A Prodomain Fragment from the Proteolytic Activation of Growth Differentiation Factor 11 Remains Associated with the Mature Growth Factor and Keeps It Soluble.
Biochemistry
; 56(33): 4405-4418, 2017 08 22.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-28715204
Growth differentiation factor 11 (GDF11), a member of the transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) family, plays diverse roles in mammalian development. It is synthesized as a large, inactive precursor protein containing a prodomain, pro-GDF11, and exists as a homodimer. Activation requires two proteolytic processing steps that release the prodomains and transform latent pro-GDF11 into active mature GDF11. In studying proteolytic activation in vitro, we discovered that a 6-kDa prodomain peptide containing residues 60-114, PDP60-114, remained associated with the mature growth factor. Whereas the full-length prodomain of GDF11 is a functional antagonist, PDP60-114 had no impact on activity. The specific activity of the GDF11/PDP60-114 complex (EC50 = 1 nM) in a SMAD2/3 reporter assay was identical to that of mature GDF11 alone. PDP60-114 improved the solubility of mature GDF11 at neutral pH. As the growth factor normally aggregates/precipitates at neutral pH, PDP60-114 can be used as a solubility-enhancing formulation. Expression of two engineered constructs with PDP60-114 genetically fused to the mature domain of GDF11 through a 2x or 3x G4S linker produced soluble monomeric products that could be dimerized through redox reactions. The construct with a 3x G4S linker retained 10% activity (EC50 = 10 nM), whereas the construct connected with a 2x G4S linker could only be activated (EC50 = 2 nM) by protease treatment. Complex formation with PDP60-114 represents a new strategy for stabilizing GDF11 in an active state that may translate to other members of the TGF-ß family that form latent pro/mature domain complexes.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
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Growth Differentiation Factors
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Protein Multimerization
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Proteolysis
Type of study:
Risk_factors_studies
Limits:
Animals
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Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Biochemistry
Year:
2017
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Country of publication: