From the Laboratoire de Génétique des Virus, Gif sur Yvette, 91198 France, and Laboratoire de Génétique et Biologie Cellulaire, Université de Versailles St. Quentin en Yvelines, 78035 France
Received for publication, July 29, 2002, and in revised form, October 29, 2002
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ABSTRACT |
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The Hepatitis B virus P22 protein is a
nonstructural protein that is the precursor of the 17-kDa secreted e
antigen (HBeAg). The mature HBeAg is obtained after the removal of the
C-terminal region of P22, a process which involves a proprotein
convertase. Our studies show first that the protease could cleave P22
at the C-terminal side of Arg167 or
Arg154 and second, that the maturation process can
be either done in one step or in two steps with the generation of a
processing intermediate (P20). Our data also demonstrate that the
removal of the P22 C terminus, which occurs mainly in the
trans-Golgi network, can also be achieved after exocytosis.
Keeping in mind this characteristic and the amino acid sequence of the
cleavage sites, we concluded that furin is involved in the maturation
of the HBeAg. In addition, we show that in our experimental system, the
HBeAg is a 164-amino acid protein and not a 159-amino acid protein as
previously reported.
The hepatitis B virus
(HBV)1 e antigen (HBeAg) is a
17-kDa protein secreted into the serum of patients infected with
wild-type HBV. It derives from the precore protein, which is encoded by the PreC/C gene. The function of HBeAg and/or its precursors during the
course of infection is still enigmatic, although conservation of a
similar e antigen among all of the members of the hepadnavirus family
argues for an important role of at least one of these proteins in the
viral life cycle. Even though a role for infectivity or viral
multiplication has been ruled out (1), several reports have
nevertheless brought circumstantial evidences that the PreC/C gene
products could be involved in the establishment of persistent infection
(2).
Most of the synthetic pathway of HBeAg is now clearly established (2).
The precore protein (Fig. 1) is
co-translationally directed to the secretory pathway by a 19-amino acid
signal peptide. The latter is cleaved during translocation of the
nascent chain into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. The
22-kDa resulting protein (named P22) is 193 amino acids long and is
further processed into mature HBeAg. The same biosynthetic pathway has
been described for both the Duck Hepatitis B virus e antigen and the
Woodchuck hepatitis virus e antigen (3, 4).
INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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Fig. 1.
Complete amino acid sequence of the precore
protein, the HBeAg precursor. The precore protein is encoded by
the entire HBV C open reading frame. This ORF contains two in-frame
initiation codons, delimiting the PreC sequence (29 codons) and the C
gene (183 codons). Conventionally, position number 1 is assigned to the
first amino acid of the core protein encoded by the C gene.
Consequently, the first amino acid of the precore protein is located at
position 29. After the cleavage of the 19-amino acid signal peptide,
the resulting P22 precursor begins at position
10. According to
Takahashi et al. (5), the HBeAg derives from P22 by
removal of its 34 C-terminal amino acids, and consequently ends at
Val149. Positions of important amino acids referred to in
this paper are numbered. The four 4-amino acid putative furin cleavage
sites present in the P22 C-terminal part are boxed and the
two 6-amino acid putative furin cleavage sites are
underlined.
In 1983, Takahashi and co-workers (5) reported that the C-terminal extremity of the secreted HBeAg was located at position 149 (see Fig. 1), leading to the conclusion that the mature HBeAg was obtained by the cleavage of the last 34 amino acids from the P22 C terminus. Indeed, very little is known about the protease involved in this process, except that a proteolytic self-cleavage of P22 is excluded (6). More recently, it has been reported that a proprotein convertase is involved in the maturation of P22 (7). However, neither the exact nature of the protease nor the cleavage sites have been determined. This led us to study these points to get new insights in the mechanism of P22 processing and thus complete our understanding of the process of HBeAg synthesis.
Furin is a transmembrane proprotein convertase localized in the trans-Golgi network (TGN), transported to the plasma membrane and then retrieved back through the endocytic pathway (8). The consensus sequence for furin cleavage is RX(K/R)R, both arginine residues at positions P1 and P4 being absolutely required, giving the minimal furin cleavage site RXXR (9). However in some cases, an alternate sequence 6 amino acids long with at least two basic residues of three at positions P6, P4, or P2, in addition to the P1 can also constitute a competent furin cleavage site (8, 9). Interestingly, six potential furin cleavage sites can be found in the 34-amino acid C-terminal domain of P22 (Fig. 1): two consensus cleavage sites (RXRR), two minimal cleavage sites (RXXR), and two alternate 6-amino acid sequences (RXRXXR and RXXXRR).
The studies presented here show that the furin protease cleaves P22 at
two positions within the C-terminal domain: one cleavage generating a
processing intermediate (P20) and the other one generating the HBeAg.
Our data also demonstrate that the removal of the P22 C terminus, which
occurs mainly in the TGN, can also be achieved after exocytosis. In
addition, we show that in our experimental system HBeAg is a 164-amino
acid protein, in contradiction with the previous result published by
Takahashi et al. (5).
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Plasmids-- Plasmid pHPC (formerly named pMLP-PC), which encodes the HBeAg precursor, the precore protein, has been previously described (10). It contains the Pre-C sequence and C gene of the HBV subtype ayw genome, under the control of the adenovirus major late promoter. Substitution mutants were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis of plasmid pHPC, using PCR. DNA sequencing of amplified regions confirmed the nucleotide exchanges.
Protein Labeling in Transfected Cells and Immunoprecipitation-- Simian kidney COS-7 cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (Biomedia) supplemented with 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum. Cells at about 50% confluency were transfected using the calcium phosphate method with 30 µg of appropriate plasmid DNA per 100-mm dishes. For standard protein radiolabeling, 48-h post-transfected cells were grown for 1 h in 10 ml of methionine-free cysteine-free minimum essential Eagle medium (ICN) then for 3 h in 6 ml of methionine-free cysteine-free minimum essential Eagle medium containing 400 µCi of Pro-Mix protein labeling mix (Amersham Biosciences, specific activity >1,000 Ci/mmol).
After labeling, the medium was collected, clarified by centrifugation
at 700 × g for 10 min, concentrated to 500 µl using a Centricon 10 microconcentrator (Millipore) according to
manufacturer's instructions, and kept at 20 °C until
immunoprecipitation. Cells were gathered in phosphate-buffered saline
(140 mM NaCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, pH 7.4) and lysed in 1 ml of
phosphate-buffered saline-2% Nonidet P-40 (BDH). Cell debris and
nuclei were removed by centrifugation at 9,500 × g for
15 min at 4 °C. The resulting cell extract was kept at
20 °C until immunoprecipitation.
The totality of concentrated medium or an aliquot fraction of cell extract (5 × 107 cpm) were submitted to immunoprecipitation, as previously described (11) using 5 µl of anti-HBV core antigen rabbit antiserum (Dako). Proteins were then separated on a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-12.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). 14C-labeled molecular mass standards were from Amersham Biosciences. Gels fixed in 20% ethanol-10% acetic acid were prepared for fluorography by treatment with Amplify (Amersham Biosciences), dried, and autoradiographied on x-ray films.
Pulse-chase Protein Labeling Experiments-- Forty-eight-hr post-transfected cells were depleted for methionine and cysteine as described above and then grown for 30 min in 6 ml of methionine-cysteine-free minimum essential Eagle medium containing 700 µCi of Pro-Mix protein labeling mix. After pulse-labeling, cells were grown in 6 ml of Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium without fetal calf serum as indicated in the figure legend. Media and cell extracts were prepared and proteins immunoprecipitated and analyzed as described above.
Brefeldin A Treatment--
Brefeldin A (Roche) was dissolved in
50% ethanol at a concentration of 1 mg/ml and stored at 20 °C
until use. For the experiment, cells were exposed to a final
concentration of 18 µM brefeldin A during
methionine/cysteine depletion and protein labeling.
Inhibition of the Furin Proprotein
Convertase--
Decanoyl-Arg-Val-Lys-Arg-chloromethylketone
(dec-RVKR-cmk, BACHEM) was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide at a
concentration of 10 mM and stored at 20 °C until use.
Cells were exposed to a final concentration of 20 µM
dec-RVKR-cmk during methionine/cysteine depletion and protein labeling.
The inhibitor was also present in the cell lysis buffer
(phosphate-buffered saline-Nonidet P-40).
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RESULTS |
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Existence of a Processing Intermediate in the HBeAg Maturation
Process--
Given that six putative furin cleavage sites are present
in the P22 C-terminal domain (see Fig. 1), the existence of other processing products in addition to the mature HBeAg can be envisaged. Transient expression of the precore protein was achieved by
transfection of COS-7 cells with plasmid pHPC. Proteins from
transfected cells were metabolically labeled with highly radioactive
35S-labeled amino acids, and the precore-derived proteins
were immunoprecipitated from the cell lysate as described under
"Experimental Procedures." Fig.
2A shows the specifically
immunoprecipited proteins, with the typical occurrence of HBeAg alone
in the medium and both P22 and HBeAg in the cell extract (12).
Interestingly, an additional faint band with an apparent molecular mass
of 20 kDa (named P20) was detected in the cell extract. P20 could
either correspond to a processing intermediate, generated in exocytic
compartments, or to the result of a degradation of some misfolded P22
molecules that occurs in the cytosol (13, 14). To determine whether P20
was formed in the secretory pathway, we used the fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA), which blocks the traffic of secreted proteins (15).
Thus, pHPC-transfected cells were grown in the presence 18 µM BFA and proteins from cell extract or cell medium were
analyzed (Fig. 2B). As expected, HBeAg was no longer
secreted when BFA was present. Interestingly, in the cell extract, P22
was accumulated in higher amounts than in standard conditions, whereas
neither P20 nor HBeAg was detected. From this data, we can exclude that P20 is a cytosolic degradation product of P22. Rather, as BFA blocks
the traffic between the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus,
we conclude that P20 is a processing intermediate generated from P22 in
a post-endoplasmic reticulum compartment of the secretory pathway.
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It is worth noting that P20 was detected only in the cell extract,
suggesting it may not be secreted in the extracellular medium. However,
we could not exclude that P20 had a short half-life after exocytosis
and thus could not be detected when newly synthesized proteins were
labeled for 3 h. To decide between these two possibilities, a
pulse-chase protein labeling experiment was performed as described under "Experimental Procedures." Fig.
3 shows that HBeAg and P20 were both
immunoprecipitated from the cell media as well as from the cell
extracts, demonstrating that P20 is actually excreted. This finding
confirmed that P20 is generated in the secretory pathway. Moreover,
these data strongly suggested that P20 could be further maturated into
HBeAg in the extracellular medium. All of these observations are in
support of the conclusion that P22 is maturated by a protease
enzymatically active both in a post-endoplasmic reticulum compartment
and at the cell surface, which is a well known characteristic of furin
(8).
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A Cellular Proprotein Convertase Is Involved in the Maturation
Process of the HBeAg--
To determine whether furin is the protease
involved in P22 maturation, a specific inhibitor, the
decanoyl-RVKR-chloromethylketone (dec-RVKR-cmk) (16) was used in the
next experiment. The inhibitor, at a concentration of 20 µM, was added in medium from pHPC-transfected cells
during depletion and was maintained through protein radiolabeling and
cell lysis. As shown in Fig. 4, under
these conditions, HBeAg was not present in the culture medium and P22
was the only pHPC-encoded protein detected in the cell extract. Thus,
when the proteolytic activity of furin was inhibited, neither P20 nor
HBeAg could be formed, indicating that this protease is involved in the
biosynthetic pathway of HBeAg.
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The C terminus of HBV P22 contains six putative furin cleavage sites
(Fig. 1): two RXXR motifs (positions 151-154 and 154-157), two RXRR motifs (positions 164-167 and 172-175), one
RXRXXR motif (positions 152-157), and one
RXXXRR motif (positions 154-159). Thus, we next determined
among them which ones were effectively cleaved to generate P20 or
HBeAg. To address this question, several independent substitution
mutants were constructed to abolish each putative cleavage site (see
Fig. 5). Introduction of different mutations in the 172RRRR175 motif did not
modify the P20 and HBeAg amounts in the cell extract or in the culture
medium (data not shown), allowing us to exclude this sequence as a
suitable cleavage site for the HBeAg maturation process. In contrast,
abolishment of the cleavage motif 164RRRR167
(mutants R164G and R167G; see Fig. 5) resulted in the disappearance of
P20 in the cell extract (Fig.
6A, cells,
lanes 164 and 167). Interestingly, the secretion
of HBeAg was not modified (Fig. 6A, media,
compare lane PC to lanes 164 and 167).
From these results, it can be concluded first, that P20 results from
the cleavage of P22 at the C-terminal side of Arg167 and
second, that the formation of the HBeAg does not require the
preliminary generation of P20.
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We next focused on the cleavage that generated mature HBeAg. Replacement of Arg154 by a glycine (mutant R154G) had a drastic effect on P22 maturation. Indeed, formation of HBeAg was completely abolished (Fig. 6B, lane 154) whereas the amount of P20 was markedly increased in the cell extract. Concomitantly, P20 became detectable in the extracellular medium after a 3-h protein labeling which, as we showed above, was not the case for the wild-type protein (Fig. 6B, media, compare lanes PC and 154). From these data, we conclude that Arg154 is absolutely required to generate mature HBeAg. Interestingly, mutation R154G affects four putative furin cleavage sites: 151RRGR154, 152RGRSPR157, 154RSPR157, and 154RSPRRR159. However, substitution of Arg157 or Arg159 by a glycine (mutants R157G and R159G, respectively) did not affect the synthesis of HBeAg (data not shown), allowing us to exclude the implication of the putative cleavage sites 154RSPR157, 152RGRSPR157, or 154RSPRRR159 in the HBeAg maturation process. Furthermore, the results obtained with mutant R151G were identical to those obtained with mutant R154G (Fig. 6B, compare lanes 151 and 154), demonstrating that the presence of the cleavage site 151RRGR154 is critical for the formation of the HBeAg.
Taken together, our results clearly demonstrate that first, furin is involved in the HBeAg maturation process and second, the removal of the P22 C-terminal domain implies specific cleavages at the C-terminal side of Arg167 and Arg154. Alternatively, furin can maturate the HBeAg in one step, cleaving P22 directly at Arg154.
The Secreted HBeAg C Terminus Is Located at
Arg154--
A cleavage of P20 or/and P22 at position 154 is not in agreement with the C terminus of the HBeAg previously
reported at position 149 for subtype adr (5). Because
subtypes adr and ayw share the same nucleotide
sequence for the PreC/C gene, this may indicate that a further step of
maturation is required to eliminate the last 5 amino acids.
Alternatively, the size of the HBeAg produced by ex vivo
cell transfection could be different from that of the HBeAg purified
from the sera of HBV infected patients by Takahashi et al.
(5). We thus decided to determine accurately the length of the HBeAg
produced in our experimental system. For this purpose, cells were
transfected with plasmids encoding wild-type (pHPC) or truncated HBeAg
precursors ending exactly at Val149 or Arg154
(C149 or C154 proteins respectively). Analysis of immunoprecipitated proteins by SDS-PAGE showed that the HBeAg encoded by pHPC migrated at
the same position as the C154 protein (Fig.
7). This result demonstrates that in our
experimental system, the accurate HBeAg C terminus is located at
Arg154 rather than at Val149. It is important
to note that the same result was obtained in a human epithelial kidney
cell line (HEK 293, data not shown).
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DISCUSSION |
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In this report, we present new data on the last unresolved steps of HBeAg biosynthesis. Our studies established that two endoproteolytic cleavages occur during P22 maturation, one cleavage giving rise to a 177-amino acid intermediate (P20) and the other generating the 164-amino acid mature HBeAg. It should be noted that these two proteolytic events are independent. In other words, the maturation of the HBeAg does not require the prior formation of the P20 intermediate. This is clearly demonstrated by our experiments in which mutated precursors that cannot produce P20 are not impaired in the HBeAg secretion. Using a specific inhibitor and P22 molecules bearing mutated cleavage motifs, we also provide evidence that these endoproteolytic cleavages are due to a member of the proprotein convertase family, most likely the furin.
Seven proteases belonging to the mammalian proprotein convertase (PC) family have been so far identified: furin/PACE, PC1/PC3, PC2, PC4, PACE 4, PC5/PC6, and LPC/PC7/PC8/SPC7 (see Refs. 9 and 17 for reviews). All PCs typically cleave their substrates on the C-terminal side of arginine residues. In contrast, they have different tissue distribution. Expression of PC2 and PC1/PC3 is limited to neuroendocrine tissues, whereas that of PC4 is highly restricted to testicular spermatogenic cells. In contrast, furin, PACE4, PC5/PC6, and LPC/PC7/PC8/SPC7 are expressed in a broad range of tissues and cell lines (9). Thus, with the exception of PC5/PC6, which is not present in the TGN (9), we assume that these three ubiquitous proteases could be responsible for the proteolytic processing of P22 into HBeAg.
In our experimental system, HBeAg can be generated in one step, by a cleavage at the C-terminal side of Arg154. That this cleavage is caused by the furin is supported by two complementary results. First, we have shown that HBeAg can be generated in the TGN or in the extracellular medium, implying that the processing enzyme is present in the TGN as well as at the cell surface or secreted. This is one of the features of furin, which cycles between the TGN and the plasmic membrane and which is also secreted in an active form (8, 17, 18). Second, furin is the only member of the PC family that does not have a strong requirement for a basic residue in position P2 (9, 19) and consequently is able to recognize a motif as 151RRGR154. The situation is less clear for the generation of P20 that arises in the TGN compartment. Because a basic residue is present at position P2 in the motif 164RRRR167, other members of the PC family that are known to be present in the TGN, namely PACE4 and LPC/PC7/PC8/SPC7 may also be involved in the cleavage of P22 at position 167. However, the fact that P20 was generated in a cell line (HEK 293, data not shown) devoid of PACE4 (20) is not in favor of the involvement of this enzyme in the generation of P20. On the other hand, LPC/PC7/PC8/SPC7 recognizes usually a 6-amino acid sequence, a property that does not support a role of this protease in the processing of P22. Taken together, those arguments strongly suggest that furin is the PC that cleaves P22 at position 167, leading to P20. However, the involvement of LPC/PC7/PC8/SPC7 or PACE 4 cannot be totally excluded. To overcome this problem, LoVo cells unable to produce functional furin were used (21). Unfortunately, the low efficiency of transfection obtained with this cell line did not allow us to draw a clear conclusion. It is worth noting that four of six putative furin sites were not cleaved. This cannot be explained by the nature of P'1 and P'2 residues, which are neither a lysine nor a hydrophobic residue, a characteristic reported to impede proper cleavage by furin (22, 23). A possible explanation could be the nonaccessibility of some putative cleavage sites to the protease that could either be caused by to the folding of P22 or to the presence of cellular proteins that interact with its C-terminal domain. We have previously reported two such proteins which interact specifically with the C-terminal domain of P22 (12, 24).
The next question is: what could be the function of P20 in the life cycle of HBV? One hypothesis derives directly from our previously reported data (10, 24). We have shown that the P22 C-terminal domain plays an important role during the intracellular transport of P22 through the secretory pathway, because a sequence located between amino acids 144 and 165 is required for an efficient HBeAg secretion via an interaction with a cellular tunicamycin-sensitive protein named TSP (24). Consequently, it could be envisaged that TSP would interact with a precursor of the HBeAg shorter than P22, like P20, which ends at Arg167. Other experiments will be required to conclude about this point.
In our experimental system, our results strongly indicate that the
HBeAg ends at Arg154 instead of Val149, as
previously reported by Takahashi et al. (5). However, it is
worth noting that these authors have determined the C terminus of the
HBeAg purified from patient's sera whereas we have studied the
generation of HBeAg in cell culture. Therefore, it could be speculated
that another proteolytic event arises in the sera of infected patients.
For instance, in the case of pro-hormone processing, a carboxypeptidase
removes one or two basic residues after the cleavage by the
proprotein-convertase (18). However, this second proteolytic event
always occurs in the secretory pathway, implying that only the mature
hormone is secreted. Although we cannot exclude that another
proteolytic event occurs in the patient's sera during the HBeAg
processing, our hypothesis is supported by previous results of Salfeld
and co-workers (25). These authors have studied the HBeAg isolated from
patients infected by the adw subtype of HBV that encode the
sequence 146TTVVDSRRRGR156 instead of the
classical 146TTVVRRRGR154 sequence.
Interestingly, they reported that the adw HBeAg has a slower
migration than the ayw HBeAg. This observation is not consistent with TTVV149 as the C-terminal extremity of the
HBeAg but rather favors of our hypothesis. Becasue our results have
been reproduced in two independent cell lines (COS-7 and HEK 293),
demonstrating that they was not due to the specificity of COS-7 cells,
we suggest that HBeAg actually ends at position 154 in
vivo.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank for their technical assistance Marie-Thérèse Bidoyen and Anne Thouard.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported in part by Grant 4353 from the Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer and by a grant from the Université Paris-Sud. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U. S. C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Supported by a training fund from the Association pour la
Recherche sur le Cancer. Present address: Laboratoire de
Génétique Oncologique, UMR 8125, Inst. Gustave Roussy,
39, rue Camille Desmoulins, 94805 Villejuif, France.
§ Supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer. Present address: Laboratoire de Biochimie Cellulaire, UMR 7098, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 9, quai Saint-Bernard, 75252 Paris cedex 05, France.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Laboratoire de Génétique et Biologie Cellulaire, ESA 8087 CNRS, Université de Versailles St. Quentin en Yvelines, Bât. Buffon, 45, avenue des Etats-Unis, 78035 Versailles, France. Tel.: 33-1-39-25-45-95; Fax: 33-1-39-25-45-72; E-mail: jean-michel.rossignol@genetique.uvsq.fr.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, November 1, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M207634200
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: HBV, hepatitis B virus; HBeAg, HBV e antigen; TGN, trans-Golgi network; BFA, brefeldin A; dec-RVKR-cmk, decanoyl-RVKR-chloromethylketone; PC, proprotein convertase; TSP, tunicamycin-sensitive protein; ORF, open reading frame.
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