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Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol (May 1, 2009). doi:10.1152/ajplung.00071.2009
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Submitted on March 6, 2009
Revised on April 8, 2009
Accepted on April 24, 2009

ECTODOMAIN SHEDDING OF ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME 2 IN HUMAN AIRWAY EPITHELIA

Hong Peng Jia1, Dwight C. Look1, Ping Tan1, Lei Shi1, Melissa Hickey1, Lokesh Gakhar1, Mark C. Chappell2, Christine Wohlford-Lenane1, and Paul B McCray, Jr.1*

1 University of Iowa
2 Wake Forest University School of Medicine

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: paul-mccray{at}uiowa.edu.

Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) is a terminal carboxypeptidase and the receptor for the SARS and NL63 coronaviruses (CoV). Loss of ACE2 function is implicated in SARS pathogenesis, but little is known about ACE2 biogenesis and activity in the airways. We report that ACE2 is shed from human airway epithelia, a site of SARS-CoV infection. The regulation of ACE2 release was investigated in polarized human airway epithelia. Constitutive generation of soluble (s) ACE2 was inhibited by DPC 333, implicating the metalloproteinase ADAM17. Phorbol ester, ionomycin, endotoxin, and IL-1{beta} and TNF-{alpha} acutely induced ACE2 release, further supporting that ADAM17 and ADAM10 regulate ACE2 cleavage. Soluble ACE2 was enzymatically active and partially inhibited virus entry into target cells. We determined that the ACE2 cleavage site resides between amino acid 716 and the putative transmembrane domain starting at amino acid 741. To reveal structural determinants underlying ACE2 release several mutant and chimeric ACE2 proteins were engineered. Neither the juxtamembrane stalk region, transmembrane domain, nor the cytosolic domain was needed for constitutive ACE2 release. Interestingly, a point mutation in the ACE2 ectodomain, L584A, markedly attenuated shedding. The resultant ACE2-L584A mutant trafficked to the cell membrane and facilitated SARS-CoV entry into target cells, suggesting that the ACE2 ectodomain regulates its release and that residue L584 might be part of a putative sheddase "recognition motif". Thus, ACE2 must be cell-associated to serve as a CoV receptor and sACE2 might play a role in modifying inflammatory processes at the airway mucosal surface.




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M. Iwata, J. E. Silva Enciso, and B. H. Greenberg
Selective and specific regulation of ectodomain shedding of angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 by tumor necrosis factor {alpha}-converting enzyme
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, November 1, 2009; 297(5): C1318 - C1329.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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