Granulocyte pro-myeloperoxidase is redundantly processed by proprotein convertase furin and PC7 in HL-60 cells.
Vanessa LapointeFrédéric CouturePublished in: Biochemistry and cell biology = Biochimie et biologie cellulaire (2024)
Neutrophil myeloperoxidase/H 2 O 2 /chloride system is a key mechanism to control pathogen infection. This enzyme, myeloperoxidase, plays a pivotal role in the arsenal of azurophilic granules that are released through degranulation upon neutrophil activation, which trigger local hypochlorous acid production. Myeloperoxidase gene encodes a protein precursor named promyeloperoxidase that arbors a propeptide that gets cleaved later during secretory routing in post-endoplasmic reticulum compartments. Although evidence suggested that this processing event was performed by one or different enzymes from the proprotein convertases family, the identity of this enzyme was never investigated. In this work, the naturally producing myeloperoxidase promyelocytic cell line HL-60 was used to investigate promyeloperoxidase cleavage during granulocytic differentiation in response to proprotein convertase inhibitors decanoyl-RVKR-chloromethylketone and hexa-d-arginine. Stable PC knockdown of endogenously expressed proprotein convertases, furin and PC7, was achieved using lentiviral delivery of shRNAs. None of the knockdown cell line could reproduce the effect of the pan-proprotein convertases inhibitor decanoyl-RVKR-chloromethylketone that accumulated intracellular promyeloperoxidase stores in HL-60 cells, therefore illustrating that both furin and PC7 redundantly process this proprotein.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- endoplasmic reticulum
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- dna methylation
- mass spectrometry
- anti inflammatory
- peripheral blood
- transcription factor
- small molecule
- reactive oxygen species
- fluorescent probe
- genome wide identification
- recombinant human