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Protein Synthesis and Degradation
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- Cell BiologyOpen Access
The motif EXEXXXL in the cytosolic tail of the secretory human proprotein convertase PC7 regulates its trafficking and cleavage activity
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 7p2068–2083Published online: January 8, 2020- Loreleï Durand
- Stéphanie Duval
- Alexandra Evagelidis
- Johann Guillemot
- Vahid Dianati
- Emilia Sikorska
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 4Many secretory proteins are activated by cleavage at specific sites. The proprotein convertases (PCs) form a family of nine secretory subtilisin-like serine proteases, seven of which cleave at specific basic residues within the trans-Golgi network, granules, or at the cell surface/endosomes. The seventh member, PC7, is a type-I transmembrane (TM) protein with a 97-residue–long cytosolic tail (CT). PC7 sheds human transferrin receptor 1 (hTfR1) into soluble shTfR1 in endosomes. To better understand the physiological roles of PC7, here we focused on the relationship between the CT-regulated trafficking of PC7 and its ability to shed hTfR1.