显示,PC1/3(N222D)突变小鼠胰岛中胰岛素生物合成动力学存在明显缺陷,导致胰岛素原及其加工中间体增加,主要是在精氨酸-精氨酸位点缺乏切割。尽管突变型PC1/3酶原能正确加工成87 kDa形式,但脉冲追踪免疫沉淀实验、标记实验以及使用不可切割变体的免疫组织化学实验均表明,与类似的野生型(WT)构建体相比,PC1/3-N222D蛋白在很大程度上定位错误,主要保留在内质网中。与WT酶相比,PC1/3-N222D突变体还通过泛素-蛋白酶体系统进行更有效的降解。最后,突变型PC1/3-N222D蛋白与WT PC1/3共免疫沉淀,并对WT酶的细胞内滞留产生适度影响。PC1/3-N222D细胞生物学的这些深刻变化可能导致突变小鼠中观察到的胰岛素生物合成缺陷事件,并且可能与该基因多态性对人类肥胖的巨大影响有关。