Regulation of fibrillin carboxy-terminal furin processing by N-glycosylation, and association of amino- and carboxy-terminal sequences

Jane L. Ashworth, Vicky Kelly, Matthew J. Rock, C. Adrian Shuttleworth, Cay M. Kielty

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The molecular mechanisms of fibrillin assembly into microfibrils are poorly understood. In this study, we investigated human fibrillin-1 carboxy-terminal processing and assembly using a recombinant approach. Processing of carboxy-terminal fibrillin-1 was strongly influenced by N-glycosylation at the site immediately downstream of the furin site, and by association with calreticulin. The carboxy terminus of fibrillin-2 underwent less efficient processing than carboxy-terminal fibrillin-1 under identical conditions. Size fractionation of the amino-terminal region of fibrillin-1, and of unprocessed and furin-processed carboxy-terminal region of fibrillin-1, revealed that the amino terminus formed abundant disulphide-bonded aggregates. Some association of unprocessed carboxy-terminal fibrillin-1 was also apparent, but processed carboxy-terminal sequences remained monomeric unless amino-terminal sequences encoded by exons 12-15 were present. These data indicate the presence of fibrillin-1 molecular recognition sequences within the amino terminus and the extreme carboxy-terminal sequence downstream of the furin site, and a specific amino- and carboxy-terminal association which could drive overlapping linear accretion of furin-processed fibrillin molecules in the extracellular space. Differences in processing of the two fibrillin isoforms may reflect differential abilities to assemble in the extracellular space.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)4163-4171
    Number of pages8
    JournalJournal of Cell Science
    Volume112
    Issue number22
    Publication statusPublished - 1999

    Keywords

    • Assembly
    • Calreticulin
    • Fibrillin
    • Furin
    • Processing

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