| Literature DB >> 12388777 |
Richard Rozmahel1, Howard T J Mount, Fusheng Chen, Van Nguyen, Jean Huang, Serap Erdebil, Jennifer Liauw, Gang Yu, Hiroshe Hasegawa, YongJun Gu, You-Qiang Song, Stephen D Schmidt, Ralph A Nixon, Paul M Mathews, Catherine Bergeron, Paul Fraser, David Westaway, Peter St George-Hyslop.
Abstract
Presenilin 1 (PS1), presenilin 2, and nicastrin form high molecular weight complexes that are necessary for the endoproteolysis of several type 1 transmembrane proteins, including amyloid precursor protein (APP) and the Notch receptor, by apparently similar mechanisms. The cleavage of the Notch receptor at the "S3-site" releases a C-terminal cytoplasmic fragment (Notch intracellular domain) that acts as the intracellular transduction molecule for Notch activation. Missense mutations in the presenilins cause familial Alzheimer's disease by augmenting the "gamma-secretase" cleavage of APP and overproducing one of the proteolytic derivatives, the Abeta peptide. Null mutations in PS1 inhibit both gamma-secretase cleavage of APP and S3-site cleavage of the Notch receptor. Mice lacking PS1 function have defective Notch signaling and die perinatally with severe skeletal and brain deformities. We report here that a genetic modifier on mouse distal chromosome 1, coinciding with the locus containing Nicastrin, influences presenilin-mediated Notch S3-site cleavage and the resultant Notch phenotype without affecting presenilin-mediated APP gamma-site cleavage. Two missense substitutions of residues conserved among vertebrates have been identified in nicastrin. These results indicate that Notch S3-site cleavage and APP gamma-site cleavage are distinct presenilin-dependent processes and support a functional interaction between nicastrin and presenilins in vertebrates. The dissociation of Notch S3-site and APP gamma-site cleavage activities will facilitate development of gamma-secretase inhibitors for treatment of Alzheimer's disease.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12388777 PMCID: PMC137904 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.222413999
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205