γ-Secretase plays a pivotal role in the production of neurotoxic amyloid β-peptide (Aβ), the principal component of amyloid plaques present in Alzheimer’s disease. It consists of a core complex of presenilin (PS), nicastrin, anterior pharynx-defective 1 (Aph-1), and presenilin enhancer 2 (Pen-2) proteins. PS harbors the catalytic aspartates required for regulated intramembrane proteolysis and the paralogs (PS1 and PS2) contribute to the assembly of distinct subpopulations of γ-secretases that may fulfill distinct roles. To characterize the molecular environments of distinct γ-secretases complexes in-depth quantitative comparisons were performed on 1) wild-type PS1 and its derivative carrying point mutations known to cause heritable early-onset AD in mice, and 2) PS1- or PS2-containing γ-secretase complexes equipped with N-terminal tandem-affinity purification (TAP) tags on PS paralogs in HEK293 cells. Isobaric labeling of co-purifying peptides for quantitative mass spectrometry revealed that γ-secretase complexes interact with other protein networks, including the cellular catenin-cadherin network, the molecular machinery that targets and fuses synaptic vesicles to cellular membranes, and the H+-transporting lysosomal ATPase macro-complex. The study revealed mature γ-secretase complexes containing PS1 or mutant PS1 to be indistinguishable in their protein composition, confirmed several previously proposed γ-secretase interactors, identified many novel interactors and uncovered a subset of proteins which can engage in robust interactions with γ-secretase complexes in individual cell types but may escape detection when whole brains are used as biological source materials. Interestingly, signal peptide peptidase (SPP), a Type II TM cleaving aspartyl protease, was pre-dominantly found to co-purify with PS2-containing γ-secretase complexes and could be shown not to influence their maturation but to affect cleavage or release of cellular Aβ. A model emerged from this work that suggests PS1 and PS2 paralogs may divide up the task of handling a broad range of membrane stubs at least in part by associating with different molecular environments.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/43389 |
Date | 12 December 2013 |
Creators | Jeon, Amy Hye Won |
Contributors | Schmitt-Ulms, Gerold |
Source Sets | University of Toronto |
Language | en_ca |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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