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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Enzymes involved in the conversion of proinsulin to insulin in the rat

Davidson, H. W. January 1987 (has links)
Insulin, the principal secretory product of the /3-ce31s of the islets of Langerhans, occupies a central role in mammalian metabolism. The biosynthesis of this hormone involves two distinct proteolytic steps. Initially the N-terminal "leader" sequence is cleaved from preproinsulin (the primary translation product of the insulin gene) by a signal peptidase present in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum. Subsequently the product, proinsulin, is transported via the Golgi to nascent secretory granules, and is converted to insulin by the excision of the connectiong (C) peptide. This thesis describes a study of the enzymes involved in the conversion of proinsulin to insulin. Chapter 1 comprises a review of the literature relating to the biosynthesis of insulin in the pancreatic /?-cell, and of post-translational proteolysis in other secretory tissues. The tissue source for the majority of the experiments conducted in the present study was a transplantable rat isnulinoma. In chapter 2 the biosynthesis of insulin in this tissue is examined. It is demonstrated that the conversion of proinsulin to insulin follows a molecular pathway indistinguishable from that of pancreatic islet cells. This chapter also examines the subcellular location of acidic "carboxypeptidase B-like" enzymes in the tumour. Previously such an activity has been identified in insulinoma secretory granules. The present study identifies 2 activities capable of hy-drolysing a synthetic carboxypeptidase B substrate which are distinguished on the basis of subcellular location and inhibitor profiles. One activity is localized to lysosomes and the other identified as carboxypeptidase H (EC 3.4.17.10), and shown to be a component of the insulin secretory granule. Chapter 3 describes a procedure for the purification of the insulinoma caboxypeplidase H, and demonstrates that the purified enzyme is capable of converting the putative proinsulin conversion intermediates [seco 32/33]-proinsulin and [seco 65/66]-proinsulin to their respective desdibasic forms, and diarginyl insulin to insulin. In chapter 4 the subcellular and tissue distribution of immunoreactive carboxypeptidase H in the rat is described. Immunoreactive species were detected in the a and /?- cells of the islets of Langerhans, and in the pituitary. However immunoreactivity was not demonstrated in the adrenal medulla, although this tissue does contain enzymatic activity and was the tissue used for the purification of this enzyme by other workers. The possibility that multiple forms of the enzyme are present is discussed with regard to this and other data. Chapter 4 also describes the results of a study of the biosynthesis of carboxypeptidase H in insulinoma cells. It is shown that the enzyme is initially synthesized as a precursor of apparent molecular weight 56000 which is subsequently converted to the mature 54000 molecular weight form. It is proposed that the observed change in molecular weight results from post-translational modification of the enzyme's N-linked oligosaccharide chains. The results presented in chapter 5 demonstrate the presence of a novel Ca2+ -dependent acidic endopeptidase in insulin secretory granules which, in conjunction with carboxypeptidase H, is capable of converting proinsulin to insulin in vitro. The relationship of this activity to the enzymes previously implicated in proinsulin processing, and the compatibility of its molecular properties with the intragranular environment, are discussed. In chapter 6 procedures for the partial purification of the proinsulin processing endopeptidase are described. It is shown that there are actually two endopeptidases which each cleave proinsulin at one of the two processing sites. Preliminary characterization of these enzymes is presented, and the implications of these observations on granule biogenesis discussed. Chapter 7 comprises a general discussion of the work presented in this thesis. Attention is focussed on the contributions made by the present study to our understanding of secretory granule biogenesis, and on possible methods which might enable the successful purification of the proinsulin endopeptidases.

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