The ubiquitously expressed cellular prion protein (PrPC) is subjected to the physiological α-cleavage at a region critical for both PrP toxicity and the conversion of PrPC to its pathogenic prion form (PrPSc), generating the C1 and N1 fragments. The C1 fragment can activate caspase 3 while the N1 fragment is neuroprotective. Recent articles indicate that ADAM10, ADAM17, and ADAM9 may not play a prominent role in the α-cleavage of PrPC as previously thought, raising questions on the identity of the responsible protease(s). Here we show that, ADAM8 can directly cleave PrP to generate C1 in vitro and PrP C1/fulllength ratio is greatly decreased in the skeletal muscles of ADAM8 knock-out mice; in addition, the PrP C1/full-length ratio is linearly correlated with ADAM8 protein level in myoblast cell line C2C12 and in skeletal muscle tissues of transgenic mice. These results indicate that ADAM8 is the primary protease responsible for the α-cleavage of PrPC in muscle cells. Moreover, we found that overexpression of PrPC led to up-regulation of ADAM8, suggesting that PrPC may regulate its own α-cleavage through modulating ADAM8 activity. © 2012 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Published in the U.S.A.
CITATION STYLE
Liang, J., Wang, W., Sorensen, D., Medina, S., Ilchenko, S., Kiselar, J., … Kong, Q. (2012). Cellular prion protein regulates its ownα-cleavage through ADAM8 in skeletal muscle. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 287(20), 16510–16520. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.360891
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