| Literature DB >> 26209623 |
Stephan Menzel1, Björn Rissiek2, Peter Bannas3, Thomas Jakoby4, Maria Miksiewicz1, Nicole Schwarz1, Marion Nissen1, Friedrich Haag1, Andreas Tholey4, Friedrich Koch-Nolte5.
Abstract
ARTC2.2 is a toxin-related, GPI-anchored ADP-ribosyltransferase expressed by murine T cells. In response to NAD(+) released from damaged cells during inflammation, ARTC2.2 ADP-ribosylates and thereby gates the P2X7 ion channel. This induces ectodomain shedding of metalloprotease-sensitive cell surface proteins. In this study, we show that ARTC2.2 itself is a target for P2X7-triggered ectodomain shedding. We identify the metalloprotease cleavage site 3 aa upstream of the predicted GPI anchor attachment site of ARTC2.2. Intravenous injection of NAD(+) increased the level of enzymatically active ARTC2.2 in serum, indicating that this mechanism is operative also under inflammatory conditions in vivo. Radio-ADP-ribosylation assays reveal that shedding refocuses the target specificity of ARTC2.2 from membrane proteins to secretory proteins. Our results uncover nucleotide-induced membrane-proximal proteolysis as a regulatory mechanism to control the substrate specificity of ARTC2.2.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26209623 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1401677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422