Furin regulates both the activation of Pseudomonas exotoxin A and the quantity of the toxin receptor expressed on target cells

M Gu, VM Gordon, DJ Fitzgerald… - Infection and …, 1996 - Am Soc Microbiol
M Gu, VM Gordon, DJ Fitzgerald, SH Leppla
Infection and immunity, 1996Am Soc Microbiol
Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) binds and enters mammalian cells via the alpha 2-
macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP). The toxin then
requires proteolytic cleavage to generate an enzymatically active fragment with translocates
to the cell cytosol and inhibits protein synthesis. To assess the role of furin in determining
toxin susceptibility, CHO cells were transfected with a mouse furin gene (CHO+ fur cells) and
maintained under neomycin selection. Cells expressing the transfected gene were about …
Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) binds and enters mammalian cells via the alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP). The toxin then requires proteolytic cleavage to generate an enzymatically active fragment with translocates to the cell cytosol and inhibits protein synthesis. To assess the role of furin in determining toxin susceptibility, CHO cells were transfected with a mouse furin gene (CHO+fur cells) and maintained under neomycin selection. Cells expressing the transfected gene were about two- to threefold more sensitive to PE than were cells expressing only a neomycin resistance gene (CHO+neo cells). Possible reasons for the increased toxin sensitivity include the cleavage of a greater number of PE molecules and/or the conversion of more single-chain LRP to the processed, two-chain form. Processing of LRP appears to be necessary to allow the surface display of this receptor. Results of ligand binding studies indicated that the CHO+fur cells displayed about twofold more surface-expressed LRP than did CHO+neo cells. In addition, the in vitro cleavage of PE by recombinant furin enhanced toxin potency about threefold for CHO+neo cells but enhanced it very little for CHO+fur cells. This suggested that CHO+fur cells were processing PE at close to the maximum usable rate. Together these findings suggest that furin is involved in at least two separate protein processing pathways that each contribute to the sensitivity of cells to PE.
American Society for Microbiology