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Vol. 59, Issue 2, 163-169, February 2001
Department of Experimental Therapeutics, William Harvey Research Institute, St. Bartholomew's and the Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary and Westfield College, Charterhouse Square Campus, London, EC1M 6BQ, UK
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Abstract |
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Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is secreted from endothelial and vascular smooth
muscle cells (VSMC) after intracellular hydrolysis of big ET-1 by
endothelin converting enzyme (ECE). The metallopeptidase called ECE-1
is widely thought to be the physiological ECE, but unequivocal evidence
of this role has yet to be provided. Endothelial cells express four
isoforms of ECE-1 (ECE-1a, ECE-1b, ECE-1c, and ECE-1d), but the
identity of ECE-1 isoforms expressed in VSMC is less clear. Here, we
describe the characterization of ECE-1 isoforms in bovine pulmonary
artery smooth muscle cells (BPASMC) and the effect on ET-1 synthesis of
an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) to ECE-1c. Reverse
transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) evaluation of total
RNA from BPASMC showed that ECE-1a and ECE-1d were not expressed.
Sequencing of cloned ECE-1 cDNA products and semiquantitative RT-PCR
demonstrated that ECE-1b and ECE-1c were expressed in BPASMC, with
ECE-1c being the predominant isoform. Basal release of ET-1 from BPASMC
was low. Treatment for 24 h with tumor necrosis factor-
(TNF
) stimulated ET-1 production by up to 10-fold with parallel
increases in levels of preproET-1 mRNA. Levels of ECE-1c mRNA were also
raised after TNF
, whereas amounts of ECE-1b mRNA were decreased
significantly. Treatment of BPASMC with a phosphorothioate antisense
ODN to ECE-1c caused a marked reduction in ECE-1c mRNA levels and ECE-1
protein levels. However, basal and TNF
-stimulated ET-1 release were
largely unaffected by the ECE-1c antisense ODN despite the inhibition
of ECE-1c synthesis. Hence, an endopeptidase distinct from ECE-1 is
mainly responsible big ET-1 processing in BPASMC.
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Introduction |
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Endothelin-1
(ET-1) is derived from its precursor, preproendothelin-1, by
intracellular proteolytic processing (Corder et al., 1995
; Harrison et
al., 1995
; Woods et al., 1999
). The final step in its biosynthesis
involves specific enzymatic hydrolysis of the intermediate, big ET-1,
by an endothelin-converting enzyme (ECE) (Yanagisawa et al., 1988
).
ET-1 exerts wide-ranging effects on a variety of tissues and cell types
through interaction with two subtypes of cell surface receptors
(ETA and ETB receptors) (Douglas, 1997
; Haynes and Webb, 1998
). It has been implicated as a
causative factor in the pathogenesis of hypertension, pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, atherosclerosis, and asthma (Douglas, 1997
; Haynes and Webb, 1998
; Goldie and Henry, 1999
). A
number of highly potent ET receptor antagonists have been developed for
therapeutic use. These compounds are generally selective for ETA receptors or nonselective
ETA/ETB antagonists
(Douglas, 1997
). In some tissues, most notably the airways,
ETB receptors predominate yet they are resistant
to blockade by selective ETB or nonselective ETA/ETB receptor
antagonists (Hay et al., 1998
). Therefore, specific inhibition of ET-1
synthesis with ECE inhibitors may be a better approach for attenuating
the adverse effects of ET-1 excess under some conditions.
Two endothelin-converting enzyme genes have been cloned and are
referred to as ECE-1 (Schmidt et al., 1994
, Shimada et al., 1994
; Xu et
al., 1994
) and ECE-2 (Emoto and Yanagisawa, 1995
). ECE-1 is the most
extensively studied of these two endopeptidases. It is widely expressed
in many cells and tissues (Korth et al., 1999
). ECE-1 was originally
thought to be expressed as two isoforms, ECE-1a and ECE-1b (Valdenaire
et al. 1995
). More recent findings, however, have revealed two
additional isoforms: ECE-1c (Schweizer et al., 1997
) and ECE-1d
(Valdenaire et al., 1999
). The four ECE-1 isoforms result from
alternative splicing at the 5'-end of a single gene (Schweizer et al.,
1997
; Valdenaire et al., 1999
). They share a common C-terminal region
(encoded by exons 4-19), that includes a transmembrane domain and the
enzyme catalytic site. Studies of the distribution of the four isoforms
have shown ECE-1c to have the highest relative expression (Schweizer et
al., 1997
; Valdenaire et al., 1999
).
Based on gene deletion studies, both ECE-1 and ECE-2 have been proposed
as physiologically relevant enzymes for ET-1 biosynthesis (Yanagisawa
et al., 1998
; Yanagisawa et al., 2000
). This conclusion is derived from
observations that ECE-1 gene knockout causes abnormalities in cardiac
development very similar to targeted disruption of the genes for ET-1
(Kurihara et al., 1994
), or the ETA receptor (Clouthier et al., 1998
). Biochemical assessment of the effect of ECE-1
knockout on ET-1 synthesis is difficult to investigate in
ECE-1
/
embryos because it results in
midgestational lethality. ET-1 levels in gestational day 12.5 embryos
show reductions of about 40% in ECE-1 null mice (Yanagisawa et al.,
1998
, 2000
), but this may simply reflect the fact these embryos are not
viable. If the physiologically essential ECE is eliminated in the
ECE-1
/
mice, raised tissue levels of big ET-1
would be expected because of inhibition of its processing, but no
increases were observed (Yanagisawa et al., 1998
).
Thus, despite the many reports showing that ECE-1 isoforms are able to convert big ET-1 to the mature ET-1 peptide, it is still unclear whether ECE-1 plays a physiological role in big ET-1 processing. The aim of this study was to examine the role of ECE-1c in ET-1 production by using an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) to selectively inhibit ECE-1c synthesis in cultured cells. These studies used bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (BPASMC) because initial investigations revealed ECE-1c to be the major isoform in these cells, with no expression of ECE-1a or ECE-1d. The results show that ECE-1 has only a minor role in ET-1 synthesis.
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Experimental Procedures |
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Cell Culture.
BPASMC were cultured from fresh bovine
pulmonary artery in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM)
containing 10% (v/v) fetal bovine serum by using the explant technique
(Corder, 1996
). Cultured cells, used between passages 5 and 10, exhibited characteristic smooth muscle cell morphology and stained
positively for
-actin. Bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) were
cultured as described by Corder and Barker (1999)
.
(R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN), and the effects of phosphoramidon (Peptide Institute, Osaka, Japan) on ET-1 and big ET-1 release. For
both series of experiments, confluent cultures were incubated with the
agents being investigated in serum-free DMEM for 24 h. The
conditioned media were collected for immunoassay of ET-1 and big ET-1.
Characterization of ECE-1 Isoforms Expressed in BAEC and BPASMC
by RACE and Colony Hybridization.
Total RNA was extracted from
confluent BAEC or BPASMC monolayers by using RNAzol B (Biogenesis,
Poole, UK). Poly(A+) mRNA for BAEC and BPASMC was
obtained from total RNA using poly(A+) tract
oligo dT-magnetic beads (Promega, Southampton, UK). After first- and
second-strand synthesis and adaptor ligation, 5' rapid amplification of
cDNA ends (5'-RACE) was carried out using the Marathon cDNA
amplification protocol (Clontech, Basingstoke, UK). Polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) was performed by using the adaptor forward primer
5'-CCATCCTAATACGACTCACTATAGGGC-3' (AP1) and a reverse primer,
5'-GGCGTTCTTGTCTGGTATTGGA-3', corresponding to a sequence common to all
bovine ECE-1 isoforms (Fig. 1). For BAEC
and BPASMC, cDNA from these reactions were purified, subcloned into the
plasmid TA cloning vector pGEM-T Easy (Promega), used to transform
competent JM109 Escherichia coli (Promega), and cultured at
37°C for 14 h. Colony hybridization to identify ECE-1 clones was
performed with a 214-bp cDNA probe obtained after purification of the
BglI (Promega) digest of the 253-bp ECE-1c PCR product
(described below). For hybridization, 25 ng of the cDNA probe was
labeled using random hexanucleotides and Klenow fragment (Promega) in a
50-µl reaction volume containing 50 µCi of
[
-32P]dCTP (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech,
Little Chalfont, UK) for 4 h at 37°C. Positive colonies were
subcultured and further evaluated by performing PCR and restriction
digests. Plasmid DNA samples containing inserts of interest were
purified and sequenced by using ABI Prism BigDye Terminator Cycle
sequencing in conjunction with an ABI Prism 377 sequencer (PE
Biosystems, Warrington, UK).
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Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction.
RT-PCR
measurements of mRNA levels were carried out with reagents from Promega
with 100 ng of total RNA per reaction under semiquantitative conditions
so that the yield of PCR product was proportional to the quantity of
RNA template (Barker et al., 1998
; Corder and Barker, 1999
). For
preproET-1, ECE-1a, and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(GAPDH), conditions were as described (Corder and Barker, 1999
). RT-PCR
measurements of mRNA levels for ECE-1b, ECE-1c, and ECE-1d were all
performed under the same conditions so that a comparison of their
relative expression could be made. Reverse transcription with
avian myeloblastosis virus RT (5 U per reaction, 48°C for 45 min),
primed with isoform specific primers and oligo dT15 primer (1 µM) was followed by PCR using Tfl polymerase (5 U per
reaction) with the following cycling parameters: denaturation for 2 min
at 94°C; 25 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 60°C for 3 0s, and
72°C for 1 min; and a final extension at 72°C for 10 min.
Isoform-specific ECE-1 primers were based on published sequences for
ECE-1c, and sequences obtained during these studies from the cloned
5'-ends of ECE-1b and ECE-1d. The primers were: ECE-1b
(5'-CGCTGTCGGCGCTGGGGATG-3', forward), ECE-1c
(5'-GGAGCGCGCGAGCGATGATG-3', forward), ECE-1d
(5'-CTTAAGGAGTCCGTGCTGCA-3', forward), with a common reverse
primer ECE-1b/1c/1d (5'-GGCGTTCTTGTCTGGTATTGGA-3'). These gave PCR
products of 253, 253, and 269 base pairs, which were separated by
electrophoresis on ethidium bromide-stained 1-1.2% (w/v) agarose
gels. In each case, a single band of the expected size was obtained and
quantified using a Gel Doc 1000 system (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA).
Antisense ODN Experiments.
The sequence chosen as the
antisense ODN target was a 25-bp region around the translation start
codon of bovine ECE-1c (Schmidt et al., 1994
) (Fig. 1). An ODN primer
corresponding to this sequence gives robust amplification of a single
product by RT-PCR (Corder and Barker, 1999
). By analogy with the human
ECE-1b and ECE-1c genes, 16 bp at the 3' end of this sequence would be
expected to be common to both bovine ECE-1b and ECE-1c. However, the 3' end of the antisense ODN, which is likely to confer its specificity, is
complementary only to ECE-1c. An antisense ODN corresponding to this
sequence (5'-CTTGTAGGTAGACATCATCGCTCGC-3'; antisense ODN) was used with
its sense counterpart as a control (5'-GCGAGCGATGATGTCTACCTACAAG-3'; sense ODN). In some experiments, following recommendations of Stein and
Krieg (1997)
, an additional scrambled control ODN was used with the
same base composition as the antisense ODN
(5'-CTACAGATGCGCTCGCTAGATGTTC-3'; scrambled ODN). The antisense, sense,
and scrambled ODNs were synthesized as full phosphorothioate ODNs and
supplied as the high-performance liquid chromatography-purified
products (Eurogentec, Seraing, Belgium).
5 × 104 cells/well in 6 × 35 mm well plates to
reach 70 to 80% confluence at the beginning of the transfection
procedure. Treatment of BPASMC with phosphorothioate ODNs (400 nM) was
performed with the cationic lipid transfectant Tfx-50 (Promega) at a
charge ratio of 3:1 (Tfx-50/ODN) in serum-free DMEM. Pilot experiments
showed this was the maximum concentration that could be used without
cytotoxicity. After 1 h, medium was replaced with DMEM containing
10% fetal bovine serum. The treatment with ODN was repeated 24 later.
After a further 24 h, cells were transferred to serum-free DMEM
with or without TNF
(30 ng/ml) to study ET-1 synthesis over the
following 24 h. At the end of this period, conditioned media were
collected for ET-1 and big ET-1 immunoassay. For RT-PCR, cells were
harvested in 1 ml of RNAzol B and stored at
80°C. For
immunoblotting and measurement of ECE activity, cells were scraped into
ice-cold PBS and centrifuged to generate cell pellets that were stored
at
80°C for later analysis.
Assays. ET-1 was measured by sandwich immunoassay (R&D Systems). Big ET-1 was measured by 96-well plate sandwich immunoassay with an affinity purified anti-ET-1 rabbit IgG as the plate-coating antibody. The detection system was biotinylated anti-human big ET-1[22-38] IgG with 125I-streptavidin. Big ET-1 IgG was affinity-purified from a rabbit antiserum (raised against human big ET-1[22-38]) by using VNTPEHVVPYGLGS (Zinsser Analytic, Maidenhead, UK) coupled to CNBr-Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). This peptide sequence is homologous in human and bovine big ET-1 sequences and hence yielded affinity purified IgG suitable for bovine big ET-1 measurements. Synthetic porcine big ET-1 was used as standard.
ECE activity was extracted from cell pellets by lysis on ice in 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.5 containing 100 µM PMSF, 100 µM leupeptin, 100 µM chymostatin, 10 µM pepstatin, and 10 µM thiorphan. Pellets were vortexed, subjected to a cycle of freeze-thawing, and centrifuged at 14,000g for 15 min at 4°C to obtain a pellet depleted of soluble proteolytic activity. Membrane-bound ECE activity was solubilized by incubation of this pellet on ice for 1 h with 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, containing the inhibitors indicated above and 1% Triton X-100. After centrifugation to remove insoluble material, solubilized protein was evaluated for ECE activity (Corder et al., 1995Immunoblotting.
Solubilized protein samples (25 µg) were
mixed with an equal volume of 62.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, containing 10 mM dithiothreitol, 25% glycerol, 2% SDS, and 0.01% bromphenol blue
and heated for 2 min at 100°C. Proteins were separated by
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (7.5% gels) and transferred
onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Bio-Rad). Blots were blocked
with I-block (Tropix, Bedford, MA) and then incubated overnight with
rabbit anti-ECE-1 IgG (1.5 µg/ml). Second antibody was a horseradish peroxidase-goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugate, and detection of bands was
achieved by using the chemiluminescence substrate SuperSignal West Pico
(Pierce, Rockford, IL). ECE-1 antiserum was raised in rabbits against
the C-terminal sequence of human ECE-1 residues 737 to 753 (Schmidt et
al., 1994
) by Neosystem (Strasbourg, France). ECE-1 specific IgG was
purified on GSPMNPPHKAEVW (Genosys, Cambridge, UK) coupled to
CNBr-Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, UK).
Materials. Unless otherwise indicated all chemicals and standard reagents were obtained from either Sigma (Poole, UK) or Merck (Lutterworth, UK). Tissue culture medium and reagents were from Sigma or Life Technologies (Paisley, UK). PCR primers were obtained from Eurogentec.
Analysis of data. Results are expressed as mean ± S.E.M. Data were analyzed using GraphPad Prism (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA) and compared by ANOVA with Fisher's protected least-significant difference post hoc test or Student's t test using Statview software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC)
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Results |
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ECE-1 Isoform Expression in BPASMC.
Using RACE combined with
colony hybridization to identify cloned cDNAs, ECE-1c was the most
common ECE-1 isoform sequence obtained from BPASMC mRNA. It was
identified by the double ATG at the 5'-end and a short, conserved
5'-flanking sequence (Fig. 1A) that corresponded to the established
bovine ECE-1c sequence encoded by exon 1c (Schmidt et al., 1994
;
Valdenaire et al., 1999
). Another ECE-1 sequence of lower frequency was
identified in the cDNA from BPASMC. On sequencing, this was found to be
homologous with the exon 1b of human ECE-1b (Fig. 1A) and hence
represents bovine ECE-1b. Although the full exon 1b sequence was not
obtained, sufficient sequence information was acquired to allow the
design of a specific forward primer for bovine ECE-1b. Neither the
ECE-1a nor ECE-1d isoforms were identified in the cloned ECE-1 cDNAs from BPASMC. For comparison, experiments were also performed using cloned cDNA from BAEC; ECE-1a was found to be the most abundant transcript. ECE-1b and ECE-1c were also present and confirmed the
sequences obtained from the BPASMC cDNA. In addition, a single colony
was identified from the cloned BAEC cDNA with ECE-1d specific sequence.
This was used to design a specific primer for ECE-1d RT-PCR (Fig. 1A).
35% of the level of ECE-1c mRNA, but
neither ECE-1a nor ECE-1d were detectable in BPASMC RNA. This
contrasted with results using total RNA from BAEC where all four ECE-1
isoforms were expressed.
Characterization of ET-1 synthesis by BPASMC.
ET-1 release
under basal conditions was low (Fig. 2).
Treatment of BPASMC for 24 h with TNF
caused
concentration-dependent increases in ET-1 release with a significant
rise at 0.3 ng/ml (p < 0.001) and maximum effect at 30 ng/ml (Fig. 2A). TNF
-stimulation increased ET-1 secretion by up to
10 fold with similar rises in levels of preproET-1 mRNA (Fig.
3). TNF
also augmented the secretion of big ET-1 by 2- to 5-fold. Under basal conditions and during TNF
-stimulation, big ET-1 release represented
20% of total
endothelin production by BPASMC (Fig. 2B). Synthesis of ET-1 under
basal and TNF
-stimulated conditions was inhibited by phosphoramidon with IC50 values of 29 ± 3 µM and 43 ± 14 µM, respectively (Fig. 2B). Inhibition of ET-1 synthesis with
phosphoramidon increased big ET-1 levels by 8- to 10-fold compared with
the corresponding values obtained without phosphoramidon
(p < 0.001; Fig. 2B).
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Effect of TNF
on ECE-1 Isoform Expression in BPASMC.
Under
basal conditions, levels of ECE-1c mRNA were more abundant than ECE-1b
mRNA (4.0 ± 0.7 compared with 1.6 ± 0.3 arbitrary densitometric units, n = 4 experiments,
p = 0.021). Treatment of BPASMC with TNF
caused a
3-fold increase in ECE-1c mRNA levels (Fig. 3). In comparison, amounts
of ECE-1b mRNA were significantly lower in BPASMC after treatment with
TNF
(expressed as a percentage of untreated samples, ECE-1b mRNA
levels were reduced to 24.8 ± 10%, n = 3, p < 0.01). Expression of mRNAs for both ECE-1a and ECE-1d were still undetectable after TNF
treatment.
Effects of ECE-1c Antisense ODN on BPASMC.
Treatment of BPASMC
with the ECE-1c antisense ODN reduced basal and TNF
-stimulated
ECE-1c mRNA levels by 37% and 65% compared with sense ODN control
(p < 0.05, p < 0.01; Fig. 3). Levels
of preproET-1 and GAPDH mRNA were unaffected by the ECE-1c antisense ODN.
stimulation, ET-1 release was 19% lower from cells treated with ECE-1c
antisense ODN when compared with the sense ODN control
(p < 0.01, Fig. 3), but this change was not
significantly different from release with TNF
alone. Consistent with
the reduction in ET-1 levels with the ECE-1c antisense ODN, big ET-1
levels were increased by 42% compared with the sense ODN control
(p < 0.001, Fig. 3).
In agreement with changes in ECE-1c mRNA levels, TNF
increased by
more than 2-fold the level of membrane-bound ECE activity measured by
immunoblotting and enzyme assay (p < 0.01, Fig.
4). Treatment with the ECE-1c antisense
ODN reduced ECE-1 protein and enzyme activity by at least 60% under
basal and TNF
-stimulated conditions (Fig. 4). In comparison, neither
sense ODN nor scrambled ODN controls had any significant effects on
ECE-1 protein levels. These results are consistent with changes
observed on ECE-1c mRNA levels and demonstrate the effectiveness of the
antisense ODN treatment.
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Discussion |
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Once ECE-1 had been cloned (Schmidt et al., 1994
; Shimada et al.,
1994
; Xu et al., 1994
), it became generally accepted as the
endopeptidase responsible for the physiological conversion of big ET-1
to ET-1 (Turner et al., 1998
). Four isoforms of ECE-1 have been
identified (Valdenaire et al., 1999
), but the relative importance of
each isoform for endogenous ET-1 synthesis has not been defined.
Importantly, targeted disruption of the ECE-1 gene to generate
ECE-1
/
mice did not prevent ET-1 synthesis in
these animals (Yanagisawa et al., 1998
, 2000
). In heterozygous
ECE-1+/
embryos, there was no significant
change in ET-1 peptide levels despite a 27% reduction in
membrane-bound ECE activity. Characterization of homozygous
ECE-1
/
embryos showed ECE activity to be
largely eliminated, yet the quantity of ET-1 was decreased by only 48%
without any increase in the levels of big ET-1. Based on these
observations it could have been inferred that the reduced ET-1 content
of ECE-1
/
embryos was not the result of
inhibition of ET-1 synthesis, but simply because of the perturbed
development. However, because the phenotype of
ECE-1
/
mice resembled that observed after
deletion of genes for ET-1 (Kurihara et al., 1994
) or the
ETA-receptor (Clouthier et al., 1998
), it was
concluded that the phenotype, rather than the ET-1 measurements,
confirmed the physiological role of ECE-1 in ET-1 biosynthesis
(Yanagisawa et al., 1998
, 2000
).
Until now there have been no specific investigations of the role of
ECE-1 in ET-1 biosynthesis at the cellular level. Where ECE inhibitor
studies have been performed, and big ET-1 has been measured to confirm
ECE inhibition, the agents tested have shown low potency and therefore
a low degree of peptidase specificity (Ikegawa et al., 1990
; Corder et
al., 1995
; Woods et al., 1999
). Future studies with highly specific
ECE-1 inhibitors may well clarify whether ECE-1 plays a significant
role in ET-1 biosynthesis.
Specific inhibition of ECE-1 synthesis using an antisense approach did
not seem feasible if all four isoforms needed to be eliminated.
However, in contrast to endothelial cells, where the four ECE-1
isoforms are expressed (Valdenaire et al., 1999
), here we have shown
that under basal conditions, BPASMC express predominantly ECE-1c with a
2.5-fold lower level of the ECE-1b isoform. This difference is
further accentuated by treatment with TNF
, which induced a 3-fold
increase in ECE-1c mRNA levels and, conversely, reduced ECE-1b mRNA to
25% of its basal level. This indicates that TNF
can regulate the
switch between the first and second ECE-1 gene promoters (Valdenaire et
al., 1999
) so that activation of transcription is driven mainly through
the dominant ECE-1c promoter (Funke-Kaiser et al., 2000
). Because
ECE-1a and ECE-1d were not expressed in BPASMC, ECE-1c mRNA represented
>95% of total ECE-1 mRNA after TNF
stimulation, hence providing a
suitable cell line to examine the role of ECE-1 in ET-1 synthesis using an antisense ODN to ECE-1c.
Treatment with the ECE-1c antisense ODN specifically reduced ECE-1c
mRNA levels. This effect was particularly marked in cells stimulated
with TNF
. The reduction in ECE-1c mRNA was associated with a
substantial reduction in membrane-bound ECE-1 protein and ECE activity.
Both the immunoblotting procedure, using a C-terminal specific ECE-1
antibody, and the enzyme assay measure the contribution of all ECE-1
isoforms to these variables. Hence, the effect of the antisense ODN
confirmed that ECE-1c expression was the main source of ECE-1 activity
in these cells.
The inverse molar relationship between ET-1 and big ET-1 secretion
during treatment with ECE inhibitors is a well-accepted characteristic
of inhibition of the physiologically relevant ECE. Similarly, the
relative amount of ET-1 and big ET-1 released from a cell population
indicates their capacity to process big ET-1, and this indirectly
reflects the level of functional ECE activity. Here, big ET-1 release
represented
20% of total endothelin output from BPASMC, implying
that the level of intracellular ECE activity was already less than that
required for complete processing of big ET-1. Despite this apparent
lack of redundancy in the level of enzyme activity, when ECE-1c
antisense ODN was used to reduce ECE-1 protein by more than 60%, big
ET-1 output did not alter under basal conditions and was only increased
by 0.4-fold in the presence of TNF
. In marked contrast, a 70%
inhibition of ET-1 biosynthesis with phosphoramidon (100 µM) caused
an 8- to 10-fold increase in big ET-1 output. When the effects of the
ECE-1c antisense ODN are compared with the effects of phosphoramidon,
this shows that ECE-1c plays little part in big ET-1 processing in
BPASMC. A role for ECE-1b also seems unlikely because its expression
decreased during stimulation with TNF
, whereas ET-1 production
increased. Despite the lack of evidence for ECE-1 processing of big
ET-1 in BPASMC, it remains a possibility that it makes a greater
contribution in endothelial cells where the various ECE-1 isoforms are
more highly expressed.
To ensure efficient intracellular processing of peptide mediators the
regulation of prepropeptide genes generally occurs in parallel with the
relevant processing enzymes (Corder et al., 1998
). This enables
appropriate quantities of enzyme to be present with the peptide
precursor in the trans-Golgi network and secretory vesicles
during peptide synthesis. A number of studies have localized ECE-1 and
ECE-2 to secretory vesicles, sometimes with colocalization of ET-1
(Barnes et al., 1998
; Turner et al., 1998
; Russell and Davenport,
1999a
,b
), but this in itself does not prove a role in ET-1 processing.
Earlier studies of BAEC have shown that expression of ECE-1 isoforms is
not coordinated with the regulation of preproET-1 mRNA levels (Corder
and Barker, 1999
). Similarly, in vivo after angioplasty when the
endothelium as a source of ECE-1 has been removed, ECE-1 expression in
vascular smooth muscle does not have the same time course as ET-1
up-regulation, indicating that the likely function of ECE-1 is not
linked to big ET-1 processing (Wang et al., 1996
). Subcellular
localization of ECE-1 in VSMC has identified it on the cell surface and
at intracellular sites including a substantial proportion that is
colocalized with
-actin filaments (Barnes & Turner, 1999
). Because
ET-1 synthesis in VSMC is negligible in the basal state, it was also
suggested that ECE-1 has other functions in these cells (Barnes & Turner, 1999
).
ECE-1 has a fairly broad specificity; it will hydrolyze a variety of
peptide substrates, so a role other than that of an ECE is quite
conceivable (Hoang and Turner, 1997
; Johnson et al., 1999
). Moreover,
hydrolysis of big ET-1 by ECE-1 is highly dependent on the secondary
structure of big ET-1 as removal of intramolecular disulfide bonds
decreases the amount of ET-1 formed and also results in hydrolysis of
other peptide bonds besides
Trp21-Val22 (Corder, 1996
;
Fahnoe et al., 2000
). If specific processing is so dependent on the
conformation of big ET-1, then the evidence that it is the
physiological substrate of ECE-1 may not be as strong as so far presumed.
The observation that substantial quantities of ET-1 were found after
disruption of the genes for ECE-1 and ECE-2 has already lead to the
conclusion that other proteases can activate ET-1 in vivo (Yanagisawa
et al., 1998
, 2000
). The experiments described here have not examined
the contribution of ECE-2 to ET-1 processing in BPASMC, so a functional
role cannot be excluded. But it should be noted that deletion of the
ECE-2 gene has no effect on ET-1 synthesis in mouse embryos either
alone or when combined with ECE-1 knockout (Yanagisawa et al., 2000
).
Although these studies of BPASMC seem to exclude a role for ECE-1 in
ET-1 biosynthesis, preliminary investigations have identified a soluble
secreted ECE from both endothelial and vascular smooth muscle cells
that is synthesized in parallel with ET-1 (Corder et al., 1998
). Future investigations are likely to identify other functions for ECE-1 as well
as other ECEs that play a greater part in ET-1 biosynthesis in VSMC and
other cell types.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We wish to acknowledge the expertise and assistance of Dr. Louise Jones from the Medical Oncology Department for DNA sequencing. We would also like to thank Dr. Canet and colleagues at Institut de Recherches Internationales Servier for providing the ECE-1 antiserum used for Western blotting.
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Footnotes |
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Received August 22, 2000; Accepted October 18, 2000
This work was supported by the Institut de Recherches Internationales Servier and The William Harvey Research Foundation.
Send reprint requests to: Prof. Roger Corder, Department of Experimental Therapeutics, William Harvey Research Institute, St. Bartholomew's and the Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary and Westfield College, Charterhouse Square Campus, London, EC1M 6BQ, UK. E-mail: r.corder{at}mds.qmw.ac.uk
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Abbreviations |
|---|
ET-1, endothelin-1;
ECE, endothelin converting
enzyme;
ODN, oligodeoxynucleotide;
BPASMC, bovine pulmonary artery
smooth muscle cells;
DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium;
BAEC, bovine aortic endothelial cells;
RACE, rapid amplification of cDNA
ends;
PCR, polymerase chain reaction;
RT, reverse transcriptase;
bp, base pair(s);
TNF
, tumor necrosis factor
;
VSMC, vascular smooth
muscle cells.
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