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1.
AIM:To determine if the cytotail of the principal sheddase tumor necrosis factor-α converting enzyme (TACE;ADAM17) controls protein ectodomain shedding.METHODS:Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to derive TACE variants. The resulting TACE expression plasmids with amino acid substitutions in the extracel-lular,cysteine-rich disintegrin domain (CRD) and/or deleted cytotail,along with an expression vector for the enhanced green fluorescence protein were transfected into shedding-defective M1 mutants stably expressing transmembrane L-selectin or transforming growth factor (TGF)-α. The expression levels of the TACE substrates at the cell surface were determined by flow cytometry. RESULTS:Consistent with published data,a single point mutation (C600Y) in the CRD led to shedding defi-ciency. However,removal of the cytotail from the C600Y TACE variant partially restored ectodomain cleavage of TGF-α and L-selectin. Cytotail-deleted mutants with any other substituting amino acid residues in place of Cys600 displayed similar function compared with tail-less C600Y TACE.CONCLUSION:The cytotail plays an inhibitory role,which becomes evident when it is removed from an enzyme with another mutation that affects the enzyme function.  相似文献   

2.
Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) converting enzyme (TACE) is a zinc metalloprotease that has emerged as a general sheddase, which is responsible for ectodomain release of numerous membrane proteins, including the proinflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha, the leukocyte adhesin L-selectin and epidermal growth factor receptor ligand-transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha), and related family members. Structurally, TACE belongs to a large clan of proteases, designated the metzincins, because TACE possesses a conserved methionine (Met435), frequently referred to as the met-turn residue, in its active site. A vital role of this residue in the function of TACE is supported by the fact that cells expressing the M435I TACE variant are defective in ectodomain shedding. However, the importance of Met435 in TACE appears to be uncertain, since another metzincin, matrix metalloprotease-2, has been found to be enzymatically fully active with either leucine or serine in place of its met-turn residue. We constructed TACE mutants with leucine or serine in place of Met435 to further examine the role of the met-turn residue in TACE-mediated ectodomain cleavage. Similar to the M435I TACE mutant, both the M435L and M435S constructs are defective in cleaving transmembrane TNF-alpha, TGF-alpha, and L-selectin. Comparative modeling and dynamic computation detected structural perturbations, which resulted in higher energy, in the catalytic zinc complexes of the Met435 TACE mutants compared with that in the wild-type enzyme. Thus, Met435 serves to maintain the stability of the catalytic center of TACE for the hydrolysis of peptide bonds in substrates.  相似文献   

3.
Shedding of TNF-alpha requires a single cleavage event, whereas the ectodomain of proTGF-alpha is cleaved at N-proximal (N-terminal) and membrane proximal (C-terminal) sites to release mature TGF-alpha. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) was shown to have a central role in the shedding of both factors. Here we show that cleavage of the proTGF-alpha C-terminal site, required for release of mature growth factor, is less sensitive to a panel of hydroxamates than TNF-alpha processing. Recombinant TACE cleaves TNF-alpha and N-terminal TGF-alpha peptides 50-fold more efficiently than the C-terminal TGF-alpha peptide. Moreover, fractionation of rat liver epithelial cell membranes yields two populations: one contains TACE and cleaves peptides corresponding to TNF-alpha and both proTGF-alpha processing sites, while the other lacks detectable TACE and cleaves only the C-terminal proTGF-alpha processing site. Activities in both fractions are inhibited by hydroxamates and EDTA but not by cysteine, aspartate, or serine protease inhibitors. Both membrane fractions also contain ADAM 10. ADAM 10 correctly cleaves peptides and a soluble form of precursor TGF-alpha (proTGFecto) at the N-terminal site but not the C-terminal site. However, the kinetics of N-terminal peptide cleavage by ADAM 10 are 90-fold less efficient than TACE. Our findings indicate that while TACE is an efficient proTGF-alpha N-terminal convertase, a different activity, distinguishable from TACE, exists that can process proTGF-alpha at the C-terminal site. A model that accounts for these findings and the requirement for TACE in TGF-alpha shedding is proposed.  相似文献   

4.
The transmembrane domain of TACE regulates protein ectodomain shedding   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Li X  Pérez L  Pan Z  Fan H 《Cell research》2007,17(12):985-998
Numerous membrane proteins are cleaved by tumor necrosis factor-α converting enzyme (TACE), which causes the release of their ectodomains. An ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease domain) family member, TACE contains several noncatalytic domains whose roles in ectodomain shedding have yet to be fully resolved. Here, we have explored the function of the transmembrane domain (TM) of TACE by coupling molecular engineering and functional analysis. A TM-free TACE construct that is anchored to the plasma membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-binding polypeptide failed to restore shedding of transforming growth factor-or (TGF-α), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and L-selectin in cells lacking endogenous TACE activity. Substitution of the TACE TM with that of the prolactin receptor or platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) also resulted in severe loss of TGF-α shedding, but had no effects on the cleavage of TNF-α and L-selectin. Replacement of the TM in TGF-α with that of L-selectin enabled TGF-α shedding by the TACE mutants carrying the TM of prolactin receptor and PDGFR. Taken together, our observations suggest that anchorage of TACE to the lipid bilayer through a TM is required for efficient cleavage of a broad spectrum of substrates, and that the amino-acid sequence of TACE TM may play a role in regulatory specificity among TACE substrates.  相似文献   

5.
Ectodomain shedding of cell surface membrane-anchoring proteins is an important process in a wide variety of physiological events(1, 2). Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) converting enzyme (TACE) is the first discovered mammalian sheddase responsible for cleavage of several important surface proteins, including TNF-alpha, TNF p75 receptor, L-selectin, and transforming growth factor-a. Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) has long been known as a potent agent to enhance ectodomain shedding. However, it is not fully understood how PMA activates TACE and induces ectodomain shedding. Here, we demonstrate that PMA induces both reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and TNF p75 receptor shedding in Mono Mac 6 cells, a human monocytic cell line, and l-selectin shedding in Jurkat T-cells. ROS scavengers significantly attenuated PMA-induced TNF p75 receptor shedding. Exogenous H2O2 mimicked PMA-induced enhancement of ectodomain shedding, and H2O2-induced shedding was blocked by TAPI, a TACE inhibitor. Furthermore, both PMA and H2O2 failed to cause ectodomain shedding in a cell line that lacks TACE activity. By use of an in vitro TACE cleavage assay, H2O2 activated TACE that had been rendered inactive by the addition of the TACE inhibitory pro-domain sequence. We presume that the mechanism of TACE activation by H2O2 is due to an oxidative attack of the pro-domain thiol group and disruption of its inhibitory coordination with the Zn++ in the catalytic domain of TACE. These results demonstrate that ROS production is involved in PMA-induced ectodomain shedding and implicate a role for ROS in other shedding processes.  相似文献   

6.
In the renal medulla, cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 is induced by osmotic stress as present in this kidney region during antidiuresis. Increasing evidence suggests that EGF receptor (EGFR) signaling is involved in this process. The aim of the present study was to examine the mechanisms responsible for COX-2 expression and PGE(2) production during hypertonic conditions and to identify potential autocrine/paracrine EGFR ligands. Immunohistochemisty and Western blot analysis revealed abundant expression of the pro-EGFR ligand pro-transforming growth factor (TGF)-alpha in renal medullary cells in vivo and in cultured Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. In Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, hypertonicity rapidly increased TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE)-dependent ectodomain shedding of pro-TGF-alpha; phosphorylation of EGFR, p38, and ERK1/2; expression of COX-2; and production of PGE(2). Conversely, TACE inhibition prevented TGF-alpha release; EGFR, p38, and ERK1/2 activation; and COX-2 expression. Furthermore, cell survival was reduced substantially, a response that could be reversed by the addition of PGE(2). Simultaneous addition of recombinant TGF-alpha during TACE inhibition restored EGFR and MAPK phosphorylation, COX-2 expression, PGE(2) production, and cell survival during osmotic stress. These results indicate that hypertonicity induces TACE-mediated ectodomain shedding of pro-TGF-alpha, which subsequently activates COX-2 expression in an autocrine/paracrine fashion, via EGFR and MAPKs. We conclude that tonicity-induced TGF-alpha release is required for COX-2 expression, PGE(2) synthesis, and survival of renal medullary cells during osmotic stress.  相似文献   

7.
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) family ligands are derived by proteolytic cleavage of the ectodomains of integral membrane precursors. Previously, we established that tumor necrosis factor alpha-converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM17) is a physiologic transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) sheddase, and we also demonstrated enhanced shedding of amphiregulin (AR) and heparin-binding (HB)-EGF upon restoration of TACE activity in TACE-deficient EC-2 fibroblasts. Here we extended these results by showing that purified soluble TACE cleaved single sites in the juxtamembrane stalks of mouse pro-HB-EGF and pro-AR ectodomains in vitro. For pro-HB-EGF, this site matched the C terminus of the purified human growth factor, and we speculate that the AR cleavage site is also physiologically relevant. In contrast, ADAM9 and -10, both implicated in HB-EGF shedding, failed to cleave the ectodomain or cleaved at a nonphysiologic site, respectively. Cotransfection of TACE in EC-2 cells enhanced phorbol myristate acetate-induced but not constitutive shedding of epiregulin and had no effect on betacellulin (BTC) processing. Additionally, soluble TACE did not cleave the juxtamembrane stalks of either pro-BTC or pro-epiregulin ectodomains in vitro. Substitution of the shorter pro-BTC juxtamembrane stalk or truncation of the pro-TGF-alpha stalk to match the pro-BTC length reduced TGF-alpha shedding from transfected cells to background levels, whereas substitution of the pro-BTC P2-P2' sequence reduced TGF-alpha shedding less dramatically. Conversely, substitution of the pro-TGF-alpha stalk or lengthening of the pro-BTC stalk, especially when combined with substitution of the pro-TGF-alpha P2-P2' sequence, markedly increased BTC shedding. These results indicate that efficient TACE cleavage is determined by a combination of stalk length and scissile bond sequence.  相似文献   

8.
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligands are synthesized as type I membrane protein precursors exposed at the cell surface. Shedding of the ectodomain of these proteins is the way cells regulate the equilibrium between cell-associated and diffusible forms of these growth factors. Whereas the regulated shedding of transforming growth factor-alpha, HB-EGF, and amphiregulin precursors have been clearly established, regulation of full-length pro-EGF shedding has not been clearly demonstrated. Here, using both wild-type and M2 mutant CHO-K1 as well as HeLa cell lines transiently transfected with epitope-tagged rat pro-EGF expression plasmid, we demonstrate that these cells synthesize EGF as a high molecular weight membrane-associated precursor glycoprotein expressed at the cell surface. All cell lines are able to release the entire ectodomain of pro-EGF in the extracellular medium following juxtamembrane cleavage of the precursor once it is present at the cell surface. More significantly we clearly established that CHO-M2 and HeLa cells only constitutively release low levels of pro-EGF. This shedding is a regulated phenomenon in wild-type CHO cells where it can be induced by different agents such as phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), pervanadate, and serum but not by calcium ionophores. Using specific inhibitors as well as protein kinase C (PKC) depletion, PMA stimulation was shown to be completely dependent on PKC activation whereas pervanadate and serum stimulation were not. Regulated ectodomain shedding involves the activity of a zinc metalloprotease as determined by inhibition with phenantrolin and TAPI-2 and by the results obtained with the CHO-M2 shedding defective mutant cell line. Comparison of the ability of CHO and HeLa cell lines to shed pro-EGF and pro-TNF-alpha upon stimulation greatly suggests that TACE (ADAM 17) may not be the ectoprotease involved in the secretion of pro-EGF ectodomain and that this protease, which remains to be identified, shows a restricted cellular expression pattern.  相似文献   

9.
We previously implicated tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM17) in the processing of the integral membrane precursor to soluble transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), pro-TGF-alpha. Here we examined TGF-alpha processing in a physiologically relevant cell model, primary keratinocytes, showing that cells lacking TACE activity shed dramatically less TGF-alpha as compared with wild-type cultures and that TGF-alpha cleavage was partially restored by infection of TACE-deficient cells with TACE-encoding adenovirus. Moreover, cotransfection of TACE-deficient fibroblasts with pro-TGF-alpha and TACE cDNAs increased shedding of mature TGF-alpha with concomitant conversion of cell-associated pro-TGF-alpha to a processed form. Purified TACE accurately cleaved pro-TGF-alpha in vitro at the N-terminal site and also cleaved a soluble form of pro-TGF-alpha containing only the ectodomain at the C-terminal site. In vitro, TACE accurately cleaved peptides corresponding to cleavage sites of several epidermal growth factor (EGF) family members, and transfection of TACE into TACE-deficient cells increased the shedding of amphiregulin and heparin-binding EGF (HB-EGF) proteins. Consistent with the hypothesis that TACE regulates EGF receptor (EGFR) ligand availability in vivo, mice heterozygous for Tace and homozygous for an impaired EGFR allele (wa-2) were born with open eyes significantly more often than Tace(+/+)Egfr(wa-2)(/)(wa-2) counterparts. Collectively, these data support a broad role for TACE in the regulated shedding of EGFR ligands.  相似文献   

10.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the leading causes of death in the U.S. Because cigarette smoking is so importantly implicated in the pathogenesis of COPD and because mucus hypersecretion plays such an important role in COPD, understanding of the mechanisms of smoking-induced mucus hypersecretion could lead to new therapies for COPD. Cigarette smoke causes mucin overproduction via EGF receptor (EGFR) in airway epithelial cells, but the cellular mechanism remains unknown. Airway epithelial cells contain EGFR proligands on their surfaces, which can be cleaved by metalloprotease and subsequently bind to EGFR resulting in mucin production. We hypothesize that TNF-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE) is activated by cigarette smoke, resulting in increased shedding of EGFR proligand, leading to EGFR phosphorylation and mucin induction in human airway epithelial (NCI-H292) cells. Here we show that cigarette smoke increases MUC5AC production in NCI-H292 cells, an effect that is prevented by an EGFR-neutralizing antibody and by specific knockdown of transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) using small interfering RNA (siRNA) for TGF-alpha, implicating TGF-alpha-dependent EGFR activation in the responses. Cigarette smoke increases TGF-alpha shedding, EGFR phosphorylation, and mucin production, which are prevented by metalloprotease inhibitors (GM-6001 and TNF-alpha protease inhibitor-1) and by specific knockdown of TACE with TACE siRNA, implicating TACE in smoking-induced responses. Furthermore, pretreatment with antioxidants prevents smoking-induced TGF-alpha shedding and mucin production, suggesting that reactive oxygen species is involved in TACE activation. These results implicate TACE in smoking-induced mucin overproduction via the TACE-proligand-EGFR signal pathway in NCI-H292 cells.  相似文献   

11.
Protein ectodomain shedding is a specialized type of regulated proteolysis that releases the extracellular domain of transmembrane proteins. The metalloprotease disintegrin tumor necrosis factor-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE) has been convincingly shown to play a central role in ectodomain shedding, but despite its broad interest, very little is known about the mechanisms that regulate its activity. An analysis of the biosynthesis of TACE in mutant cell lines that have a gross defect in ectodomain shedding (M1 and M2) shows a defective removal of the prodomain that keeps TACE in an inactive form. Using LoVo, a cell line that lacks of active furin, and alpha1-Antitrypsin Portland, a protein inhibitor of proprotein convertases, we show that TACE is normally processed by furin and other proprotein convertases. The defect in M1 and M2 cells is due to a blockade of the exit of TACE from the endoplasmic reticulum. The processing of other zinc-dependent metalloproteases, previously suggested to participate in activated ectodomain shedding is normal in the mutant cells, indicating that the component mutated is highly specific for TACE. In summary, the characterization of shedding-defective somatic cell mutants unveils the existence of a specific mechanism that directs the proteolytic activation of TACE through the control of its exit from the ER.  相似文献   

12.
Fan H  Derynck R 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(24):6962-6972
A variety of transmembrane proteins, such as transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and L-selectin, undergo shedding, i.e. cleavage of the ectodomain, resulting in release of a soluble protein. Although the physiological relevance of ectodomain shedding is well recognized, little is known about the signaling mechanisms activating this process. We show that growth factor activation of cell surface tyrosine kinase receptors induces ectodomain cleavage of transmembrane TGF-alpha through activation of the Erk MAP kinase signaling cascade without the need for new protein synthesis. In addition, expression of constitutively activated MEK1 or its downstream target Erk2 MAP kinase was sufficient to stimulate TGF-alpha shedding. The basal cleavage level in the absence of exogenous growth factor stimulation was due to p38 MAP kinase signaling. Accordingly, a constitutively activated MKK6, a p38 activator, activated TGF-alpha shedding in the absence of exogenous stimuli. In addition to TGF-alpha shedding, these mechanisms also mediate L-selectin and TNF-alpha cleavage. Thus, L-selectin shedding by neutrophils, induced by N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, was strongly inhibited by inhibitors of Erk MAP kinase or p38 MAP kinase signaling. Our results indicate that activation of Erk and p38 signaling pathways may represent a general physiological mechanism to induce shedding of a variety of transmembrane proteins.  相似文献   

13.
The ectodomain of different transmembrane molecules is released by a proteolytic event known as shedding. The metalloprotease disintegrin proTNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) is responsible for the shedding of various proteins, including protransforming growth factor-alpha (proTGF-alpha) and amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP). Inactive TACE accumulates in the early secretory pathway of cell mutants (M1 and M2) defective in proTGF-alpha and APP shedding. Although previous evidences indicated that the component mutated in M1 and M2 cells is different from TACE, recent results show the existence of two heterozygous point mutations in TACE from M2 cells. Here, we show that wild-type TACE stably transfected in M2 cells is processed, transported to the cell surface, and rescues the proTGF-alpha and APP shedding-defective phenotype. Furthermore, M1 cells also express mutant TACE and transfection with wild-type TACE restores the wild-type phenotype. Therefore, different inactivating mutations result in the accumulation of TACE in the early secretory pathway, emphasizing the importance of the initial steps in the biosynthesis of TACE.  相似文献   

14.
CSF-1 is a hemopoietic growth factor, which plays an essential role in macrophage and osteoclast development. Alternative splice variants of CSF-1 are synthesized as soluble or membrane-anchored molecules, although membrane CSF-1 (mCSF-1) can be cleaved from the cell membrane to become soluble CSF-1. The activities involved in this proteolytic processing, also referred to as ectodomain shedding, remain poorly characterized. In the present study, we examined the properties of the mCSF-1 sheddase in cell-based assays. Shedding of mCSF-1 was up-regulated by phorbol ester treatment and was inhibited by the metalloprotease inhibitors GM6001 and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteases 3. Moreover, the stimulated shedding of mCSF-1 was abrogated in fibroblasts lacking the TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE, also known as a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17) and was rescued by expression of wild-type TACE in these cells, strongly suggesting that the stimulated shedding is TACE dependent. Additionally, we observed that mCSF-1 is predominantly localized to intracellular membrane compartments and is efficiently internalized in a clathrin-dependent manner. These results indicate that the local availability of mCSF-1 is actively regulated by ectodomain shedding and endocytosis. This mechanism may have important implications for the development and survival of monocyte lineage cells.  相似文献   

15.
Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE) is a membrane protein belonging to the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase) family that cleaves various membrane proteins, including the proform of TNF-alpha. In this study, we constructed expression vectors for the membrane-bound full-length TACE (mTACE) and its truncated soluble form (sTACE). When a human TNF-alpha expression vector was introduced into human 293 cells, processing of TNF-alpha to its mature form was enhanced by coexpressing mTACE, and this processing was inhibited by a metalloproteinase inhibitor. On the other hand, coexpression of sTACE had no effect on the processing of TNF-alpha, although the culture medium of sTACE-transfected cells could cleave a peptide containing the TNF-alpha cleavage site. Fas ligand (FasL)-transfected 293 cells released a considerable amount of soluble FasL, and coexpression of neither mTACE nor sTACE enhanced this shedding. Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting analysis with cells that were cotransfected with TACE and TNF-alpha indicated that both mTACE and sTACE could interact with the proform of TNF-alpha. In the same assay, neither mTACE nor sTACE interacted with FasL. The catalytic domain-lacking TACE mutant, which could also interact TNF-alpha, showed a dominant negative effect on not only TNF-alpha secretion but also FasL secretion. These results suggest that binding of the membrane-anchored but not the soluble form of TACE to TNF-alpha results in efficient ectodomain shedding, and that FasL secretase is a metalloproteinase similar, but not identical, to TACE.  相似文献   

16.
Zinc-dependent metalloproteases can mediate the shedding of the extracellular domain of many unrelated transmembrane proteins from the cell surface. In most instances, this process, also known as ectodomain shedding, is regulated via protein kinase C (PKC). The tumor necrosis factor alpha-converting enzyme (TACE) was the first protease involved in regulated protein ectodomain shedding identified. Although TACE belongs to the family of metalloprotease-disintegrins, few members of this family have been shown to participate in regulated ectodomain shedding. In fact, the phenotype of tace-/- cells and that of Chinese hamster ovary cell mutants defective in ectodomain shedding points to the existence of a common PKC-activated ectodomain shedding system, whose proteolytic component is TACE, that acts on a variety of transmembrane proteins. Examples of these proteins include the Alzheimer's disease-related protein beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) and the transmembrane growth factors protransforming growth factor-alpha (pro-TGF-alpha) and, as shown in this report, proheparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (pro-HB-EGF). Here we show that the mercurial compound 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA), frequently used to activate in vitro recombinant matrix metalloproteases, is an activator of the shedding of betaAPP, pro-HB-EGF, and pro-TGF-alpha. Treatment of tace-/- cells or Chinese hamster ovary shedding-defective mutants with APMA activates the cleavage of pro-TGF-alpha but not that of pro-HB-EGF or betaAPP, indicating that APMA activates TACE and also a previously unacknowledged proteolytic activity specific for pro-TGF-alpha. Characterization of this proteolytic activity indicates that it acts on pro-TGF-alpha located at the cell surface and that it is a metalloprotease active in cells defective in furin activity. In summary, treatment of shedding-defective cell lines with APMA unveils the existence of a metalloprotease activity alternative to TACE with the ability to specifically shed the ectodomain of pro-TGF-alpha.  相似文献   

17.
18.
TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) is the protease responsible for processing proTNF from the 26-kDa membrane-anchored precursor to the secreted 17-kDa TNF-alpha. We show here that a deletion mutant of TACE (dTACE), lacking the pro and catalytic domains of the protease, acts as a dominant negative for proTNF processing in transfected HEK293 cells. We used the same system to test the effect of dTACE on TNFRII processing. Overexpression of dTACE with TNFRII resulted in >80% inhibition of TNFRII shedding. Although significant inhibition of TNF-alpha and TNFRII shedding was achieved with dTACE, we could not detect a cell surface accumulation of the noncleaved substrates above that observed in the absence of dTACE. Our results suggest that TNFRII is a substrate for TACE, and that dTACE is capable of interfering with the function of endogenous TACE, either by binding and sequestering TACE substrates via the disintegrin domain, transmembrane domain, or cytoplasmic tail, or by some other mechanism that has yet to be determined.  相似文献   

19.
CD44 is a widely expressed integral membrane glycoprotein that serves as a specific adhesion receptor for the extracellular matrix glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan. CD44 participates in a variety of physiological and pathological processes through its role in cell adhesion. Under appropriate conditions, the ectodomain of CD44 is proteolytically removed from the cell surface. In this study we show that excessive CD44 shedding can be induced in mouse fibroblasts and monocytes upon exposure of these cells to a CD44-specific Ab immobilized on plastic, whereas treatment with phorbol ester induces significantly enhanced CD44 release from the monocytes only. CD44 shedding proceeds normally in fibroblasts and monocytes deficient in TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE), a sheddase involved in the processing of several substrates. Conversely, activation of the CD44 protease has no effect on the release of TNF-alpha from TACE-expressing cells, although the same metalloprotease inhibitor effectively blocks both TACE and the CD44 sheddase. Concomitant with anti-CD44 Ab- or phorbol ester-induced CD44 shedding, dramatic changes are observed in cell morphology and the structure of the actin cytoskeleton. Disruption of actin assembly with cytochalasin reduces CD44 shedding, but not the release of TNF-alpha. Moreover, pharmacological activation of Rho family GTPases Rac1 and Cdc42, which regulate actin filament assembly into distinct cytoskeletal structures, has a profound effect on CD44 release. We conclude that the CD44 sheddase and TACE are distinct enzymes, and that Ab- and phorbol ester-enhanced cleavage of CD44 is controlled in a cell type-dependent fashion by Rho GTPases through the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

20.
Like other members of the epidermal growth factor family, heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) is synthesized as a transmembrane protein that can be shed enzymatically to release a soluble growth factor. Ectodomain shedding is essential to the biological functions of HB-EGF and is strictly regulated. However, the mechanism that induces the shedding remains unclear. We have recently identified nardilysin (N-arginine dibasic convertase (NRDc)), a metalloendopeptidase of the M16 family, as a protein that specifically binds HB-EGF (Nishi, E., Prat, A., Hospital, V., Elenius, K., and Klagsbrun, M. (2001) EMBO J. 20, 3342-3350). Here, we show that NRDc enhances ectodomain shedding of HB-EGF. When expressed in cells, NRDc enhanced the shedding in cooperation with tumor necrosis factor-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE; ADAM17). NRDc formed a complex with TACE, a process promoted by phorbol esters, general activators of ectodomain shedding. NRDc enhanced TACE-induced HB-EGF cleavage in a peptide cleavage assay, indicating that the interaction with NRDc potentiates the catalytic activity of TACE. The metalloendopeptidase activity of NRDc was not required for the enhancement of HB-EGF shedding. Notably, a reduction in the expression of NRDc caused by RNA interference was accompanied by a decrease in ectodomain shedding of HB-EGF. These results indicate the essential role of NRDc in HB-EGF ectodomain shedding and reveal how the shedding is regulated by the modulation of sheddase activity.  相似文献   

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