4.6 Article

Intracellular pathways of folded and misfolded amyloid precursor protein degradation

Journal

ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
Volume 451, Issue 1, Pages 79-90

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2006.05.002

Keywords

protein folding; amyloid precursor protein; proteasome; protease inhibitors; protein glycosylation; tunicamycin; protein trafficking

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [P30 AG60817] Funding Source: Medline

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A number of studies suggest that early events in the maturation of amyloid precursor protein (APP) are important in determining its entry into one of several alternative processing pathways, one of which leads to the toxic protein beta-amyloid (A beta). In pulse-labeled APP expressing CHO cells two proteolytic systems can degrade newly translated APP: the proteosome and a cysteine protease. When N-glycosylation was inhibited by tunicamycin, the former system is the dominant mechanism of APP degradation. Without tunicamycin present, the cysteine protease is operational: cysteine protease inhibitors completely inhibit APP turnover in cells in which the secretory pathway is interrupted with brefeldin A or when alpha-secretase and endosomal degradation are also pharmacologically blocked. APP immunoprecipitated from cells extracted under mild conditions and labeled in the presence of tunicamycin exhibited greater sensitivity to endoproteinase glu-C (V8) or lys-C than from cells without drug. The V8 fragment missing in tunicamyin treated cells encompassed the KPI inhibitor insertion site but was distinct from the site of N-glycosylation. It is concluded that a conformational change caused by interrupted N-glycosylation shunts newly translated APP into the proteasomal degradation pathway. Pulse-labeled and chased cells showed an additional V8 fragment that was not present in pulsed-labeled cells and was not due to glycosylation since it was also present in cells labeled in the presence of brefeldin. This latter result indicates that an additional, delayed conformational alteration occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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