Abstract

Regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) is a key mechanism for activating transmembrane proteins such as epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) for cellular signaling and degradation. EpCAM is highly expressed in carcinomas and progenitor and embryonic stem cells and is involved in the regulation of cell adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation. Strictly sequential cleavage of EpCAM through RIP involves initial shedding of the extracellular domain by α-secretase (ADAM) and β-secretase (BACE) sheddases, generating a membrane-tethered C-terminal fragment EpCTF. Subsequently, the rate-limiting γ-secretase complex catalyzes intramembrane cleavage of EpCTF, generating an extracellular EpCAM-Aβ-like fragment and an intracellular EpICD fragment involved in nuclear signaling. Here, we have combined biochemical approaches with live-cell imaging of fluorescent protein tags to investigate the kinetics of γ-secretase-mediated intramembrane cleavage of EpCTF. We demonstrate that γ-secretase-mediated proteolysis of exogenously and endogenously expressed EpCTF is a slow process with a 50% protein turnover in cells ranging from 45 min to 5.5 h. The slow cleavage was dictated by γ-secretase activity and not by EpCTF species, as indicated by cross-species swapping experiments. Furthermore, both human and murine EpICDs generated from EpCTF by γ-secretase were degraded efficiently (94-99%) by the proteasome. Hence, proteolytic cleavage of EpCTF is a comparably slow process, and EpICD generation does not appear to be suited for rapidly transducing extracellular cues into nuclear signaling, but appears to provide steady signals that can be further controlled through efficient proteasomal degradation. Our approach provides an unbiased bioassay to investigate proteolytic processing of EpCTF in single living cells.

Highlights

  • Regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) is a key mechanism for activating transmembrane proteins such as epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) for cellular signaling and degradation

  • EpCAM is cleaved by ADAM10/17 or BACE1 and ␥-secretase to sequentially generate EpEX, EpCTF, A␤-like, and EpICD fragments (Fig. 1A)

  • Composed of the signal peptide of EpCAM, a c-Myc tag, 35 membrane-proximal amino acids of the extracellular domain of EpCAM, and the transmembrane and intracellular domains of EpCAM were fused to yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) (Fig. 1B)

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

EpCAM, epithelial cell adhesion molecule; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; RIP, regulated intramembrane proteolysis; CTF, C-terminal fragment; PS, presenilin 1 or 2; NCT, nicastrin; ICD, intracellular domain; EGF, epidermal growth factor; EGFR, EGF receptor; EMT, epithelial–mesenchymal transition; YFP, yellow fluorescent protein; aa, amino acid(s); ANOVA, analysis of variance; ESC, embryonic stem cell; STR, short tandem repeat; BACE, ␤-secretase; DAPT, N-[N(3,5-difluorophenacetyl)-L-alanyl]-S-phenylglycine t-butyl ester.

Results
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