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1.
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   

2.
Numerous proteins are cleaved or "shed" from their membrane-bound form. One such protein, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), is synthesized as a type 2 transmembrane protein. Recently, a human protease responsible for this shedding, the TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM17), was isolated. TACE/ADAM17 is a member of the adamalysin class of zinc-binding metalloproteases or ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease). We report the isolation and characterization of the mouse TACE/ADAM17 cDNA and gene. Mouse TACE/ADAM17 has a 92% amino-acid identity with the human protein and was ubiquitously expressed. A recombinant form of the protease is found to cleave a peptide representing the cleavage site of precursor mouse TNF-alpha. An alternatively spliced form of mouse TACE/ADAM17 was found that would produce a soluble protein. The gene for TACE/ADAM17 is approximately 50 kb and contains 19 exons. Chromosomal mapping places TACE/ADAM17 on mouse chromosome 12 and human chromosome 2p25.  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.
Tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine which is shed in its soluble form by a disintegrin and metalloproteinase (ADAM) called TNF-alpha convertase (TACE; ADAM17). TNF-alpha plays a role in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and is involved in the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) which has also been implicated in IBD. The study was designed to investigate whether colitis induced by trinitrobenzene sulphonic acid (TNBS) in rats produces an increase in TACE activity and/or expression and whether its pharmacological inhibition reduces TNF-alpha levels, iNOS expression and colonic damage in this model. TNBS (30 mg in 0.4 ml of 50% ethanol) was instilled into the colon of female Wistar rats. Saline or TACE inhibitor BB1101 (10 mg/kg/day) was administered intraperitoneally 5 days after TNBS instillation. On day 10, colons were removed and assessed for pathological score, myeloperoxidase (MPO), NO synthase (NOS), TACE enzymatic activity and protein levels, colonic TNF-alpha and NOx- levels. Instillation of TNBS caused an increase in TACE activity and expression and the release of TNF-alpha. TNBS also resulted in iNOS expression and colonic damage. BB1101 blocked TNBS-induced increase in TACE activity, TNF-alpha release and iNOS expression. Concomitantly, BB1101 ameliorated TNBS-induced colonic damage and inflammation. TNBS causes TNF-alpha release by an increase in TACE activity and expression and this results in the expression of iNOS and subsequent inflammation, suggesting that TACE inhibition may prove useful as a therapeutic means in IBD.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE; ADAM17), a member of the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) family of metalloproteases, has been shown to cleave a wide variety of cell surface proteins of immunological importance. Due to the broad expression of TACE and the early postnatal lethality of TACE-deficient mice, it has been difficult to assess the role of TACE in lymphocyte development. Indeed, it is not known whether hemopoietic and/or nonhemopoietic expression of TACE is required for normal lymphocyte development. In the current study, we analyzed the lymphoid system of tace(DeltaZn/DeltaZn) mice and tace(DeltaZn/DeltaZn) bone marrow RAG1(-/-) recipients. Our results clearly show that nonlymphocyte expression of TACE is required for normal lymphocyte development and lymphoid organ structure. Lack of TACE function resulted in a partial block in T cell development at the double-negative 4:double-positive transition in the thymus, a loss of B cell development/maturation in the spleen, and a lack of B cell follicle and germinal center formation in the spleen. Thus, TACE serves as a lymphocyte extrinsic factor that is essential for normal T development and peripheral B cell maturation.  相似文献   

7.
TNF-alpha, a potent proinflammatory cytokine, is synthesized as a membrane-anchored precursor and proteolytically released from cells. Soluble TNF is the primary mediator of pathologies such as rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, and endotoxin shock. The TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE), a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17 (ADAM17), has emerged as the best candidate TNF sheddase, but other proteinases can also release TNF. Because TACE-deficient mice die shortly after birth, we generated conditional TACE-deficient mice to address whether TACE is the relevant sheddase for TNF in adult mice. In this study, we report that TACE inactivation in myeloid cells or temporal inactivation at 6 wk offers strong protection from endotoxin shock lethality in mice by preventing increased TNF serum levels. These findings corroborate that TACE is the major endotoxin-stimulated TNF sheddase in mouse myeloid cells in vivo, thereby further validating TACE as a principal target for the treatment of TNF-dependent pathologies.  相似文献   

8.
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha), a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine, is released from cells by proteolytic cleavage of a membrane-anchored precursor. The TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE; a disintegrin and metalloprotease17; ADAM17) is known to have a key role in the ectodomain shedding of TNFalpha in several cell types. However, because purified ADAMs 9, 10, and 19 can also cleave a peptide corresponding to the TNFalpha cleavage site in vitro, these enzymes are considered to be candidate TNFalpha sheddases as well. In this study we used cells lacking ADAMs 9, 10, 17 (TACE), or 19 to address the relative contribution of these ADAMs to TNFalpha shedding in cell-based assays. Our results corroborate that ADAM17, but not ADAM9, -10, or -19, is critical for phorbol ester- and pervanadate-stimulated release of TNFalpha in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. However, overexpression of ADAM19 increased the constitutive release of TNFalpha, whereas overexpression of ADAM9 or ADAM10 did not. This suggests that ADAM19 may contribute to TNFalpha shedding, especially in cells or tissues where it is highly expressed. Furthermore, we used mutagenesis of TNFalpha to explore which domains are important for its stimulated processing by ADAM17. We found that the cleavage site of TNFalpha is necessary and sufficient for cleavage by ADAM17. In addition, the ectodomain of TNFalpha makes an unexpected contribution to the selective cleavage of TNFalpha by ADAM17: it prevents one or more other enzymes from cleaving TNFalpha following PMA stimulation. Thus, selective stimulated processing of TNFalpha by ADAM17 in cells depends on the presence of an appropriate cleavage site as well as the inhibitory role of the TNF ectodomain toward other enzymes that can process this site.  相似文献   

9.
The importance of shedding of membrane proteins for cytokine biology   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Most transmembrane proteins are subjected to limited proteolysis by cellular proteases. The recent molecular cloning of the TNF-a converting enzyme (TACE) revealed that this shedding enzyme belongs to a family of metalloproteinases which contain a disintegrin domain (ADAM family). The activity of these proteases seems to be tightly regulated. Mice lacking functional TACE are not viable demonstrating the importance of this enzyme for body homeostasis. This review describes the current knowledge of shedding enzymes, the ADAM protein family, the mechanism of shedding as well as physiological consequences of shedding of cytokines and cytokine receptors for cytokine biology.  相似文献   

10.
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE or ADAM17) is a member of the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase) family of type I membrane proteins and mediates the ectodomain shedding of various membrane-anchored signaling and adhesion proteins. TACE is synthesized as an inactive zymogen, which is subsequently proteolytically processed to the catalytically active form. We have identified the proprotein-convertases PC7 and furin to be involved in maturation of TACE. This maturation is negatively influenced by the phorbol ester phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA), which decreases the cellular amount of the mature form of TACE in PMA-treated HEK293 and SH-SY5Y cells. Furthermore, we found that stimulation of protein kinase C or protein kinase A signaling pathways did not influence long-term degradation of mature TACE. Interestingly, PMA treatment of furin-deficient LoVo cells did not affect the degradation of mature TACE. By examination of furin reconstituted LoVo cells we were able to exclude the possibility that PMA modulates furin activity. Moreover, the PMA dependent decrease of the mature enzyme form is specific for TACE, as the amount of mature ADAM10 was unaffected in PMA-treated HEK293 and SH-SY5Y cells. Our results indicate that the activation of TACE by the proprotein-convertases PC7 and furin is very similar to the maturation of ADAM10 although there is a significant difference in the cellular stability of the mature enzyme forms after phorbol ester treatment.  相似文献   

11.
A disintegrin and metalloprotease protein 17 (ADAM17) is a transmembrane zinc dependent metalloprotease. The catalytic activity of the enzyme results in the shedding of a broad range of membrane proteins. The release of the corresponding ectodomains induces a switch in various physiological and pathophysiological processes. So far there is not much information about the molecular mechanism of ADAM17 activation available. As for other transmembrane proteases, multimerisation may play a critical role in the activation and function of ADAM17. The present work demonstrates that ADAM17 indeed exists as a multimer in the cell membrane and that this multimerisation is mediated by its EGF-like domain.  相似文献   

12.
The extracellular domains of several integral membrane proteins are released from the cell surface by a group of enzymes known as "sheddases" through a process called "ectodomain shedding". Because many transmembrane growth and differentiation factors, including members of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family that play a crucial role in development, require ectodomain shedding for proper action in vivo, proteolysis is now viewed as a regulatory mechanism in the developing embryos. Two recent reports by Zhao et al. provide evidence for the role of cell surface proteolysis by an ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) in the development of murine lung. Inhibition of tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE, ADAM17) by the hydroxamic acid-based metalloprotease inhibitor (TAPI), or a targeted mutation in Zn(2+)-binding domain of TACE, disrupts two essential epithelial functions in lung development: branching morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation. Evidence for the role of ADAMs as sheddases in development and growth factor signaling is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The C-terminal domains of TACE weaken the inhibitory action of N-TIMP-3   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) is an ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinases) that comprises an active catalytic domain and several C-terminal domains. We compare the binding affinity and association rate constants of the N-terminal domain form of wild-type tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP-3; N-TIMP-3) and its mutants against full-length recombinant TACE and the truncated form of its catalytic domain. We show that the C-terminal domains of TACE substantially weaken the inhibitory action of N-TIMP-3. Further probing with hydroxamate inhibitors indicates that both forms of TACE have similar active site configurations. Our findings highlight the potential role of the C-terminal domains of ADAM proteinases in influencing TIMP interactions.  相似文献   

14.
The release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) from cellular membranes has been shown by different laboratories to be controlled by a disintegrin and metalloprotease, ADAM10 or ADAM17. In contrast, only ADAM17 has shown to be involved in L-selectin shedding. To determine the specific roles of ADAM10 and ADAM17 in the processing of TNF-alpha and L-selectin shedding, antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) targeting both ADAM10 and ADAM17 were identified. We show that ISIS 16337 reduces ADAM17 mRNA and ISIS 100750 reduces ADAM10 mRNA in a sequence-specific and dose-dependent manner in both Jurkat and THP-1 cells. The ADAM17 ASO (ISIS 16337) inhibited both TNF-alpha secretion in THP-1 cells and L-selectin shedding in Jurkat cells, whereas the ADAM10 ASO (ISIS 100750) did not significantly inhibit release of either protein. These results suggest that ADAM17 is one of the major metalloproteases involved in L-selectin shedding as well as TNF-alpha processing. The biologic substrates for ADAM10 in Jurkat and THP-1 cells remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

15.
The beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) undergoes a physiological cleavage triggered by one or several proteolytic activities referred to as alpha-secretases, leading to the secretion of sAPPalpha. Several lines of evidence indicate that the alpha-secretase cleavage is a highly regulated process. Thus, besides constitutive production of sAPPalpha, several studies have reported on protein kinase C-regulated sAPPalpha secretion. Studies aimed at identifying alpha-secretase(s) candidates suggest the involvement of enzymes belonging to the pro-hormone convertases and disintegrin families. The delineation of respective contributions of proteolytic activities in constitutive and regulated sAPPalpha secretion is rendered difficult by the fact that the overall regulated response always includes the basal constitutive counterpart that cannot be selectively abolished. Here we report on the fact that the furin-deficient LoVo cells are devoid of regulated PKC-dependent sAPPalpha secretion and therefore represent an interesting model to study exclusively the constitutive sAPPalpha secretion. We show here, by a pharmacological approach using selective inhibitors, that pro-hormone convertases and proteases of the ADAM (disintegrin metalloproteases) family participate in the production/secretion of sAPPalphas in LoVo cells. Transfection analysis allowed us to further establish that the pro-hormone convertase 7 and ADAM10 but not ADAM17 (TACE, tumour necrosis factor alpha-converting enzyme) likely contribute to constitutive sAPPalpha secretion by LoVo cells.  相似文献   

16.
Several cytokines and growth factors are released by proteolytic cleavage of a membrane-anchored precursor, through the action of ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) metalloproteases. The activity of these proteases is regulated through largely unknown mechanisms. In this study we show that Ab engagement of several tetraspanins (CD9, CD81, CD82) increases epidermal growth factor and/or TNF-alpha secretion through a mechanism dependent on ADAM10. The effect of anti-tetraspanin mAb on TNF-alpha release is rapid, not relayed by intercellular signaling, and depends on an intact MEK/Erk1/2 pathway. It is also associated with a concentration of ADAM10 in tetraspanin-containing patches. We also show that a large fraction of ADAM10 associates with several tetraspanins, indicating that ADAM10 is a component of the "tetraspanin web." These data show that tetraspanins regulate the activity of ADAM10 toward several substrates, and illustrate how membrane compartmentalization by tetraspanins can control the function of cell surface proteins such as ectoproteases.  相似文献   

17.
ADAM10 is a disintegrin metalloproteinase that processes amyloid precursor protein and ErbB ligands and is involved in the shedding of many type I and type II single membrane-spanning proteins. Like tumor necrosis factor-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE or ADAM17), ADAM10 is expressed as a zymogen, and removal of the prodomain results in its activation. Here we report that the recombinant mouse ADAM10 prodomain, purified from Escherichia coli, is a potent competitive inhibitor of the human ADAM10 catalytic/disintegrin domain, with a K(i) of 48 nM. Moreover, the mouse ADAM10 prodomain is a selective inhibitor as it only weakly inhibits other ADAM family proteinases in the micromolar range and does not inhibit members of the matrix metalloproteinase family under similar conditions. Mouse prodomains of TACE and ADAM8 do not inhibit their respective enzymes, indicating that ADAM10 inhibition by its prodomain is unique. In cell-based assays we show that the ADAM10 prodomain inhibits betacellulin shedding, demonstrating that it could be of potential use as a therapeutic agent to treat cancer.  相似文献   

18.
Catalytic properties of ADAM12 and its domain deletion mutants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Human ADAM12 (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase) is a multidomain zinc metalloproteinase expressed at high levels during development and in human tumors. ADAM12 exists as two splice variants: a classical type 1 membrane-anchored form (ADAM12-L) and a secreted splice variant (ADAM12-S) consisting of pro, catalytic, disintegrin, cysteine-rich, and EGF domains. Here we present a novel activity of recombinant ADAM12-S and its domain deletion mutants on S-carboxymethylated transferrin (Cm-Tf). Cleavage of Cm-Tf occurred at multiple sites, and N-terminal sequencing showed that the enzyme exhibits restricted specificity but a consensus sequence could not be defined as its subsite requirements are promiscuous. Kinetic analysis revealed that the noncatalytic C-terminal domains are important regulators of Cm-Tf activity and that ADAM12-PC consisting of the pro domain and catalytic domain is the most active on this substrate. It was also observed that NaCl inhibits ADAM12. Among the tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMP) examined, the N-terminal domain of TIMP-3 (N-TIMP-3) inhibits ADAM12-S and ADAM12-PC with low nanomolar Ki(app) values while TIMP-2 inhibits them with a slightly lower affinity (9-44 nM). However, TIMP-1 is a much weaker inhibitor. N-TIMP-3 variants that lack MMP inhibitory activity but retained the ability to inhibit ADAM17/TACE failed to inhibit ADAM12. These results indicate unique enzymatic properties of ADAM12 among the members of the ADAM family of metalloproteinases.  相似文献   

19.
Retinoic acid stimulates α-secretase processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and decreases β-secretase cleavage that leads to amyloid-β formation. Here, we investigated the effect of retinoic acid on the two putative α-secretases, the disintegrin metalloproteinases ADAM10 and TACE, and the β-site cleaving enzyme BACE1, in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. Western blot analysis showed that exposure to retinoic acid resulted in significantly increased levels of ADAM10 and TACE, suggesting that regulation of α-secretases causes the effects on APP processing. The presence of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor LY 294002 selectively reduced the effect on ADAM10 protein levels but not on ADAM10 mRNA levels as determined by RT-PCR. On the other hand, the effect on TACE was shown to be dependent on protein kinase C, since it was completely blocked in the presence of the inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide XI. Our data indicate that different signalling pathways are involved in retinoic acid-induced up-regulation of the secretases.  相似文献   

20.
ADAMs (a disintegrin and metalloprotease domains) are metalloprotease and disintegrin domain-containing transmembrane glycoproteins with proteolytic, cell adhesion, cell fusion, and cell signaling properties. ADAM8 was originally cloned from monocytic cells, and its distinct expression pattern indicates possible roles in both immunology and neuropathology. Here we describe our analysis of its biochemical properties. In transfected COS-7 cells, ADAM8 is localized to the plasma membrane and processed into two forms derived either by prodomain removal or as remnant protein comprising the extracellular region with the disintegrin domain at the N terminus. Proteolytic removal of the ADAM8 propeptide was completely blocked in mutant ADAM8 with a Glu(330) to Gln exchange (EQ-A8) in the Zn(2+) binding motif (HE(330)LGHNLGMSHD), arguing for autocatalytic prodomain removal. In co-transfection experiments, the ectodomain but not the entire MP domain of ADAM8 was able to remove the prodomain from EQ-ADAM8. With cells expressing ADAM8, cell adhesion to a substrate-bound recombinant ADAM8 disintegrin/Cys-rich domain was observed in the absence of serum, blocked by an antibody directed against the ADAM8 disintegrin domain. Soluble ADAM8 protease, consisting of either the metalloprotease domain or the complete ectodomain, cleaved myelin basic protein and a fluorogenic peptide substrate, and was inhibited by batimastat (BB-94, IC(50) approximately 50 nm) but not by recombinant tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases 1, 2, 3, and 4. Our findings demonstrate that ADAM8 processing by autocatalysis leads to a potential sheddase and to a form of ADAM8 with a function in cell adhesion.  相似文献   

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