Intracellular maturation and localization of the tumour necrosis factor alpha convertase (TACE).
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- Vol. 347, 131-8
Abstract
Tumour necrosis factor alpha convertase (TACE) is a metalloprotease/disintegrin involved in the ectodomain shedding of several proteins, a process thought to be important in inflammation, rheumatoid arthritis and murine development. The characterization of the intracellular maturation and subcellular localization of endogenous TACE is decribed in the present study. Similarly to other proteolytically active metalloprotease/disintegrins, two forms of TACE are found in cells; a full-length precursor and a mature form lacking the prodomain. Prodomain removal occurs in a late Golgi compartment, consistent with the proposed role of a furin type proprotein convertase in this process. An additional form of TACE, lacking the pro and cytoplasmic domains, is detected when cell lysates are prepared in the presence of EDTA instead of a hydroxamate-based metalloprotease inhibitor or 1,10-phenanthroline. This form appears to be generated by mature TACE cleaving its own cytoplasmic tail and may explain why little mature TACE has been detected in previous studies. In cell-surface labelling experiments, mature TACE was detected on the cell surface but immunofluorescence data indicate that TACE is predominantly localized to a perinuclear compartment similar to that described for tumour necrosis factor (TNF)alpha. This raises the possibility that TACE-mediated ectodomain shedding may occur in an intracellular compartment in addition to the cell surface.This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- The ADAM gene family: surface proteins with adhesion and protease activityTrends in Genetics, 2000
- Evidence for an interaction of the metalloprotease-disintegrin tumour necrosis factor alpha convertase (TACE) with mitotic arrest deficient 2 (MAD2), and of the metalloprotease-disintegrin MDC9 with a novel MAD2-related protein, MAD2beta.1999
- Rapid Plasma Membrane Anchoring of Newly Synthesized p59 fyn: Selective Requirement for NH2-Terminal Myristoylation and Palmitoylation at Cysteine-3The Journal of cell biology, 1997
- Cloning of a disintegrin metalloproteinase that processes precursor tumour-necrosis factor-αNature, 1997
- A metalloproteinase disintegrin that releases tumour-necrosis factor-α from cellsNature, 1997
- Diverse Cell Surface Protein Ectodomains Are Shed by a System Sensitive to Metalloprotease InhibitorsPublished by Elsevier ,1996
- Metargidin, a Membrane-anchored Metalloprotease-Disintegrin Protein with an RGD Integrin Binding SequenceJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Transforming growth factor-alpha and beta-amyloid precursor protein share a secretory mechanism.The Journal of cell biology, 1995
- Regulation of tumour necrosis factor-α processing by a metalloproteinase inhibitorNature, 1994
- The cysteine switch: a principle of regulation of metalloproteinase activity with potential applicability to the entire matrix metalloproteinase gene family.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990