More than one intracellular processing bottleneck delays the secretion of coagulation factor VII

Journal:Thrombosis and Haemostasis
ISSN:0340-6245
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH08-05-0281
Issue:2008: 100/2 (Aug) pp. 173-364
Pages:204-210

More than one intracellular processing bottleneck delays the secretion of coagulation factor VII

Gert Bolt, Claus Kristensen, Thomas D. Steenstrup
Mammalian Cell Technology, Novo Nordisk A/S, Novo Nordisk Park, Måløv, Denmark

Summary

Coagulation factorVII (FVII) is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein that undergoes extensive post-translational modification prior to secretion. Secretion of FVII proteins from producer cells is a slow process.To identify bottlenecks for the transport of FVII through the secretory pathway of FVII-producing cells, we analysed the processing of intracellular FVII by pulse-chase of FVII producing CHO cells followed by radioimmuno precipitation, SDS-PAGE, and autoradiography. FVII was coprecipitated with GRP78 and vice versa for at least three hours after synthesis of the labelled FVII,suggesting that nascent FVII is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Judged from barium citrate precipitation assay, gamma-carboxylation of the pulse-labelled FVII was a slow process requiring several hours and seemed to be the most important bottleneck in the intracellular processing of FVII. Nevertheless, FVII was not released from the cells immediately after gamma-carboxylation. Gamma-carboxylated FVII accumulated in the cells and migrated as a band with reduced mobility compared to uncarboxylated FVII. This shift in migration was caused by N-glycan processing in the Golgi complex. Thus, the release of FVII from producer cells is delayed by at least two bottlenecks. The major bottleneck appears to be gamma-carboxylation, which determines the rate of transport of FVII out of the ER. Another bottleneck retains FVII in the cells after processing of the N-glycans into complex chains.Cells with an intact gamma-carboxylation machinery appear to posses mechanisms that protect nascent FVII from intracellular degradation and keep FVII in the ER until it is gamma-carboxylated.

Keywords

glycosylation, Factor VII, protein processing, post-translational, gammacarboxylation

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH08-05-0281

You may also be interested in...

1.

Gert Bolt, Thomas D. Steenstrup, Claus Kristensen

Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2007 98 5: 988-997

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH07-05-0332

2.

Carolyn M. Millar1, Anne F. Riddell1, Simon A. Brown1, Richard Starke2, Ian Mackie2, Derrick J. Bowen3, P. Vincent Jenkins1, Jan A. van Mourik4

Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2008 99 5: 916-924

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH07-09-0565

3.

U. Lewandrowski, R. P. Zahedi, J. Moebius, A. Sickmann

Hämostaseologie 2007 27 4: 241-245



Articles

You've 499 Article(s) in your Basket.

TH 107.5

Clinical Focus on GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors: In the May issue of Thrombosis and Haemostasis Armstrong...

TH 107.4

The April 2012 issue of Thrombosis and Haemostasis TH 107.4 is a Theme Issue by A. Schober, T....

Thrombosis and Haemostasis official organ of Spanish Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis

Thrombosis and Haemostasis, founded in 1957, has become the official organ of the Spanish Society...