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Identification of a tetratricopeptide repeat-like domain in the nicastrin subunit of γ-secretase using synthetic antibodies

Authors :
Georgia Dolios
Marcin Paduch
Kwangwook Ahn
Yue-Ming Li
Rong Wang
Akiko Koide
Robert J. Hoey
Shohei Koide
Xulun Zhang
Takeshi Ikeuchi
Sangram S. Sisodia
Brenda Leung
Guoqing Lin
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109:8534-8539
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012.

Abstract

The γ-secretase complex, composed of presenilin, anterior-pharynx-defective 1, nicastrin, and presenilin enhancer 2, catalyzes the intramembranous processing of a wide variety of type I membrane proteins, including amyloid precursor protein (APP) and Notch. Earlier studies have revealed that nicastrin, a type I membrane-anchored glycoprotein, plays a role in γ-secretase assembly and trafficking and has been proposed to bind substrates. To gain more insights regarding nicastrin structure and function, we generated a conformation-specific synthetic antibody and used it as a molecular probe to map functional domains within nicastrin ectodomain. The antibody bound to a conformational epitope within a nicastrin segment encompassing residues 245–630 and inhibited the processing of APP and Notch substrates in in vitro γ-secretase activity assays, suggesting that a functional domain pertinent to γ-secretase activity resides within this region. Epitope mapping and database searches revealed the presence of a structured segment, located downstream of the previously identified DAP domain ( D YIGS a nd p eptidase; residues 261–502), that is homologous to a tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain commonly involved in peptide recognition. Mutagenesis analyses within the predicted TPR-like domain showed that disruption of the signature helical structure resulted in the loss of γ-secretase activity but not the assembly of the γ-secretase and that Leu571 within the TPR-like domain plays an important role in mediating substrate binding. Taken together, these studies offer provocative insights pertaining to the structural basis for nicastrin function as a “substrate receptor” within the γ-secretase complex.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
109
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82b3f3ed535e6f09db1ed0f7cf694243