4.6 Article

Seizure protein 6 and its homolog seizure 6-like protein are physiological substrates of BACE1 in neurons

Journal

MOLECULAR NEURODEGENERATION
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13024-016-0134-z

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; BACE1; BACE2; Secretase; Neuroproteomics; Biomarker; SEZ6; SEZ6L

Categories

Funding

  1. BMBF (JPND-RiModFTD)
  2. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (IWT)
  3. DFG [FOR2290]
  4. Center of Excellence in Neurodegeneration CoEN
  5. Alzheimer Research Price of the Breuer Foundation
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  7. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
  8. Swedish Society of Medicine
  9. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  10. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H04676] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Background: The protease BACE1 (beta-site APP cleaving enzyme) is a major drug target in Alzheimer's disease. However, BACE1 therapeutic inhibition may cause unwanted adverse effects due to its additional functions in the nervous system, such as in myelination and neuronal connectivity. Additionally, recent proteomic studies investigating BACE1 inhibition in cell lines and cultured murine neurons identified a wider range of neuronal membrane proteins as potential BACE1 substrates, including seizure protein 6 (SEZ6) and its homolog SEZ6L. Methods and results: We generated antibodies against SEZ6 and SEZ6L and validated these proteins as BACE1 substrates in vitro and in vivo. Levels of the soluble, BACE1-cleaved ectodomain of both proteins (sSEZ6, sSEZ6L) were strongly reduced upon BACE1 inhibition in primary neurons and also in vivo in brains of BACE1-deficient mice. BACE1 inhibition increased neuronal surface levels of SEZ6 and SEZ6L as shown by cell surface biotinylation, demonstrating that BACE1 controls surface expression of both proteins. Moreover, mass spectrometric analysis revealed that the BACE1 cleavage site in SEZ6 is located in close proximity to the membrane, similar to the corresponding cleavage site in SEZ6L. Finally, an improved method was developed for the proteomic analysis of murine cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and was applied to CSF from BACE-deficient mice. Hereby, SEZ6 and SEZ6L were validated as BACE1 substrates in vivo by strongly reduced levels in the CSF of BACE1-deficient mice. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that SEZ6 and SEZ6L are physiological BACE1 substrates in the murine brain and suggests that sSEZ6 and sSEZ6L levels in CSF are suitable markers to monitor BACE1 inhibition in mice.

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