scholarly journals Biosynthesis of von Willebrand protein by human endothelial cells: processing steps and their intracellular localization.

1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (6) ◽  
pp. 2123-2130 ◽  
Author(s):  
D D Wagner ◽  
V J Marder

Biosynthesis of von Willebrand protein by human umbilical vein endothelial cells involved distinct processing steps marked by the presence of several intermediate molecular species. Examination of endoglycosidase H sensitivity of these intracellular intermediates indicated that the processing steps occurred in at least two separate cellular compartments. In the pre-Golgi apparatus (most probably the endoplasmic reticulum), the high mannose carbohydrates were added onto the precursor monomer chains and the 260,000-mol-wt monomers dimerized by interchain disulfide bond formation. The other processing steps have been localized to the Golgi apparatus and later compartments (e.g., Weibel-Palade bodies). High mannose carbohydrate was converted to the complex type, leading to the appearance of a larger precursor subunit of 275,000 mol wt. The 275,000-mol-wt species was not formed if carbohydrate processing was inhibited by the ionophore monensin. From the large pool of dimers of precursor subunits, the high molecular weight multimers were built. These dimer molecules appeared to have free sulfhydryls which might have been involved in the interdimer disulfide bond formation. Simultaneously with multimerization, the precursor subunits were cleaved to the 220,000-mol-wt form. The cleavage of the pro-sequence was not likely to be an absolute requirement for von Willebrand protein multimerization or secretion, as the 275,000-mol-wt precursor subunit was present in secreted high molecular weight multimers of the protein.

2008 ◽  
Vol 149 (1) ◽  
pp. 412-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessio Lombardi ◽  
Alessandra Barbante ◽  
Pietro Della Cristina ◽  
Daniele Rosiello ◽  
Chiara Lara Castellazzi ◽  
...  

mAbs ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1829333
Author(s):  
Zhijun Tan ◽  
Vivekh Ehamparanathan ◽  
Tingwei Ren ◽  
Peifeng Tang ◽  
Laurel Hoffman ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 190 (17) ◽  
pp. 5738-5745 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sumarin Soonsanga ◽  
Jin-Won Lee ◽  
John D. Helmann

ABSTRACTOhrR proteins can be divided into two groups based on their inactivation mechanism: 1-Cys (represented byBacillus subtilisOhrR) and 2-Cys (represented byXanthomonas campestrisOhrR). A conserved cysteine residue near the amino terminus is present in both groups of proteins and is initially oxidized to the sulfenic acid. TheB. subtilis1-Cys OhrR protein is subsequently inactivated by formation of a mixed-disulfide bond with low-molecular-weight thiols or by cysteine overoxidation to sulfinic and sulfonic acids. In contrast, theX. campestris2-Cys OhrR is inactivated when the initially oxidized cysteine sulfenate forms an intersubunit disulfide bond with a second Cys residue from the other subunit of the protein dimer. Here, we demonstrate that the 1-CysB. subtilisOhrR can be converted into a 2-Cys OhrR by introducing another cysteine residue in either position 120 or position 124. Like theX. campestrisOhrR protein, these mutants (G120C and Q124C) are inactivated by intermolecular disulfide bond formation. Analysis of oxidized 2-Cys variants both in vivo and in vitro indicates that intersubunit disulfide bond formation can occur simultaneously at both active sites in the protein dimer. Rapid formation of intersubunit disulfide bonds protects OhrR against irreversible overoxidation in the presence of strong oxidants much more efficiently than do the endogenous low-molecular-weight thiols.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 333-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hema Kothari ◽  
Ramesh Nayak ◽  
L. Vijaya Mohan Rao ◽  
Usha Pendurthi

Abstract Abstract 333 Tissue factor (TF) plays the key role in initiation of blood coagulation by allosterically activating coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa). TF is essential for hemostasis but aberrant expression would lead to thrombotic disorders. TF on cell surfaces resides mostly in a cryptic state. At present it is not entirely clear how cryptic TF differs from procoagulant active TF and how de-encryption occurs. Recent studies have suggested that cryptic and active TF may have different conformations, i.e., cryptic TF contains unpaired cysteine thiols at Cys 186 and Cys 209 in the membrane proximal domain whereas procoagulant active TF contains the oxidized Cys186-Cys209 disulfide bond. It has been suggested that the catalytic switching of this disulfide bond between reduced and oxidized states by protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) might modulate the activity status of TF. Although the validity of this hypothesis has been questioned, more recent reports have supported the contention that PDI-catalyzed disulfide bond formation of Cys186-Cys209 in TF plays a role in regulation of TF activity both in vitro and in vivo. To reconcile the conflicting data in the recent literature, we re-examined in the present study the central dogma on which the hypothesis was originated, i.e., a TF mutant lacking Cys186-Cys 209 disulfide bond is functionally inactive (cryptic) and that TF activation requires formation of the Cys186-Cys209 disulfide bond. CHO cells were transfected with wild type TF or TF mutants that selectively preclude Cys186-Cys209 disulfide bond formation, i.e., TFC186S, TFC209S, or TFC186S/C209S, and TF procoagulant and antigen expression levels at the cell surface were quantified accurately by measuring TF procoagulant activity in a factor × activation assay and TF antigen levels in radioligand binding studies utilizing two different TF mAb (10H10 and 5G9) and FVIIa. CHO cells transfected with TFC186S, TFC209S or TFC186S/C209S expressed very little procoagulant activity (less than 1% of CHO cells transfected with wild-type TF under identical experimental conditions). However, TF mAb and FVIIa binding studies revealed that CHO cells transfected with TFC186S, TFC209S or TFC186S/C209S expressed very little TF protein on the cell surface (∼ 1 to 2% of CHO cells transfected with wild-type TF). Similar results were obtained whether we mutated Cys 186 or Cys 209 to Ser or Ala or whether we used transient or stable transfections. To confirm that the lower expression of TFC186S, TFC209S or TFC186S/C209S is neither an artifact nor limited to CHO cell model system, we extended these studies to endothelial cells. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were transduced with adenovirus particles (25 moi/cell) encoding wild-type TF, TFC186S, TFC209S or TFC186S/C209S and TF antigen levels at the cell surface and in cell lysates were measured using multiple methods - confocal microscopy, FACS, TF antigen assay, immuno blot analysis, TF mAb binding and FVIIa binding. HUVEC transduced with adenoviral particles encoding TFC186S, TFC209S or TFC186S/C209S expressed very low levels of TF antigen both at the cell surface ( 1 to 5%) as well as in total (10 to 15%) (TFC186S > TFC209S >TFC186S/C209S) compared to HUVEC transduced with the same number of adenovirus particles expressing wild-type TF. Cell surface TF activity measured in the presence of saturating concentrations of FVIIa revealed that the TF procoagulant activity of the mutants correlate well with the amount of TF antigen present on the cell surface, i.e., there were no significant differences in the specific activity of TF mutants and wild-type TF (TF procoagulant activity/amount of TF antigen, pM FXa formed/femto mole TF: wild-type TF, 68 ± 6; TFC186S, 55 ± 10; TFC209S, 57 ± 17; and TFC186S/C209S, 64 ± 0.2). More importantly, treatment of HUVEC with the thiol-oxidizing agent HgCl2 or with ionomycin increased the cell surface TF activity to the same extent (200 to 400% increase over HUVEC treated with control vehicle) in HUVEC expressing TFC186S/C209S or wild-type TF. In summary the present data provide clear evidence for that TF lacking Cys186-Cys209 bond is coagulantly active and a lower TF procoagulant activity in cells expressing the mutant TF that precludes Cys186-Cys209 disulfide bond formation is due to severe impairment in TF protein synthesis/processing and not because the mutant TF assumes the cryptic conformation. Our data also show that TF de-encryption does not require the formation of Cys186-Cys209 disulfide bond. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. 112-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
D D Wagner ◽  
T Mayadas ◽  
M Urban-Pickering ◽  
B H Lewis ◽  
V J Marder

The biosynthesis of von Willebrand protein by human endothelial cells was impaired by the presence of the carboxylic ionophore monensin. Several processing steps that have been localized to the Golgi apparatus were affected in a dose-dependent manner, including carbohydrate processing, dimer multimerization, and precursor cleavage. Since multimerization was more susceptible to the ionophore than was precursor cleavage, it appears that these processing steps are separate events. As expected, dimer formation, which occurs in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, was unaffected by monensin. Thus, at high concentrations of monensin, only dimer molecules were produced and secreted. The observed inhibition of multimer formation and precursor cleavage were not likely the result of incomplete carbohydrate processing, since inhibition of complex carbohydrate formation by swainsonine did not interfere with the other processing steps. Monensin also affected the capacity of endothelial cells to store von Willebrand protein, as the ratio of secreted to cell-associated protein increased dramatically in the presence of monensin, and the processed forms could not be found in the treated cells. The low molecular weight multimers produced in the presence of monensin did not incorporate in the endothelial cells' extracellular matrix nor did they bind to the matrix of human foreskin fibroblasts. In summary, the presence of monensin in human endothelial cell culture produced experimental conditions that mimic Type IIA von Willebrand disease, in that the cells synthesized and secreted only low molecular weight von Willebrand protein multimers, which were functionally defective.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document