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Species-specific differences in the processing of acid alpha-glucosidase are due to the amino acid identity at position 201

  作者 Moreland, RJ; Higgins, S; Zhou, AQ; VanStraten, P; Cauthron, RD; Brem, M; McLarty, BJ; Kudo, M; Canfield, WM  
  选自 期刊  Gene;  卷期  2012年491-1;  页码  25-30  
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[摘要]Acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) is a lysosomal enzyme that hydrolyzes glycogen to glucose. Deficiency of GM causes Pompe disease. Mammalian GAA is synthesized as a precursor of similar to 110,000 Da that is N-glycosylated and targeted to the lysosome via the MOP receptors. In the lysosome, human GAA is sequentially processed by proteases to polypeptides of 76-, 19.4-, and 3.9-kDa that remain associated. Further cleavage between R(200) and A(204) inefficiently converts the 76-kDa polypeptide to the mature 70-kDa form with an additional 10.4-kDa polypeptide. GAA maturation increases its affinity for glycogen by 7-10 fold. In contrast to human GAA, processing of bovine and hamster GM to the 70-kDa form is more rapid. A comparison of sequences surrounding the cleavage site revealed human GAA contains histidine at 201 while other species contain hydrophobic amino acids at position 201 in the otherwise conserved sequence. Recombinant human GAA (rhGAA) containing the H201L substitution was expressed in 293T cells by transfection. Pulse chase experiments in 293 T cells expressing rhGAA with or without the H201L substitution revealed rapid processing of rhGAA(H201L) but not rhGAA(WT) to the 70-kDa form. Similarly, when GM precursor was endocytosed by human Pompe fibroblasts rhGAA(H201L) but not rhGAA(WT) was rapidly converted to the 70-kDa mature GAA. These studies indicate that the amino acid at position 201 influences the rate of conversion of 76-kDa GAA to 70-kDa GAA. The GAA sequence rather than the lysosomal protease environment explains the predominance of the 76-kDa form in human tissues. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

 
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