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Comparative studies of active site-ligand interactions among various recombinant constructs of human beta-amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme
Authors:Kopcho Lisa M  Ma Jianhong  Marcinkeviciene Jovita  Lai Zhihong  Witmer Mark R  Cheng Janet  Yanchunas Joseph  Tredup Jeffrey  Corbett Martin  Calambur Deepa  Wittekind Michael  Paruchuri Manjula  Kothari Dharti  Lee Grace  Ganguly Subinay  Ramamurthy Vidhyashankar  Morin Paul E  Camac Daniel M  King Robert W  Lasut Amy L  Ross O Harold  Hillman Milton C  Fish Barbara  Shen Keqiang  Dowling Randine L  Kim Young B  Graciani Nilsa R  Collins Dale  Combs Andrew P  George Henry  Thompson Lorin A  Copeland Robert A
Institution:Department of Chemical Enzymology, Hopewell, NJ, USA.
Abstract:Amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleaving enzyme (BACE) is the enzyme responsible for beta-site cleavage of APP, leading to the formation of the amyloid-beta peptide that is thought to be pathogenic in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Hence, BACE is an attractive pharmacological target, and numerous research groups have begun searching for potent and selective inhibitors of this enzyme as a potential mechanism for therapeutic intervention in AD. The mature enzyme is composed of a globular catalytic domain that is N-linked glycosylated in mammalian cells, a single transmembrane helix that anchors the enzyme to an intracellular membrane, and a short C-terminal domain that extends outside the phospholipid bilayer of the membrane. Here we have compared the substrate and active site-directed inhibitor binding properties of several recombinant constructs of human BACE. The constructs studied here address the importance of catalytic domain glycosylation state, inclusion of domains other than the catalytic domain, and incorporation into a membrane bilayer on the interactions of the enzyme active site with peptidic ligands. We find no significant differences in ligand binding properties among these various constructs. These data demonstrate that the nonglycosylated, soluble catalytic domain of BACE faithfully reflects the ligand binding properties of the full-length mature enzyme in its natural membrane environment. Thus, the use of the nonglycosylated, soluble catalytic domain of BACE is appropriate for studies aimed at understanding the determinants of ligand recognition by the enzyme active site.
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