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Publication : Interaction between secretogranin III and carboxypeptidase E facilitates prohormone sorting within secretory granules.

First Author  Hosaka M Year  2005
Journal  J Cell Sci Volume  118
Issue  Pt 20 Pages  4785-95
PubMed ID  16219686 Mgi Jnum  J:102191
Mgi Id  MGI:3607040 Doi  10.1242/jcs.02608
Citation  Hosaka M, et al. (2005) Interaction between secretogranin III and carboxypeptidase E facilitates prohormone sorting within secretory granules. J Cell Sci 118(Pt 20):4785-95
abstractText  Secretogranin III (SgIII) and carboxypeptidase E (CPE) bind specifically to cholesterol-rich secretory granule (SG) membranes. We previously showed that SgIII binds chromogranin A (CgA) and targets CgA to the SGs in endocrine cells. We investigated the binding of SgIII and CPE because they frequently localize close to the periphery of SGs, and they bind each other in mouse corticotrope-derived AtT-20 cells. In Cpe fat mouse corticotropes, which have defective CPE, proopiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived adrenocorticotrophin hormone (ACTH)-containing peptides were distributed over the entire surface of the SGs, and displayed a regulated secretion by secretagogues. The Cpe fat pituitary exhibited elevated levels of SgIII and CgA, which suggests that they compensate for a sorting function of CPE for POMC and its intermediates to ACTH. Indeed, both SgIII and CgA were able to bind POMC-derived intermediates. In a competitive pull-down assay, excessive SgIII led to a decrease in CPE-bound POMC-derived intermediate molecules, and SgIII pulled-down by anti-ACTH antibody increased proportionately. We suggest that SgIII and CPE form the separate functional sorting complex by anchoring to cholesterol-rich SG membranes, and POMC-derived peptides are transferred from CPE to SgIII, and subsequently to CgA.
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