| Literature DB >> 28105004 |
Christoph Becker-Pauly1, Claus U Pietrzik2.
Abstract
The membrane bound metalloprotease meprin β is important for collagen fibril assembly in connective tissue formation and for the detachment of the intestinal mucus layer for proper barrier function. Recent proteomic studies revealed dozens of putative new substrates of meprin β, including the amyloid precursor protein (APP). It was shown that APP is cleaved by meprin β in distinct ways, either at the β-secretase site resulting in increased levels of Aβ peptides, or at the N-terminus releasing 11 kDa, and 20 kDa peptide fragments. The latter event was discussed to be rather neuroprotective, whereas the ectodomain shedding of APP by meprin β reminiscent to BACE-1 is in line with the amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease, promoting neurodegeneration. The N-terminal 11 kDa and 20 kDa peptide fragments represent physiological cleavage products, since they are found in human brains under different diseased or non-diseased states, whereas these fragments are completely missing in brains of meprin β knock-out animals. Meprin β is not only a sheddase of adhesion molecules, such as APP, but was additionally demonstrated to cleave within the prodomain of ADAM10. Activated ADAM10, the α-secretase of APP, is then able to shed meprin β from the cell surface thereby abolishing the β-secretase activity. All together meprin β seems to be a novel player in APP processing events, even influencing other enzymes involved in APP cleavage.Entities:
Keywords: APP; N-terminal truncated Aβ; meprin β; proteolysis; shedding
Year: 2017 PMID: 28105004 PMCID: PMC5215381 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2016.00159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1Proteolytic processing of APP by Meprin β. APP is cleaved by meprin β in two distinct ways. On the one hand non-amyloidogenic N-APP fragments are produced, and on the other hand, meprin β acts as a β-secretase, inducing Aβ2-x generation. Remarkably, APPswe completely abolishes Aβ2-x release. The AD protective mutant APPA673T is also much less cleaved by meprin β.
Figure 2Structural features of meprin β and APP interaction. (A) Model of dimeric membrane bound meprin β (white and brownish) based on the crystal structure of the ectodomain (PDB 4GWN) in complex with part of the APP (red/magenta). (B) As in (A) but turned by 90° to the right. (C) Close up of the active site cleft of meprin β as shown in (A). Positively charged amino acid residues important for the cleavage specificity are highlighted in blue. Part of the APP that builds the Aβ peptide is displayed as surface model. Glycans in meprin β are depicted as stick models.