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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 17, 11782-11788, April 23, 1999
From the Departments of Pediatrics, Cell Biology, and Physiology,
Washington University School of Medicine, Division of
Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital,
St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Factor H, a secretory glycoprotein composed of 20 short consensus repeat modules, is an inhibitor of the complement
system. Previous studies of inherited factor H deficiency revealed
single amino acid substitutions at conserved cysteine residues, on one allele arginine for cysteine 518 (C518R) and on the other tyrosine for
cysteine 941 (C941Y) (Ault, B. H., Schmidt, B. Z., Fowler, N. L., Kashtan, C. E., Ahmed, A. E., Vogt, B. A.,
and Colten, H. R. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 25168-25175). To ascertain if the phenotype, impaired secretion of
factor H, is due to the C518R substitution or the C941Y substitution
and to ascertain the mechanism by which secretion is impaired, we
studied COS-1 and HepG2 cells transfected with wild type and several
mutant factor H molecules. The results showed markedly impaired
secretion of both C518R and C941Y factor H as well as that of factor H
molecules bearing alanine or arginine substitutions at the
Cys518-Cys546 disulfide bond (C518A, C546A,
C546R, C518A-C546A). In each case, mutant factor H was retained in the
endoplasmic reticulum and degraded relatively slowly as compared with
most other mutant secretory and membrane proteins that are retained in
the endoplasmic reticulum. These data indicate that impaired secretion
of the naturally occurring C518R and C941Y mutant factor H proteins is due to disruption of framework-specific disulfide bonds in factor H
short consensus repeat modules.
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