Abstract

The oligosaccharyltransferase complex catalyzes the transfer of oligosaccharide from a dolichol pyrophosphate donor en bloc onto a free asparagine residue of a newly synthesized nascent chain during the translocation in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen. The role of the less known oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) subunits, DC2 and KCP2, recently identified still remains to be determined. Here, we have studied DC2 and KCP2, and we have established that DC2 and KCP2 are substrate-specific, affecting amyloid precursor protein (APP), indicating that they are not core components required for N-glycosylation and OST activity per se. We show for the first time that DC2 and KCP2 depletion affects APP processing, leading to an accumulation of C-terminal fragments, both C99 and C83, and a reduction in full-length mature APP. This reduction in mature APP levels was not due to a block in secretion because the levels of sAPPα secreted into the media were unaffected. We discover that DC2 and KCP2 depletion affects only the γ-secretase complex, resulting in a reduction of the PS1 active fragment blocking Aβ production. Conversely, we show that the overexpression of DC2 and KCP2 causes an increase in the active γ-secretase complex, particularly the N-terminal fragment of PS1 that is generated by endoproteolysis, leading to a stimulation of Aβ production upon overexpression of DC2 and KCP2. Our findings reveal that components of the OST complex for the first time can interact with the γ-secretase and affect the APP processing pathway.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer disease (AD)2 is the primary cause of adult onset dementia, with a dramatic increase in the incidence of AD apparent in our aging population

  • For the cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP), ␤-secretase competes with ␣-secretase, which produces non-amyloidogenic peptides [4]. ␥-Secretase is an aspartyl protease complex composed of four core components, including presenilins (PS1/PS2), presenilin enhancer 2 (PEN2), nicastrin, and anterior pharynx-defective 1 (APH1) [2]

  • SH-SY5Y cells transiently transfected with siRNAs against DC2 or KCP2 and stained for PS1 display similar staining compared with the mock. These findings suggest that DC2 and KCP2 are unable to affect the cellular localization of the ␥-secretase complex, whereas DC2 and KCP2 may interact with ␥-secretase subcomplexes containing PS1 and nicastrin that could be formed in the immature ␥-secretase complex before PEN2 is able to associate with the complex in the final stages of assembly

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer disease (AD)2 is the primary cause of adult onset dementia, with a dramatic increase in the incidence of AD apparent in our aging population. Cells treated with a non-functional siRNA showed no such reduction in protein levels (Fig. 2A, lane 4, see DC2, KCP2, STT3A, and STT3B panels), showing that the losses observed were not due to pleotropic effects resulting from transfection.

Results
Conclusion
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