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1.
Polycystin (PC)1 and PC2 are membrane proteins implicated in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. A physiologically relevant cleavage at PC1's G protein-coupled receptor proteolytic site (GPS) occurs early in the secretory pathway. Our results suggest that PC2 increases both PC1 GPS cleavage and PC1's appearance at the plasma membrane. Mutations that prevent PC1's GPS cleavage prevent its plasma membrane localization. PC2 is a member of the trp family of cation channels and is an important PC1 binding partner. The effect of PC2 on PC1 localization is independent of PC2 channel activity, as tested using channel-inhibiting PC2 mutations. PC1 and PC2 can interact through their C-terminal tails, but removing the C-terminal tail of either protein has no effect on PC1 surface localization in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. Experiments in polarized LLC-PK cells show that apical and ciliary PC1 localization requires PC2 and that this delivery is sensitive to PC2 truncation. In sum, our work shows that PC2 expression is required for the movement of PC1 to the plasma and ciliary membranes. In fibroblast cells this localization effect is independent of PC2's channel activity or PC1 binding ability but involves a stimulation of PC1's GPS cleavage before the PC1 protein's surface delivery.  相似文献   

2.
Post-translational cleavage at the G protein-coupled receptor proteolytic site (GPS) has been demonstrated in many class B2 G protein-coupled receptors as well as other cell surface proteins such as polycystin-1. However, the mechanism of the GPS proteolysis has never been elucidated. Here we have characterized the cleavage of the human EMR2 receptor and identified the molecular mechanism of the proteolytic process at the GPS. Proteolysis at the highly conserved His-Leu downward arrow Ser(518) cleavage site can occur inside the endoplasmic reticulum compartment, resulting in two protein subunits that associate noncovalently as a heterodimer. Site-directed mutagenesis of the P(+1) cleavage site (Ser(518)) shows an absolute requirement of a Ser, Thr, or Cys residue for efficient proteolysis. Substitution of the P(-2) His residue to other amino acids produces slow processing precursor proteins, which spontaneously hydrolyze in a defined cell-free system. Further biochemical characterization indicates that the GPS proteolysis is mediated by an autocatalytic intramolecular reaction similar to that employed by the N-terminal nucleophile hydrolases, which are known to activate themselves by self-catalyzed cis-proteolysis. We propose here that the autoproteolytic cleavage of EMR2 represents a paradigm for the other GPS motif-containing proteins and suggest that these GPS proteins belong to a cell surface receptor subfamily of N-terminal nucleophile hydrolases.  相似文献   

3.
The transmembrane and multidomain neural adhesion molecule L1 plays important functional roles in the developing and adult nervous system. L1 is proteolytically processed at two distinct sites within the extracellular domain, leading to the generation of different fragments. In this report, we present evidence that the proprotein convertase PC5A is the protease that cleaves L1 in the third fibronectin type III domain, whereas the proprotein convertases furin, PC1, PC2, PACE4, and PC7 are not effective in cleaving L1. Analysis of mutations revealed Arg(845) to be the site of cleavage generating the N-terminal 140-kDa fragment. This fragment was present in the hippocampus, which expresses PC5A, but was not detectable in the cerebellum, which does not express PC5A. The 140-kDa L1 fragment was found to be tightly associated with the full-length 200-kDa L1 molecule. The complex dissociated from the membrane upon cleavage by a protease acting at a more membrane-proximal site of full-length L1. This proteolytic cleavage was inhibited by the metalloprotease inhibitor GM 6001 and enhanced by a calmodulin inhibitor. L1-dependent neurite outgrowth of cerebellar neurons was inhibited by GM 6001, suggesting that proteolytic processing of L1 by a metalloprotease is involved in neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

4.
This study demonstrates the presence of boc-Gln-Arg-Arg-MCA cleaving activity in bovine chromaffin granule membranes that resembles yeast Kex2 proteolytic activity. The chromaffin granule boc-Gln-Arg-Arg-MCA cleaving activity, like Kex2 proteolytic activity, shows calcium dependence, optimum activity at pH 7.5-8.2, inhibition by serine protease inhibitors, and preference for cleavage at the COOH-terminal side of Arg-Arg and Lys-Arg, over Lys-Lys, paired basic residues. Potent inhibition by the active-site directed inhibitor [D-Tyr]-Glu-Phe-Lys-Arg-CK (20 microM) provided further evidence for dibasic residue cleavage site specificity. These results are the first report of endogenous mammalian Kex2-like proteolytic activity that may be related to PC1/PC3 and PC2 enzymes, the newly discovered mammalian homologues of Kex2 protease. It will be important to determine the role of this Kex2-like proteolytic activity in processing the precursors of adrenal medullary neuropeptides.  相似文献   

5.
Differences in virion RNA dimer stability between mature and protease-defective (immature) forms of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) suggest that maturation of the viral RNA dimer is regulated by the proteolytic processing of the HIV-1 Gag and Gag-Pol precursor proteins. However, the proteolytic processing of these proteins occurs in several steps denoted primary, secondary, and tertiary cleavage events and, to date, the processing step associated with formation of stable HIV-1 RNA dimers has not been identified. We show here that a mutation in the primary cleavage site (p2/nucleocapsid [NC]) hinders formation of stable virion RNA dimers, while dimer stability is unaffected by mutations in the secondary (matrix/capsid [CA], p1/p6) or a tertiary cleavage site (CA/p2). By introducing mutations in a shared cleavage site of either Gag or Gag-Pol, we also show that the cleavage of the p2/NC site in Gag is more important for dimer formation and stability than p2/NC cleavage in Gag-Pol. Electron microscopy analysis of viral particles shows that mutations in the primary cleavage site in Gag but not in Gag-Pol inhibit viral particle maturation. We conclude that virion RNA dimer maturation is dependent on proteolytic processing of the primary cleavage site and is associated with virion core formation.  相似文献   

6.
The fusion (F) protein precursor of virulent Newcastle disease virus (NDV) strains has two pairs of basic amino acids at the cleavage site, and its intracellular cleavage activation occurs in a variety of cells; therefore, the viruses cause systemic infections in poultry. To explore the protease responsible for the cleavage in the natural host, we examined detailed substrate specificity of the enzyme in chick embryo fibroblasts (CEF) using a panel of the F protein mutants at the cleavage site expressed by vaccinia virus vectors, and compared the specificity with those of mammalian subtilisin-like proteases such as furin, PC6 and PACE4 which are candidates for F protein processing enzymes. It was demonstrated in CEF cells that Arg residues at the -4, -2 and -1 positions upstream of the cleavage site were essential, and that at the -5 position was required for maximal cleavage. Phe at the +1 position was also important for efficient cleavage. On the other hand, furin and PC6 expressed by vaccinia virus vectors showed cleavage specificities against the F protein mutants consistent with that shown by the processing enzyme of CEF cells, but PACE4 hardly cleaved the F proteins including the wild type. These results indicate that the proteolytic processing enzymes of poultry for virulent NDV F proteins could be furin and/or PC6 but not PACE4. The significance of individual contribution of the three amino acids at the -5, -2 and +1 positions to cleavability was discussed in relation to the evolution of virulent and avirulent NDV strains.  相似文献   

7.
Polycystin-1 (Pc1) cleavage at the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) proteolytic site (GPS) is required for normal kidney morphology in humans and mice. We found a complex pattern of endogenous Pc1 forms by GPS cleavage. GPS cleavage generates not only the heterodimeric cleaved full-length Pc1 (Pc1cFL) in which the N-terminal fragment (NTF) remains noncovalently associated with the C-terminal fragment (CTF) but also a novel (Pc1) form (Pc1deN) in which NTF becomes detached from CTF. Uncleaved Pc1 (Pc1U) resides primarily in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), whereas both Pc1cFL and Pc1deN traffic through the secretory pathway in vivo. GPS cleavage is not a prerequisite, however, for Pc1 trafficking in vivo. Importantly, Pc1deN is predominantly found at the plasma membrane of renal epithelial cells. By functional genetic complementation with five Pkd1 mouse models, we discovered that CTF plays a crucial role in Pc1deN trafficking. Our studies support GPS cleavage as a critical regulatory mechanism of Pc1 biogenesis and trafficking for proper kidney development and homeostasis.  相似文献   

8.
Bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria (BFPP) is a rare genetic disease characterized by cortical malformation associated with GPR56 mutations of frameshift, splicing, and point mutations (Science 303:2033). All the missense point mutations are located in the regions predicted to be exposed at the cell surface, e.g. the N-terminal extracellular domain (ECD), the proteolytic site (GPS), and the extracellular loops of transmembrane domain (TM), implying functionally important interaction among these domains. Wild type GPR56 protein is cleaved at the GPCR protein cleavage site (GPS) and gives rise to two subunits (ECD and TM), which are transported to cell surface. We have shown that GPR56 GPS mutant protein is defective in cleavage and surface localization, while non-GPS mutant proteins are cleaved normally but still defective in surface localization. Furthermore, all the mutant proteins demonstrated different glycosylation pattern from that of wild-type protein. PNGase F and Endo H sensitivity assays suggests that the mutant proteins are trapped in endoplasmic reticulum (ER), preventing them from trafficking to Golgi where further glycosylation modification usually occurs before destination to cell surface. Therefore, the loss-of-function of all these missense mutations is primarily caused by their failure to localize to cell surface.  相似文献   

9.
The MUC1 SEA module is a self-cleaving domain   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
MUC1, a glycoprotein overexpressed by a variety of human adenocarcinomas, is a type I transmembrane protein (MUC1/TM) that soon after its synthesis undergoes proteolytic cleavage in its extracellular domain. This cleavage generates two subunits, alpha and beta, that specifically recognize each other and bind together in a strong noncovalent interaction. Proteolysis occurs within the SEA module, a 120-amino acid domain that is highly conserved in a number of heavily glycosylated mucin-like proteins. Post-translational cleavage of the SEA module occurs at a site similar to that in MUC1 in the glycoproteins IgHepta and MUC3. However, as in the case of other proteins containing the cleaved SEA module, the mechanism of MUC1 proteolysis has not been elucidated. Alternative splicing generates two transmembrane MUC1 isoforms, designated MUC1/Y and MUC1/X. We demonstrated here that MUC1/X, whose extracellular domain is comprised solely of the SEA module in addition to 30 MUC1 N-terminal amino acids, undergoes proteolytic cleavage at the same site as the MUC1/TM protein. In contrast, the MUC1/Y isoform, composed of an N-terminally truncated SEA module, is not cleaved. Cysteine or threonine mutations of the MUC1/X serine residue (Ser-63) immediately C-terminal to the cleavage site generated cleaved proteins, whereas mutation of the Ser-63 residue of MUC1/X to any other of 17 amino acids did not result in cleavage. In vitro incubation of highly purified precursor MUC1/X protein resulted in self-cleavage. Furthermore, addition of hydroxylamine, a strong nucleophile, markedly enhanced cleavage. Both these features are signature characteristics of self-cleaving proteins, and we concluded that MUC1 undergoes autoproteolysis mediated by an N --> O-acyl rearrangement at the cleavage site followed by hydrolytic resolution of the unstable ester and concomitant cleavage. It is likely that all cleaved SEA module-containing proteins follow a similar route.  相似文献   

10.
Brain-specific angiogenesis inhibitor 2 (BAI2) is a member of adhesion-G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). BAI2 is dominantly expressed in the brain and its physiological ligands and functions are still unclear. Adhesion-GPCRs, including BAI2, commonly have a long N-terminal extracellular region (ECR) containing the GPCR proteolysis site (GPS) and the cleavage of the ECR at the GPS domain is suspected to be important for their function. In this study, we analyzed the proteolytic processing of BAI2 and its activation mechanism. Several cleaved C-terminal fragments of BAI2 were identified in mouse hippocampus. We confirmed that mutation in the GPS domain caused inhibition of the proteolysis of BAI2, which indicated the possibility that BAI2 was cleaved at the GPS domain. The association of the ECR putatively cleaved at the GPS domain and the C-terminal seven-transmembrane (7TM) fragment was detected by co-immunoprecipitation. We also found that furin prohormone convertase cleaved BAI2 at another site in the ECR. Additionally, the C-terminal fragment cleaved at the GPS domain specifically activated the nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) pathway. These results suggest that BAI2 is a functional GPCR regulated by proteolytic processing and activates the NFAT pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Hsiao CC  Chen HY  Chang GW  Lin HH 《FEBS letters》2011,585(2):313-318
Most adhesion-class G protein-coupled receptors (adhesion-GPCRs) undergo a novel self-catalytic cleavage at the GPCR proteolysis site (GPS) to form a hetero-dimeric complex containing the extracellular and seven-span transmembrane subunits. However, little is known about the role of GPS auto-proteolysis in the function of adhesion-GPCRs. Here we show that GPS cleavage is essential for the homotypic cell aggregation promoted by CD97 receptor, a leukocyte-restricted adhesion-GPCR often aberrantly expressed in carcinomas. We find that CD97 does not mediate cell aggregation directly. Instead, expression of the wild type – but not the GPS cleavage-deficient CD97 up-regulates the expression of N-cadherin, leading to Ca++-dependent cell–cell aggregation. Our results provide a clear evidence for the role of GPS proteolytic modification in the cellular function of adhesion-GPCRs.  相似文献   

12.
The eukaryotic subtilisin prohormone convertase 2 (PC2) is known to require in vivo exposure to the neuroendocrine protein 7B2 in order to produce an enzymatically active species capable of proteolytic action on prohormone substrates. In the present study, we examined the role of the pentabasic site within 27-kDa 7B2 in this process. We prepared two His-tagged recombinant 7B2s by overexpression in bacteria: 7B2-Ser-Ser (SS), with an inactivating mutation in the CT peptide from Lys171-Lys172 (KK) to SS, rendering the CT peptide non-inhibitory; blockade-SS, a double mutant of both the CT peptide as well as of the pentabasic furin cleavage site. These purified proteins were used in a cell-free proPC2 activation assay. Both 7B2-SS as well as blockade-SS were able to facilitate the activation of proPC2 (as judged by efficient production of enzyme activity), suggesting that cleavage at the furin site is not required for 7B2s lacking inhibitory CT peptides. Plasmids encoding proPC2 and various 7B2s were transiently transfected into human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells and PC2 enzymatic activity and CT forms in each overnight conditioned medium were measured. Cells transfected with proPC2 and wild-type 7B2 secreted CT peptide cleavage products, but cells transfected with proPC2 and the blockade mutant overwhelmingly secreted intact, 27-kDa, blockaded 7B2. Medium obtained from HEK293 cells transfected with proPC2 and either wild-type 7B2, 7B2-SS, or blockade-SS exhibited PC2 activity, but medium from cells expressing the 7B2 blockade mutant did not. We conclude that cleavage at the 7B2 furin consensus site is required to produce PC2 capable of efficient proteolytic inactivation of the CT peptide.  相似文献   

13.
Plasma lipoprotein metabolism is tightly regulated by several members of the triglyceride lipase family, including endothelial lipase (EL) and lipoprotein lipase (LPL). Our previous work suggested that EL is proteolytically processed. In this report, we have used a combination of epitope tagging, mutagenesis, and N-terminal sequencing to determine the precise location of the cleavage site within EL. The cleavage occurs immediately after the sequence RNKR, a known recognition sequence for the proprotein convertase (PC) family. We demonstrate that some PCs, but not all, can proteolytically cleave EL at this site and thereby directly regulate EL enzymatic activity through modulating EL cleavage. Furthermore, specific knockdown of individual PCs proves that PCs are the proteases that cleave EL in human endothelial cells. Interestingly, a homologous site in LPL is also cleaved by PCs. This action is unusual for PCs, which are traditionally known as activators of pro-proteins, and highlights a potential role of PCs in lipid metabolism through their proteolytic processing of lipases.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies using selectively modified pro-ocytocin/neurophysin substrate analogues and the purified metalloprotease, pro-ocytocin/neurophysin convertase (magnolysin; EC 3.4 24.62), have shown that dibasic cleavage site processing is associated with a prohormone sequence organized in a beta-turn structure. We have used various peptide analogues of the pro-ocytocin-neurophysin processing domain, and recombinant prohormone convertase 1/3, to test the validity of this property towards this member of the family of prohormone convertases (PCs). The enzymatic cleavage analysis and kinetics showed that: (a) with methyl amide (N-Met) modification, a secondary structure beta-turn breaker, the enzyme substrate interaction was abolished; (b) cleavage was favoured when the dibasic substrate side-chains were oriented in opposite directions; (c) the amino acid present at the P'1 position is important in the enzyme-substrate interaction; (d) the flexibility of the peptide substrate is necessary for the interaction; (e) Addition of dimethylsulfoxide to the cleavage assay favoured the cleavage of the pro-ocytocin/neurophysin large substrate over that of the smaller one pGlu-Arg-Thr-Lys-Arg-methyl coumarin amide. These data allowed us to conclude that proteolytic processing of pro-ocytocin-related peptide substrates by PC1/3 as well as by the metalloenzyme, magnolysin, involves selective recognition of precise cleavage site local secondary structure by the processing enzyme. It is hypothesized that this may represent a general property of peptide precursor proteolytic processing systems.  相似文献   

15.
The calcium-independent receptor of alpha-latrotoxin (CIRL), a neuronal cell surface receptor implicated in the regulation of exocytosis, is a natural chimera of the cell adhesion protein and the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). In contrast with canonic GPCRs, CIRL consists of two heterologous non-covalently bound subunits, p120 and p85, due to endogenous proteolytic processing of the receptor precursor in the endoplasmic reticulum. Extracellularly oriented p120 contains hydrophilic cell adhesion domains, whereas p85 resembles a generic GPCR. We determined that the site of the CIRL cleavage is located within a juxtamembrane Cys- and Trp-rich domain of the N-terminal extracellular region of CIRL. Mutations in this domain make CIRL resistant to the cleavage and impair its trafficking. Therefore, we have named it GPS for G protein-coupled receptor proteolysis site. The GPS motif is found in homologous adhesion GPCRs and thus defines a novel receptor family. We postulate that the proteolytic processing and two-subunit structure is a common characteristic feature in the family of GPS-containing adhesion GPCRs.  相似文献   

16.
Mutant presenilins (PS) contribute to the pathogenesis of familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) by enhancing the production of Abeta42 from beta-amyloid precursor protein. Presenilins are endoproteolytically processed to N-terminal and C-terminal fragments, which together form a stable 1:1 complex. We have mapped the cleavage site in the PS2 protein by direct sequencing of its C-terminal fragment isolated from mouse liver. Three different N-terminal residues were identified starting at Val-299, Thr-301, and Leu-307 that correspond closely to the previously described N termini of the C-terminal fragment of human PS1. Mutational analysis of the PS2 cleavage site indicates that the principal endoproteolytic cleavage occurs at residues Met-298/Val-299 and that the N terminus is subsequently modified by secondary proteolytic cleavages. We have generated cleavage defective PS2 constructs, which accumulate exclusively as full-length polypeptides in transfected Neuro2a cells. Functional analysis of such cleavage defective PS2 carrying the FAD mutation Asn-141 --> Ile showed that its Abeta42 producing activity was strongly reduced compared with cleavage-competent FAD PS2. In contrast, cleavage defective PS2 was active in rescuing the egg-laying defect of a sel-12 mutant in Caenorhabditis elegans. We conclude that PS2 endoproteolytic cleavage is not an absolute requirement for its activities but may rather selectively enhance or stabilize its functions.  相似文献   

17.
Microfibril-associated glycoprotein 2 (MAGP2) is a secreted protein associated with multiple cellular activities including the organization of elastic fibers in the extracellular matrix (ECM), angiogenesis, as well as regulating Notch and integrin signaling. Importantly, increases in MAGP2 positively correlate with poor prognosis for some ovarian cancers. It has been assumed that full-length MAGP2 is responsible for all reported effects; however, here we show MAGP2 is a substrate for the proprotein convertase (PC) family of endoproteases. Proteolytic processing of MAGP2 by PC cleavage could serve to regulate secretion and thus, activity and function as reported for other extracellular and cell-surface proteins. In support of this idea, MAGP2 contains an evolutionarily conserved PC consensus cleavage site, and amino acid sequencing of a newly identified MAGP2 C-terminal cleavage product confirmed functional PC cleavage. Additionally, mutagenesis of the MAGP2 PC consensus cleavage site or treatment with PC inhibitors prevented MAGP2 proteolytic processing. Finally, both cleaved and uncleaved MAGP2 were detected extracellularly and MAGP2 secretion appeared independent of PC cleavage, suggesting that PC processing occurs mainly outside the cell. Our characterization of alternative forms of MAGP2 present in the extracellular space not only enhances diversity of this ECM protein but also provides a previously unrecognized molecular mechanism for regulation of MAGP2 biological activity.  相似文献   

18.
Epithelial cells maintained in culture medium containing low calcium proteolytically process laminin 5 (alpha3beta3gamma2) within the alpha3 and gamma2 chains (). Experiments were designed to identify the enzyme(s) responsible for the laminin 5 processing and the sites of proteolytic cleavage. To characterize the nature of laminin 5 processing, we determined the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the proteolytic fragments produced by the processing events. The results indicate that the first alpha3 chain cleavage (200-l65 kDa alpha3) occurs within subdomain G4 of the G domain. The second cleavage (l65-l45 kDa alpha3) occurs within the lIla domain, 11 residues N-terminal to the start of domain II. The gamma chain is cleaved within the second epidermal growth factor-like repeat of domain Ill. The sequence cleaved within the gamma2 chain matches the consensus sequence for the cleavage of type I, II, and III procollagens by bone morphogenetic protein-1 (BMP-1), also known as type I procollagen C-proteinase (). Recombinant BMP-1 cleaves gamma2 in vitro, both within intact laminin 5 and at the predicted site of a recombinant gamma2 short arm. alpha3 is also cleaved by BMP-1 in vitro, but the cleavage site is yet to be determined. These results show the laminin alpha3 and gamma2 chains to be substrates for BMP-1 in vitro. We speculate that gamma2 cleavage is required for formation of the laminin 5-6 complex and that this complex is directly involved in assembly of the interhemidesmosomal basement membrane. This further suggests that BMP-1 activity facilitates basement membrane assembly, but not hemidesmosome assembly, in the laminin 5-rich dermal-epidermal junction basement membrane in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
Expression of the measles virus (MV) F/H complex on the surface of viral particles, infected cells, or cells transfected to express these proteins (presenter cells [PC]) is necessary and sufficient to induce proliferative arrest in both human and rodent lymphoid cells (responder cells [RC]). This inhibition was found to occur independent of apoptosis and soluble mediators excluded by a pore size filter of 200 nm released from either PC or RC. We now show that reactive oxygen intermediates which might be released by RC or PC also do not contribute to MV-induced immunosuppression in vitro. Using an inhibitor of Golgi-resident mannosidases (deoxymannojirimycin), we found that complex glycosylation of the F and H proteins is not required for the induction of proliferative arrest of RC. As revealed by our previous studies, proteolytic cleavage of the MV F protein precursor into its F1 and F2 subunits, but not of F/H-mediated cellular fusion, was found to be required, since fusion-inhibitory peptides such as Z-D-Phe-L-Phe-Gly (Z-fFG) did not interfere with the induction of proliferative inhibition. We now show that Z-fFG inhibits cellular fusion at the stage of hemifusion by preventing lipid mixing of the outer membrane layer. These results provide strong evidence for a receptor-mediated signal elicited by the MV F/H complex which can be uncoupled from its fusogenic activity is required for the induction of proliferative arrest of human lymphocytes.  相似文献   

20.
The human epigenetic cell-cycle regulator HCF-1 undergoes an unusual proteolytic maturation process resulting in stably associated HCF-1(N) and HCF-1(C) subunits that regulate different aspects of the cell cycle. Proteolysis occurs at six centrally located HCF-1(PRO)-repeat sequences and is important for activation of HCF-1(C)-subunit functions in M phase progression. We show here that the HCF-1(PRO) repeat is recognized by O-linked β-N-acetylglucosamine transferase (OGT), which both O-GlcNAcylates the HCF-1(N) subunit and directly cleaves the HCF-1(PRO) repeat. Replacement of the HCF-1(PRO) repeats by a heterologous proteolytic cleavage signal promotes HCF-1 proteolysis but fails to activate HCF-1(C)-subunit M phase functions. These results reveal an unexpected role of OGT in HCF-1 proteolytic maturation and an unforeseen nexus between OGT-directed O-GlcNAcylation and proteolytic maturation in HCF-1 cell-cycle regulation.  相似文献   

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