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Human endothelin-converting enzyme (ECE-1): three isoforms with distinct subcellular localizations

Authors :
Anja Schweizer
Olivier Valdenaire
U Deuschle
J G Stumpf
P Nelböck
J B Dumas Milne Edwards
Bernd-Michael Löffler
Source :
The Biochemical journal. 328
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Endothelin-converting enzyme 1 (ECE-1) is a membrane-bound metalloprotease that catalyses the conversion of inactive big endothelins into active endothelins. Two different isoforms (ECE-1a and ECE-1b) have previously been identified for human ECE-1. In the present study we have cloned a novel human ECE-1 isoform, termed ECE-1c, and have thus shown for the first time the existence of three distinct ECE-1 isoforms. The three isoforms differ only in their N-terminal regions and are derived from a single gene through the use of alternative promoters. Ribonuclease protection experiments revealed that, although the relative levels of the three isoform mRNA species vary between human tissues, ECE-1c mRNA is generally the predominant isoform messenger. Immunofluorescence microscopy analysis showed distinct subcellular localizations for the three isoforms: whereas ECE-1a and ECE-1c are localized at the cell surface, ECE-1b was found to be intracellular and showed significant co-localization with a marker protein for the trans-Golgi network. We determined that the three isoforms have similar kinetic rate constants (Km, kcat and Vmax) for the processing of big endothelin 1 and that the big endothelin isoforms 1, 2 and 3 are cleaved with similar relative velocities of 1.0:0.1:0.1 by the three isoenzymes.

Details

ISSN :
02646021
Volume :
328
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Biochemical journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....088eba3d36343bbc09898ab5fd9e13d8