4.7 Article

A Bioengineering Strategy to Control ADAM10 Activity in Living Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24020917

Keywords

prodomain; cytosolic domain; TEV; engineered protein; APP; Alzheimer

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ADAM10 is a cell surface protease involved in the cleavage of membrane proteins. Dysregulation of ADAM10 has been linked to various pathological conditions, including AD. Researchers have designed a bioengineering strategy to control the cleavage activity of ADAM10, providing insights into AD treatment.
A Disintegrin and Metalloprotease 10, also known as ADAM10, is a cell surface protease ubiquitously expressed in mammalian cells where it cuts several membrane proteins implicated in multiple physiological processes. The dysregulation of ADAM10 expression and function has been implicated in pathological conditions, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Although it has been suggested that ADAM10 is expressed as a zymogen and the removal of the prodomain results in its activation, other potential mechanisms for the ADAM10 proteolytic function and activation remain unclear. Another suggested mechanism is post-translational modification of the cytoplasmic domain, which regulates ADAM10-dependent protein ectodomain shedding. Therefore, the precise and temporal activation of ADAM10 is highly desirable to reveal the fine details of ADAM10-mediated cleavage mechanisms and protease-dependent therapeutic applications. Here, we present a strategy to control prodomain and cytosolic tail cleavage to regulate ADAM10 shedding activity without the intervention of small endogenous molecule signaling pathways. We generated a series of engineered ADAM10 analogs containing Tobacco Etch Virus protease (TEV) cleavage site (TEVcs), rendering ADAM10 cleavable by TEV. This strategy revealed that, in the absence of other stimuli, the TEV-mediated removal of the prodomain could not activate ADAM10. However, the TEV-mediated cleavage of the cytosolic domain significantly increased ADAM10 activity. Then, we generated ADAM10 with a minimal constitutively catalytic activity that increased significantly in the presence of TEV or after activating a chemically activatable TEV. Our results revealed a bioengineering strategy for controlling the ADAM10 activity in living cells, paving the way to obtain spatiotemporal control of ADAM10. Finally, we proved that our approach of controlling ADAM10 promoted alpha-secretase activity and the non-amyloidogenic cleavage of amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP), thereby increasing the production of the neuroprotective soluble ectodomain (sAPP alpha). Our bioengineering strategy has the potential to be exploited as a next-generation gene therapy for AD.

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