4.6 Article

Corin Mutation R539C from Hypertensive Patients Impairs Zymogen Activation and Generates an Inactive Alternative Ectodomain Fragment

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 288, Issue 11, Pages 7867-7874

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M112.411512

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL089298]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31070716, 81170247, 31161130356]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of the Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions [10KJB320017]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions
  5. Danish-Chinese Center for Proteases and Cancer

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Corin is a cardiac transmembrane serine protease that regulates blood pressure by activating natriuretic peptides. Corin variants have been associated with African Americans with hypertension and heart disease. Here, we report a new mutation in exon 12 of the CORIN gene identified in a family of patients with hypertension. The mutation resulted in R539C substitution in the Fz2 (Frizzled-2) domain of the corin propeptide region. We expressed and characterized the corin R539C mutant in HEK293 cells. As determined by Western blot analysis, the R539C mutation did not alter corin expression in transfected cells but impaired corin zymogen activation. In a proatrial natriuretic peptide processing assay, the corin mutant had reduced activity and exhibited a dominant-negative effect on wild-type corin. In addition, the R539C mutation altered corin ectodomain shedding, producing an alternative similar to 75-kDa fragment that was biologically inactive. Using protease inhibitors and the catalytically inactive corin mutant S985A, we showed that the similar to 75-kDa fragment was generated by corin autocleavage. We constructed a series of mutants by replacing single or double Arg residues in the corin propeptide and identified Arg-530 in the Fz2 domain as the alternative autocleavage site. Our results show that the corin mutation R539C identified in hypertensive patients impairs corin zymogen activation and causes an alternative autocleavage that reduces corin activity. These data support that human CORIN gene mutations causing impaired corin activity may be an underlying mechanism in hypertension.

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