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A protease activity associated with acetylcholinesterase releases the membrane-bound form of the amyloid protein precursor of Alzheimer's disease

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 10:06 authored by David SmallDavid Small, Moir, RD, Fuller, S, Michaelson, S, Bush, AI, Li, QX, Milward, E, Hilbich, C, Weidemann, A, Beyreuther, K, Masters, CL
Amyloid deposits in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) contain a protein (βA4) which is abnormally cleaved from a larger transmembrane precursor protein (APP). APP is believed to be normally released from membranes by the action of a protease referred to as APP secretase. Amyloid deposits have also been shown to contain the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (AChE). In this study, a protease activity associated with AChE was found to possess APP secretase activity, stimulating the relase of a soluble 100K form of APP from HeLa cells transfected with an APP cDNA. The AChE-associated protease was strongly and specifically inhibited by soluble APP (10 nM) isolated from human brain. The AChE-associated protease cleaved a synthetic βA4 peptide at the predicted cleavage site. As AChE is decreased in AD, a deficiency of its associated protease might explain why APP is abnormally processed in AD. © 1991, American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.

History

Publication title

Biochemistry

Volume

30

Issue

44

Pagination

10795-10799

ISSN

0006-2960

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

Amer Chemical Soc

Place of publication

1155 16Th St, Nw, Washington, USA, Dc, 20036

Rights statement

Copyright © 1991 American Chemical Society

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Clinical health not elsewhere classified

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