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1.
Zhang L  Lee J  Song L  Sun X  Shen J  Terracina G  Parker EM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(11):4450-4457
Gamma-secretase catalyzes the proteolytic processing of a number of integral membrane proteins, including amyloid precursor protein (APP) and Notch. The native gamma-secretase is a heterogeneous population of large membrane protein complexes containing presenilin 1 (PS1) or presenilin 2 (PS2), aph-1a or aph-1b, nicastrin, and pen-2. Here we report the reconstitution of a gamma-secretase complex in Sf9 cells by co-infection with baculoviruses carrying the PS1, nicastrin, pen-2, and aph-1a genes. The reconstituted enzyme processes C99 and the Notch-like substrate N160 and displays the characteristic features of gamma-secretase in terms of sensitivity to a gamma-secretase inhibitor, upregulation of Abeta42 production by a familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) mutation in the APP gene, and downregulation of Notch processing by PS1 FAD mutations. However, the ratio of Abeta42:Abeta40 production by the reconstituted gamma-secretase is significantly higher than that of the native enzyme from 293 cells. Unlike in mammalian cells where PS1 FAD mutations cause an increase in Abeta42 production, PS1 FAD missense mutations in the reconstitution system alter the cleavage sites in the C99 substrate without changing the Abeta42:Abeta40 ratio. In addition, PS1DeltaE9 is a loss-of-function mutation in both C99 and N160 processing. Reconstitution of gamma-secretase provides a homogeneous system for studying the individual gamma-secretase complexes and their roles in Abeta production, Notch processing and AD pathogenesis. These studies may provide important insight into the development of a new generation of selective gamma-secretase inhibitors with an improved side effect profile.  相似文献   

2.
gamma-Secretase is a membrane protein complex with an unusual aspartyl protease activity that catalyses the regulated intramembranous cleavage of the beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP) to release the Alzheimer's disease (AD)-associated amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) and the APP intracellular domain (AICD). Here we show the reconstitution of gamma-secretase activity in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which lacks endogenous gamma-secretase activity. Reconstituted gamma-secretase activity depends on the presence of four complex components including presenilin (PS), nicastrin (Nct), APH-1 (refs 3-6) and PEN-2 (refs 4, 7), is associated with endoproteolysis of PS, and produces Abeta and AICD in vitro. Thus, the biological activity of gamma-secretase is reconstituted by the co-expression of human PS, Nct, APH-1 and PEN-2 in yeast.  相似文献   

3.
Nicastrin, a type-I transmembrane glycoprotein, is a necessary component of the high molecular weight presenilin (PS) complexes that mediate intramembranous cleavage of beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) and Notch. Nicastrin undergoes trafficking-dependent glycosylation maturation, and PS1 interacts preferentially with these maturely glycosylated forms of nicastrin. We investigated the effects of differing levels of the immature and mature endoglycosidase-H-resistant forms of nicastrin on Abeta40- and Abeta42-peptide secretion in several cell lines stably expressing a mutant nicastrin (D336A/Y337A) that increases Abeta secretion. There was no correlation between Abeta secretion and the level of over-expression of the immature forms of nicastrin. The total level of mature nicastrin remained constant, but mutant nicastrin replaced endogenous mature nicastrin in varying degrees. Differences in the levels of mature mutant nicastrin positively correlated with Abeta secretion, but did not influence either betaAPP trafficking or processing by alpha- and beta-secretases. Proper trafficking and terminal maturation of nicastrin is therefore a necessary event for the regulated intramembranous proteolysis of betaAPP.  相似文献   

4.
Amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) is generated by the consecutive cleavages of beta- and gamma-secretase. The intramembraneous gamma-secretase cleavage critically depends on the activity of presenilins (PS1 and PS2). Although there is evidence that PSs are aspartyl proteases with gamma-secretase activity, it remains controversial whether their subcellular localization overlaps with the cellular sites of Abeta production. We now demonstrate that biologically active GFP-tagged PS1 as well as endogenous PS1 are targeted to the plasma membrane (PM) of living cells. On the way to the PM, PS1 binds to nicastrin (Nct), an essential component of the gamma-secretase complex. This complex is targeted through the secretory pathway where PS1-bound Nct becomes endoglycosidase H resistant. Moreover, surface-biotinylated Nct can be coimmunoprecipitated with PS1 antibodies, demonstrating that this complex is located to cellular sites with gamma-secretase activity. Inactivating PS1 or PS2 function by mutagenesis of one of the critical aspartate residues or by gamma-secretase inhibitors results in delayed reinternalization of the beta-amyloid precursor protein and its accumulation at the cell surface. Our data suggest that PS is targeted as a biologically active complex with Nct through the secretory pathway to the cell surface and suggest a dual function of PS in gamma-secretase processing and in trafficking.  相似文献   

5.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is caused by the cerebral deposition of beta-amyloid (Abeta), a 38-43-amino acid peptide derived by proteolytic cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein (APP). Initial studies indicated that final cleavage of APP by the gamma-secretase (a complex containing presenilin and nicastrin) to produce Abeta occurred in the endosomal/lysosomal system. However, other studies showing a predominant endoplasmic reticulum localization of the gamma-secretase proteins and a neutral pH optimum of in vitro gamma-secretase assays have challenged this conclusion. We have recently identified nicastrin as a major lysosomal membrane protein. In the present work, we use Western blotting and immunogold electron microscopy to demonstrate that significant amounts of mature nicastrin, presenilin-1, and APP are co-localized with lysosomal associated membrane protein-1 (cAMP-1) in the outer membranes of lysosomes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these membranes contain an acidic gamma-secretase activity, which is immunoprecipitable with an antibody to nicastrin. These experiments establish APP, nicastrin, and presenilin-1 as resident lysosomal membrane proteins and indicate that gamma-secretase is a lysosomal protease. These data reassert the importance of the lysosomal/endosomal system in the generation of Abeta and suggest a role for lysosomes in the pathophysiology of AD.  相似文献   

6.
Aggregates of beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta) are the major component of the amyloid core of the senile plaques observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Abeta results from the amyloidogenic processing of its precursor, the amyloid precursor protein (APP), by beta- and gamma-secretase activities. If beta-secretase has recently been identified and termed BACE, the identity of gamma-secretase is still obscure. Studies with knock-out mice showed that presenilin 1 (PS1), of which mutations are known to be the first cause of inherited AD, is mandatory for the gamma-secretase activity. However, the proteolytic activity of PS1 remains a matter of debate. Here we used transfected Sf9 insect cells, a cellular model lacking endogenous beta- and/or gamma-secretase activities, to characterize the role of BACE and PS1 in the amyloidogenic processing of human APP. We show that, in Sf9 cells, BACE performs the expected beta-secretase cleavage of APP, generating C99. We also show that C99, which is a substrate of gamma-secretase, tightly binds to the human PS1. Despite this interaction, Sf9 cells still do not produce Abeta. This strongly argues against a direct proteolytic activity of PS1 in APP processing, and points toward an implication of PS1 in trafficking/presenting its substrate to the gamma-secretase.  相似文献   

7.
Alzheimer's disease-associated beta-amyloid peptides (Abeta) are generated by the sequential proteolytic processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) by beta- and gamma-secretases. There is growing evidence that cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich membrane microdomains are involved in regulating trafficking and processing of APP. BACE1, the major beta-secretase in neurons is a palmitoylated transmembrane protein that resides in lipid rafts. A subset of APP is subject to amyloidogenic processing by BACE1 in lipid rafts, and this process depends on the integrity of lipid rafts. Here we describe the association of all four components of the gamma-secretase complex, namely presenilin 1 (PS1)-derived fragments, mature nicastrin, APH-1, and PEN-2, with cholesterol-rich detergent insoluble membrane (DIM) domains of non-neuronal cells and neurons that fulfill the criteria of lipid rafts. In PS1(-/-)/PS2(-/-) and NCT(-/-) fibroblasts, gamma-secretase components that still remain fail to become detergent-resistant, suggesting that raft association requires gamma-secretase complex assembly. Biochemical evidence shows that subunits of the gamma-secretase complex and three TGN/endosome-resident SNAREs cofractionate in sucrose density gradients, and show similar solubility or insolubility characteristics in distinct non-ionic and zwitterionic detergents, indicative of their co-residence in membrane microdomains with similar protein-lipid composition. This notion is confirmed using magnetic immunoisolation of PS1- or syntaxin 6-positive membrane patches from a mixture of membranes with similar buoyant densities following Lubrol WX extraction or sonication, and gradient centrifugation. These findings are consistent with the localization of gamma-secretase in lipid raft microdomains of post-Golgi and endosomes, organelles previously implicated in amyloidogenic processing of APP.  相似文献   

8.
Presenilins (PSs) are polytopic membrane proteins that have been implicated as potential therapeutic targets in Alzheimer's disease because of their role in regulating the gamma-secretase cleavage that generates the amyloid beta protein (Abeta). It is not clear how PSs regulate gamma-secretase cleavage, but there is evidence that PSs could be either essential cofactors in the gamma-secretase cleavage, gamma-secretase themselves, or regulators of intracellular trafficking that indirectly influence gamma-secretase cleavage. Using presenilin 1 (PS1) mutants that inhibit Abeta production in conjunction with transmembrane domain mutants of the amyloid protein precursor that are cleaved by pharmacologically distinct gamma-secretases, we show that PS1 regulates multiple pharmacologically distinct gamma-secretase activities as well as inducible alpha-secretase activity. It is likely that PS1 acts indirectly to regulate these activities (as in a trafficking or chaperone role), because these data indicate that for PS1 to be gamma-secretase it must either have multiple active sites or exist in a variety of catalytically active forms that are altered to an equivalent extent by the mutations we have studied.  相似文献   

9.
The intramembranous cleavage of Alzheimer beta-amyloid precursor protein and the signaling receptor Notch is mediated by the presenilin (PS, PS1/PS2)-gamma-secretase complex, the components of which also include nicastrin, APH-1, and PEN-2. In addition to its essential role in gamma-secretase activity, we and others have reported that PS1 plays a role in intracellular trafficking of select membrane proteins including nicastrin. Here we examined the fate of PEN-2 in the absence of PS expression or gamma-secretase activity. We found that PEN-2 is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum and has a much shorter half-life in PS-deficient cells than in wild type cells, suggesting that PSs are required for maintaining the stability and proper subcellular trafficking of PEN-2. However, the function of PS in PEN-2 trafficking is distinct from its contribution to gamma-secretase activity because inhibition of gamma-secretase activity by gamma-secretase inhibitors did not affect the PEN-2 level or its egress from the endoplasmic reticulum. Instead, membrane-permeable gamma-secretase inhibitors, but not a membrane-impermeable derivative, markedly increased the cell surface levels of PS1 and PEN-2 without affecting that of nicastrin. In support of its role in PEN-2 trafficking, PS1 was also required for the gamma-secretase inhibitor-induced plasma membrane accumulation of PEN-2. We further showed that gamma-secretase inhibitors specifically accelerated the Golgi to the cell surface transport of PS1 and PEN-2. Taken together, we demonstrate an essential role for PSs in intracellular trafficking of the gamma-secretase components, and that selective gamma-secretase inhibitors differentially affect the trafficking of the gamma-secretase components, which may contribute to an inactivation of gamma-secretase.  相似文献   

10.
One characteristic feature of Alzheimer's disease is the deposition of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) as amyloid plaques within specific regions of the human brain. Abeta is derived from the amyloid beta-peptide precursor protein (beta-APP) by the intramembranous cleavage activity of gamma-secretase. Studies in cells have revealed that gamma-secretase is a large multimeric membrane-bound protein complex that is functionally dependent on several proteins, including presenilin, nicastrin, Aph-1, and Pen-2. However, the precise biochemical and molecular nature of gamma-secretase is as yet to be fully elucidated, and no investigations have analyzed gamma-secretase in human brain. To address this we have developed a novel in vitro gamma-secretase activity assay using detergent-solubilized cell membranes and a beta-APP-derived fluorescent probe. We report that human brain-derived gamma-secretase activity co-purifies with a high molecular weight protein complex comprising presenilin, nicastrin, Aph-1, and Pen-2. The inhibitor profile and solubility characteristics of brain-derived gamma-secretase are similar to those described in cells, and proteolysis occurs at the Abeta40- and Abeta42-generating cleavage sites. The ability to isolate gamma-secretase from post-mortem human brain may facilitate the identification of brain-specific modulators of beta-APP processing and provide new insights into the biology of this important factor in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

11.
The enzyme gamma-secretase catalyzes the intramembrane proteolytic cleavage that generates the amyloid beta-peptide from the beta-amyloid precursor protein. The presenilin (PS) protein is one of the four integral membrane protein components of the mature gamma-secretase complex. The PS protein is itself subjected to endoproteolytic processing, generating stable N- and C-terminal fragment (NTF and CTF, respectively) heterodimers. Here we demonstrate that coexpression of PS1 NTF and CTF functionally mimics expression of the full-length PS1 protein and restores gamma-secretase activity in PS-deficient mammalian cells. The coexpressed fragments re-associate with each other inside the cell, where they also interact with nicastrin, another gamma-secretase complex component. Analysis of gamma-secretase activity following the expression of mutant forms of NTF and CTF, under conditions bypassing endoproteolysis, indicated that the putatively catalytic Asp257 and Asp385 residues have a direct effect on gamma-secretase activity. Moreover, we demonstrate that expression of the wild-type CTF rescues endoproteolytic cleavage of C-terminally truncated PS1 molecules that are otherwise uncleaved and inactive. Recovery of cleavage is critically dependent on the integrity of Asp385. Taken together, our findings indicate that ectopically expressed NTF and CTF restore functional gamma-secretase complexes and that the presence of full-length PS1 is not a requirement for proper complex assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Nicastrin is an integral component of the high molecular weight presenilin complexes that control proteolytic processing of the amyloid precursor protein and Notch. We report here that nicastrin is most probably a type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein that is expressed at moderate levels in the brain and in cultured neurons. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrate that nicastrin is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi, and a discrete population of vesicles. Glycosidase analyses reveal that endogenous nicastrin undergoes a conventional, trafficking-dependent maturation process. However, when highly expressed in transfected cells, there is a disproportionate accumulation of the endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H-sensitive, immature form, with no significant increase in the levels of the fully mature species. Immunoprecipitation revealed that presenilin-1 interacts preferentially with mature nicastrin, suggesting that correct trafficking and co-localization of the presenilin complex components are essential for activity. These findings demonstrate that trafficking and post-translational modifications of nicastrin are tightly regulated processes that accompany the assembly of the active presenilin complexes that execute gamma-secretase cleavage. These results also underscore the caveat that simple overexpression of nicastrin in transfected cells may result in the accumulation of large amounts of the immature protein, which is apparently unable to assemble into the active complexes capable of processing amyloid precursor protein and Notch.  相似文献   

13.
The presenilins and nicastrin, a type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein, form high molecular weight complexes that are involved in cleaving the beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) and Notch in their transmembrane domains. The former process (termed gamma-secretase cleavage) generates amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta), which is involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. The latter process (termed S3-site cleavage) generates Notch intracellular domain (NICD), which is involved in intercellular signalling. Nicastrin binds both full-length betaAPP and the substrates of gamma-secretase (C99- and C83-betaAPP fragments), and modulates the activity of gamma-secretase. Although absence of the Caenorhabditis elegans nicastrin homologue (aph-2) is known to cause an embryonic-lethal glp-1 phenotype, the role of nicastrin in this process has not been explored. Here we report that nicastrin binds to membrane-tethered forms of Notch (substrates for S3-site cleavage of Notch), and that, although mutations in the conserved 312-369 domain of nicastrin strongly modulate gamma-secretase, they only weakly modulate the S3-site cleavage of Notch. Thus, nicastrin has a similar role in processing Notch and betaAPP, but the 312-369 domain may have differential effects on these activities. In addition, we report that the Notch and betaAPP pathways do not significantly compete with each other.  相似文献   

14.
Morais VA  Leight S  Pijak DS  Lee VM  Costa J 《FEBS letters》2008,582(3):427-433
The gamma-secretase complex, composed by presenilin, nicastrin, APH-1 and PEN-2, is involved in intramembranous proteolysis of membrane proteins, such as amyloid precursor protein or Notch. Cleavage occurs in multiple cellular compartments. Here, nicastrin mutants containing targeting signals to the endoplasmic reticulum, trans-Golgi network, lysosomes, or plasma membrane have been shown to yield active gamma-secretase complexes with different activities and specificities: wild-type and plasma membrane nicastrin complexes yielded the highest amounts of secreted amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta), predominantly Abeta40, whereas intracellular targeted mutants produced intracellular Abeta, with a comparatively higher amount of Abeta42. These results suggest that compartmental microenvironments play a role in gamma-secretase activity and specificity.  相似文献   

15.
Gamma-secretase is a member of an unusual class of proteases with intramembrane catalytic sites. This enzyme cleaves many type I membrane proteins, including the amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) precursor (APP) and the Notch receptor. Biochemical and genetic studies have identified four membrane proteins as components of gamma-secretase: heterodimeric presenilin (PS) composed of its N- and C-terminal fragments (PS-NTF/CTF), a mature glycosylated form of nicastrin (NCT), Aph-1, and Pen-2. Recent data from studies in Drosophila, mammalian, and yeast cells suggest that PS, NCT, Aph-1, and Pen-2 are necessary and sufficient to reconstitute gamma-secretase activity. However, many unresolved issues, in particular the possibility of other structural or regulatory components, would be resolved by actually purifying the enzyme. Here, we report a detailed, multistep purification procedure for active gamma-secretase and an initial characterization of the purified protease. Extensive mass spectrometry of the purified proteins strongly suggests that PS-NTF/CTF, mNCT, Aph-1, and Pen-2 are the components of active gamma-secretase. Using the purified gamma-secretase, we describe factors that modulate the production of specific Abeta species: (1) phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin dramatically improve activity without changing cleavage specificity within an APP substrate; (2) increasing CHAPSO concentrations from 0.1 to 0.25% yields a approximately 100% increase in Abeta42 production; (3) exposure of an APP-based recombinant substrate to 0.5% SDS modulates cleavage specificity from a disease-mimicking pattern (high Abeta42/43) to a physiological pattern (high Abeta40); and (4) sulindac sulfide directly and preferentially decreases Abeta42 cleavage within the purified complex. Taken together, our results define a procedure for purifying active gamma-secretase and suggest that the lipid-mediated conformation of both enzyme and substrate regulate the production of the potentially neurotoxic Abeta42 and Abeta43 peptides.  相似文献   

16.
Absence of functional presenilin 1 (PS1) protein leads to loss of gamma-secretase cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP), resulting in a dramatic reduction in amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) production and accumulation of alpha- or beta-secretase-cleaved COOH-terminal fragments of betaAPP (alpha- or beta-CTFs). The major COOH-terminal fragment (CTF) in brain was identified as betaAPP-CTF-(11-98), which is consistent with the observation that cultured neurons generate primarily Abeta-(11-40). In PS1(-/-) murine neurons and fibroblasts expressing the loss-of-function PS1(D385A) mutant, CTFs accumulated in the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi, and lysosomes, but not late endosomes. There were some subtle differences in the subcellular distribution of CTFs in PS1(-/-) neurons as compared with PS1(D385A) mutant fibroblasts. However, there was no obvious redistribution of full-length betaAPP or of markers of other organelles in either mutant. Blockade of endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi trafficking indicated that in PS1(-/-) neurons (as in normal cells) trafficking of betaAPP to the Golgi compartment is necessary before alpha- and beta-secretase cleavages occur. Thus, although we cannot exclude a specific role for PS1 in trafficking of CTFs, these data argue against a major role in general protein trafficking. These results are more compatible with a role for PS1 either as the actual gamma-secretase catalytic activity or in other functions indirectly related to gamma-secretase catalysis (e.g. an activator of gamma-secretase, a substrate adaptor for gamma-secretase, or delivery of gamma-secretase to betaAPP-containing compartments).  相似文献   

17.
In vitro reconstitution of functions of membrane proteins is often hampered by aggregation, misfolding, or lack of post-translational modifications of the proteins attributable to overexpression. To overcome this technical obstacle, we have developed a method to express multimeric integral membrane proteins in extracellular (budded) baculovirus particles that are released from Sf9 cells co-infected with multiple transmembrane proteins. We applied this method to the reconstitution of gamma-secretase, a membrane protease complex that catalyzes the intramembrane cleavage of beta-amyloid precursor protein to release Abeta peptides, the major component of amyloid deposits in Alzheimer brains as well as of Notch. When we co-infected Sf9 cells with human presenilin 1 (PS1), nicastrin, APH-1a, and PEN-2, a high-molecular-weight membrane protein complex that contained PS1 exclusively in its fragment form associated with three other cofactor proteins was reconstituted and recovered in a highly gamma-secretase-active state in budded virus particles, whereas nonfunctional PS1 holoproteins massively contaminated the parental Sf9 cell membranes. The relative gamma-secretase activity (per molar PS1 fragments) was concentrated by approximately 2.5 fold in budded virus particles compared with that in Sf9 membranes. The budded baculovirus system will facilitate structural and functional analyses of gamma-secretase, as well as screening of its binding molecules or inhibitors, and will also provide a versatile methodology for the characterization of a variety of membrane protein complexes.  相似文献   

18.
Gamma-secretase mediates the final proteolytic cleavage, which liberates amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta), the major component of senile plaques in the brains of Alzheimer disease patients. Therefore, gamma-secretase is a prime target for Abeta-lowering therapeutic strategies. gamma-Secretase is a protein complex composed of four different subunits, presenilin (PS), APH-1, nicastrin, and PEN-2, which are most likely present in a 1:1:1:1 stoichiometry. PS harbors the catalytically active site, which is critically required for the aspartyl protease activity of gamma-secretase. Moreover, numerous familial Alzheimer disease-associated mutations within the PSs increase the production of the aggregation-prone and neurotoxic 42-amino acid Abeta. Nicastrin may serve as a substrate receptor, although this has recently been challenged. PEN-2 is required to stabilize PS within the gamma-secretase complex. No particular function has so far been assigned to APH-1. The four components are sufficient and required for gamma-secretase activity. At least six different gamma-secretase complexes exist that are composed of different variants of PS and APH-1. All gamma-secretase complexes can exert pathological Abeta production. Assembly of the gamma-secretase complex occurs within the endoplasmic reticulum, and only fully assembled and functional gamma-secretase complexes are transported to the plasma membrane. Structural analysis by electron microscopy and chemical cross-linking reveals a water-containing cavity, which allows intramembrane proteolysis. Specific and highly sensitive gamma-secretase inhibitors have been developed; however, they interfere with the physiological function of gamma-secretase in Notch signaling and thus cause rather significant side effects in human trials. Modulators of gamma-secretase, which selectively affect the production of the pathological 42-amino acid Abeta, do not inhibit Notch signaling.  相似文献   

19.
The gamma-secretase complex catalyzes the cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein in its transmembrane domain resulting in the formation of the amyloid beta-peptide and the cytoplasmic APP intracellular domain. The active gamma-secretase complex is composed of at least four subunits: presenilin (PS), nicastrin, Aph-1, and Pen-2, where the presence of all components is critically required for gamma-cleavage to occur. The PS proteins are themselves subjected to endoproteolytic cleavage resulting in the generation of an N-terminal and a C-terminal fragment that remain stably associated as a heterodimer. Here we investigated the effects of modifications on the C terminus of PS1 on PS1 endoproteolysis, gamma-secretase complex assembly, and activity in cells devoid of endogenous PS. We report that certain mutations and, in particular, deletions of the PS1 C terminus decrease gamma-secretase activity, PS1 endoproteolysis, and gamma-secretase complex formation. We demonstrate that the N- and C-terminal PS1 fragments can associate with each other in mutants having C-terminal truncations that cause loss of interaction with nicastrin and Aph-1. In addition, we show that the C-terminal fragment of PS1 alone can mediate interaction with nicastrin and Aph-1 in PS null cells expressing only the C-terminal fragment of PS1. Taken together, these data suggest that the PS1 N- and C-terminal fragment intermolecular interactions are independent of an association with nicastrin and Aph-1, and that nicastrin and Aph-1 interact with the C-terminal part of PS1 in the absence of an association with full-length PS1 or the N-terminal fragment.  相似文献   

20.
The presenilin (PS) complex, including PS, nicastrin, APH-1 and PEN-2, is essential for gamma-secretase activity, which is required for amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) generation. However, the precise individual roles of the three cofactors in the PS complex in Abeta generation remain to be clarified. Here, to distinguish the roles of PS cofactors in gamma-secretase activity from those in PS endoproteolysis, we investigated their roles in the gamma-secretase activity reconstituted by the coexpression of PS N- and C-terminal fragments (NTF and CTF) in PS-null cells. We demonstrate that the coexpression of PS1 NTF and CTF forms the heterodimer and restores Abeta generation in PS-null cells. The generation of Abeta was saturable at a certain expression level of PS1 NTF/CTF, while the overexpression of PEN-2 alone resulted in a further increase in Abeta generation. Although PEN-2 did not enhance PS1 NTF/CTF heterodimer formation, PEN-2 expression reduced the IC50 of a specific gamma-secretase inhibitor, a transition state analogue, for Abeta generation, suggesting that PEN-2 expression enhances the affinity or the accessibility of the substrate to the catalytic site. Thus, our results strongly suggest that PEN-2 is not only an essential component of the gamma-secretase complex but also an enhancer of gamma-cleavage after PS heterodimer formation.  相似文献   

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