4.7 Article

The transmembrane domain of Frey1 harbors a transplantable inhibitory motif for intramembrane proteases

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 80, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-023-04823-7

Keywords

Intramembrane proteolysis; Signal peptide peptidase-like proteases; gamma-Secretase; Enzyme inhibitors; Alzheimer's disease; Protease regulation

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F rey1 has been identified as an inhibitory protein of SPPL2c, and its specific motif can be transplanted to the substrate PLN to generate inhibitors for this enzyme. The findings suggest a mechanism for inhibiting aspartic I-CLIPs and provide potential tools for targeted drug development.
Although aspartic intramembrane-cleaving proteases (I-CLIPs) are crucial switches of multiple signaling pathways and involved in several devastating diseases, little is known about their physiological regulation. We have recently identified Frey regulator of sperm-oocyte fusion 1 (Frey1) as an inhibitory protein of Signal Peptide Peptidase-like 2c (SPPL2c), a member of this protease family. Employing structure modeling along with cell-based inhibition and interaction studies, we identify a short motif within the Frey1 transmembrane domain essential for inhibition of SPPL2c. Intriguingly, this motif can be transplanted to the SPPL2c substrate PLN, thereby transforming it into an inhibitor of this enzyme. It can be adopted for the generation of Notch1-based ?-Secretase inhibitors demonstrating its versatile use among aspartic I-CLIPs. In summary, we describe a mechanism of aspartic I-CLIP inhibition which allows the targeted generation of specific inhibitors of these enzymes and might enable the identification of endogenous negative regulators of these enzymes.

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