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Identification of novel loci affecting circulating chromogranins and related peptides
- Benyamin, Beben;
- Maihofer, Adam X;
- Schork, Andrew J;
- Hamilton, Bruce A;
- Rao, Fangwen;
- Schmid-Schönbein, Geert W;
- Zhang, Kuixing;
- Mahata, Manjula;
- Stridsberg, Mats;
- Schork, Nicholas J;
- Biswas, Nilima;
- Hook, Vivian Y;
- Wei, Zhiyun;
- Montgomery, Grant W;
- Martin, Nicholas G;
- Nievergelt, Caroline M;
- Whitfield, John B;
- O’Connor, Daniel T
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddw380Abstract
Chromogranins are pro-hormone secretory proteins released from neuroendocrine cells, with effects on control of blood pressure. We conducted a genome-wide association study for plasma catestatin, the catecholamine release inhibitory peptide derived from chromogranin A (CHGA), and other CHGA- or chromogranin B (CHGB)-related peptides, in 545 US and 1252 Australian subjects. This identified loci on chromosomes 4q35 and 5q34 affecting catestatin concentration (P = 3.40 × 10-30 for rs4253311 and 1.85 × 10-19 for rs2731672, respectively). Genes in these regions include the proteolytic enzymes kallikrein (KLKB1) and Factor XII (F12). In chromaffin cells, CHGA and KLKB1 proteins co-localized in catecholamine storage granules. In vitro, kallikrein cleaved recombinant human CHGA to catestatin, verified by mass spectrometry. The peptide identified from this digestion (CHGA360-373) selectively inhibited nicotinic cholinergic stimulated catecholamine release from chromaffin cells. A proteolytic cascade involving kallikrein and Factor XII cleaves chromogranins to active compounds both in vivo and in vitro.
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