G. Huber et al., cDNA cloning and molecular characterization of human brain metalloproteaseMP100: A beta-secretase candidate?, J NEUROCHEM, 72(3), 1999, pp. 1215-1223
Metalloprotease MP100 was originally isolated as a beta-secretase candidate
from human brain using a beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP)-derived
p-nitroanilide (pNA) peptide substrate. Peptide sequences from purified MP
100 were now found to resemble sequences reported for a puromycin-sensitive
aminopeptidase (PSA) highly enriched in brain, and cDNA cloning revealed n
early complete homology of MP100 to PSA, with only a single bp difference r
esulting in an amino acid change at position 184. Another MP100 cDNA encode
d a protein with a 36-amino acid deletion (positions 180-217) and a two-ami
no acid insertion after Val(533). Purified recombinant human MP100 cleaved
the original pNA substrate as well as a free beta-site-spanning amyloid bet
a (A beta) peptide (A beta(-10/+10)), generating A beta(1-10). The latter s
ubstrate, however, remained uncleaved, if N- and C-terminally blocked, and
also purified beta-APP was not cleaved. Double immunoimaging revealed parti
al, patchy, colocalization of beta-APP and MP100 in doubly transfected huma
n embryonic kidney cells (HEK cells) and in normal neuroblastoma cells, and
both proteins could be coimmunoprecipitated from rat brain extracts, sugge
sting their close vicinity in vivo. Coexpression of MP100 and beta-APP(695)
, however, did not boost A beta levels in HEK cells, although active enzyme
was produced. Thus, MP100 does not exert true beta-secretase-like function
in cells, although it may well act as a secondary exoprotease in a complex
beta-APP/A beta metabolism.