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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Characterization of the endopeptidase PC2 activity towards secretogranin II in stably transfected PC12 cells.

To study the processing of secretogranin II (SgII) by the prohormone convertase PC2 we have generated a stable PC12 cell line which expresses mouse PC2. We here present the characteristics of the PC12/PC2 cell line and demonstrate that the exogenous PC2 is sorted and stored in secretory granules in the PC12/PC2 cell line as efficiently as the endogenous granins. By indirect immunofluorescence with antibodies specific for chromogranin B (CgB) and PC2 we were able to establish that the PC2 is stored in secretory granules in the PC12/PC2 cell line. After subcellular fractionation, followed by immunoblotting, the mature 68 kDa form of PC2 was found co-sedimented with SgII in fractions containing secretory granules. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was used to characterize a secretory granule fraction obtained from the PC12/PC2 cells, and a comparison was done of the electrophoretic pattern obtained from the PC12/PC2 cells with the parent cell line PC12. The products derived from the processing of SgII by PC2 were identified by immunoblotting with a panel of antibodies directed against SgII. Using [35S]sulphate to label the newly synthesized SgII, we performed a time course to monitor the appearance of the lower-molecular-mass fragments of SgII: beginning 15 min after a 5 min pulse of [35S]sulphate we were able to detect the first proteolytic fragment of SgII. Our results demonstrate that SgII is proteolytically processed by PC2 in the immature secretory granule into several lower-molecular-mass proteins, the major ones being an 18 kDa sulphated fragment and a 28 kDa fragment.[1]

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