Alzheimer's disease associated presenilin-1 holoprotein and its 18-20 kDa C-terminal fragment are death substrates for proteases of the caspase family.
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Mutations in the presenilin (PS) genes are linked to early onset familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD). PS-1 proteins are proteolytically processed by an unknown protease leading to the formation of two stable fragments of approximately 30 and approximately 20 kDa [Thinakaran, G., et al. (1996) Neuron 17, 181-190]. In addition to the conventional fragments, alternative cleavage products were observed as well. Here we characterize an alternative proteolytic pathway of PS-1 which involves proteases of the caspase superfamily. Caspase mediated cleavage occurs between aspartate 345 and serine 346 C-terminal to the conventional cleavage determined previously [Podlisny, M., et al., (1997) Neurobiol. Dis. 3, 325-337]. Full-length PS-1 can serve as a substrate for caspase-like proteases, as demonstrated by the generation of the alternative C-terminal fragment in cells expressing PS-1 containing the Deltaexon 10 deletion which is known to accumulate as a full-length molecule [Thinakaran, G., et al. (1996)]. By inhibition of de novo protein synthesis in untransfected cells we demonstrate that the conventional C-terminal fragment of PS-1 is a substrate for caspase-like proteases as well. Therefore full-length and the conventional C-terminal fragment of PS-1 can serve as potential death substrates. Due to the fact that very little full-length PS-1 is expressed in vivo, the much more abundant C-terminal fragment and not the full-length precursor is the major in vivo substrate for the alternative cleavage of PS-1 by proteases of the caspase superfamily.