Abstract

β-Secretase (BACE1) is an attractive drug target for Alzheimer disease. However, the design of clinical useful inhibitors targeting its active site has been extremely challenging. To identify alternative drug targeting sites we have generated a panel of BACE1 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that interfere with BACE1 activity in various assays and determined their binding epitopes. mAb 1A11 inhibited BACE1 in vitro using a large APP sequence based substrate (IC(50) ∼0.76 nm), in primary neurons (EC(50) ∼1.8 nm), and in mouse brain after stereotactic injection. Paradoxically, mAb 1A11 increased BACE1 activity in vitro when a short synthetic peptide was used as substrate, indicating that mAb 1A11 does not occupy the active-site. Epitope mapping revealed that mAb 1A11 binds to adjacent loops D and F, which together with nearby helix A, distinguishes BACE1 from other aspartyl proteases. Interestingly, mutagenesis of loop F and helix A decreased or increased BACE1 activity, identifying them as enzymatic regulatory elements and as potential alternative sites for inhibitor design. In contrast, mAb 5G7 was a potent BACE1 inhibitor in cell-free enzymatic assays (IC(50) ∼0.47 nm) but displayed no inhibitory effect in primary neurons. Its epitope, a surface helix 299-312, is inaccessible in membrane-anchored BACE1. Remarkably, mutagenesis of helix 299-312 strongly reduced BACE1 ectodomain shedding, suggesting that this helix plays a role in BACE1 cellular biology. In conclusion, this study generated highly selective and potent BACE1 inhibitory mAbs, which recognize unique structural and functional elements in BACE1, and uncovered interesting alternative sites on BACE1 that could become targets for drug development.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer disease (AD)2 is the most common form of progressive dementia in the elderly population

  • To identify alternative drug targeting sites we have generated a panel of BACE1 monoclonal antibodies that interfere with BACE1 activity in various assays and determined their binding epitopes. mAb 1A11 inhibited BACE1 in vitro using a large amyloid precursor protein (APP) sequence based substrate (IC50 ϳ0.76 nM), in primary neurons (EC50 ϳ1.8 nM), and in mouse brain after stereotactic injection

  • Twenty-five clones that gave the highest signals in the immunofluorescence assay were selected and further screened in a BACE1 cellular activity assay measuring sAPP␤ secretion from SH-SY5Y stably transfected with human APP695

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer disease (AD)2 is the most common form of progressive dementia in the elderly population. To identify alternative drug targeting sites we have generated a panel of BACE1 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that interfere with BACE1 activity in various assays and determined their binding epitopes. Hybridoma Screening for BACE1 Inhibitory mAbs—To generate mAbs for inhibition of BACE1 activity, we immunized Bace1Ϫ/ϪBace2Ϫ/Ϫ knock-out mice [21] with part of the human BACE1 ectodomain (amino acids 46 – 460) containing the catalytic domain of this protease.

Results
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