Beta-amyloid precursor protein cleavage by a membrane-bound protease.

Sangram S. Sisodia(Johns Hopkins University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
July 1, 1992
Cited by 730Open Access

Abstract

The principal component of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer disease is beta-amyloid protein, an approximately 4-kDa peptide derived from amyloid precursor proteins. Previous studies have established that amyloid precursor proteins are secreted after proteolytic cleavage within the beta-amyloid peptide. The present investigation documents that, in cultured cells, amyloid precursor protein is cleaved on the plasma membrane by a membrane-bound endoprotease and that the specificity of peptide bond hydrolysis is largely independent of the primary sequence of the precursor. The principal determinants of cleavage appear to be an alpha-helical conformation and the distance (12-13 residues) of the hydrolyzed bond from membrane.


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