Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 10, 3219-3226, Copyright © 1990 by Society for Neuroscience
Carboxypeptidase H in the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system: evidence for processing and activation of a prohormone-processing enzyme during axonal transport
VY Hook, HU Affolter and M Palkovits
Department of Biochemistry, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814.
Investigations of peptide precursor processing in nerve cells, including
studies on prooxytocin and provasopressin processing in the rat
hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system, show that prohormone processing occurs
during axonal transport of maturing secretory vesicles. Recent studies
(Fricker et al., 1989; Rodriguez et al., 1989) show that carboxypeptidase H
(CPH), one of several proteases required for prohormone processing, is
synthesized as a proenzyme that presumably requires activation. To
determine if pro-CPH, like prohormone precursors, is processed and
activated during axonal transport, we have analyzed the molecular forms of
CPH present at several levels in the rat hypothalamo-neurohypophysial
system. These biochemical and immunochemical studies showed that the
supraoptic nucleus (SON), a region enriched in neuronal cell bodies,
possesses primarily an inactive 65-kDa species of CPH. The median eminence
and pituitary stalk regions that are enriched in axons possess both the
inactive 65-kDa and the active 55-kDa forms of CPH, and nerve terminals of
the posterior pituitary contain primarily the active 55-kDa CPH. These
results support the hypothesis that pro-CPH is processed and activated
during axonal transport from neuronal perikarya of SON to nerve terminals
of the posterior pituitary. Furthermore, analysis of immunoreactive CPH in
the rat and bovine pituitary showed that each tissue possessed different
relative amounts of zymogen compared to mature forms of CPH, suggesting
that tissue-specific processing of pro- CPH occurs. Thus, the biosynthesis
of active peptide hormones requires the simultaneous processing of
proenzyme and prohormone.