Processing at the carboxyl terminus of nascent placental alkaline phosphatase in a cell-free system: evidence for specific cleavage of a signal peptide.
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Alkaline phosphatase is anchored to the plasma membrane by a carboxyl-terminal phosphatidylinositol glycan moiety. To investigate the biosynthesis of mature alkaline phosphatase, nascent human placental alkaline phosphatase was expressed in a cell-free system and used as substrate for in vitro processing by microsomal extracts. By monitoring the processed product with three site-directed antibodies, it was shown that microsomal extracts from CHO cells that contain other recognized processing activities also remove the carboxyl-terminal signal peptide from the preproenzyme in an apparently selective manner. This peptidase-like cleavage may be brought about by the action of a specific transamidase acting on the nascent protein in the absence of an appropriate phosphatidylinositol glycan cosubstrate.