4.6 Article

Pepsinogen C proteolytic processing of surfactant protein B

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 283, Issue 16, Pages 10330-10338

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M707516200

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL059959, HL077226, R01 HL059959] Funding Source: Medline

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Surfactant protein B (SP-B) is essential to the function of pulmonary surfactant and to lamellar body genesis in alveolar epithelial type 2 cells. The bioactive, mature SP-B is derived from multistep post-translational proteolysis of a larger proprotein. The identity of the proteases involved in carboxyl-terminal cleavage of proSP-B remains uncertain. This cleavage event distinguishes SP-B production in type 2 cells from less complete processing in bronchiolar Clara cells. We previously identified pepsinogen C as an alveolar type 2 cell-specific protease that was developmentally regulated in the human fetal lung. We report that pepsinogen C cleaved recombinant proSP-B at Met(302) in addition to an amino-terminal cleavage at Ser(197). Using a well described model of type 2 cell differentiation, small interfering RNA knockdown of pepsinogen C inhibited production of mature SP-B, whereas overexpression of pepsinogen C increased SP-B production. Inhibition of SP-B production recapitulated the SP-B-deficient phenotype evident by aberrant lamellar body genesis. Together, these data support a primary role for pepsinogen C in SP-B proteolytic processing in alveolar type 2 cells.

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