Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.56 (insulin-degrading enzyme)
737 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mechanisms by which growth factors are degraded and the role this process plays in the regulation of cell growth are not well understood. Insulin degradation is believed to be mediated by a specific metalloprotease, insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE). We have previously shown that IDE can also degrade transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF alpha), but not epidermal growth factor (EGF), in vitro. This selectivity was surprising, since TGF alpha and EGF are structurally similar and bind to the same receptor with comparable affinities. Using a spectrum of protease inhibitors, we have now analyzed the degradation of TGF alpha, EGF, and insulin by human hepatoma HepG2 cells. The results suggest that bacitracin-sensitive metalloproteases are involved in the degradation of TGF alpha and EGF as well as insulin, and that the degradation of TGF alpha, but not EGF, is mediated in part by IDE. Inhibiting the activity of these metalloproteases decreased growth factor depletion, suggesting that these enzymes play an important role in the control of extracellular growth factor levels. The existence of separate degradative pathways for EGF and TGF alpha may explain how the two factors exert differential effects in some systems, and degradation of TGF alpha by IDE would provide a possible mechanism for interaction between the insulin and TGF alpha/EGF signalling systems.
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PMID:Regulation of insulin, epidermal growth factor, and transforming growth factor-alpha levels by growth factor-degrading enzymes. 184 63

The activity of insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), a thiol metalloprotease degrading insulin in many insulin target cells, was determined in human colon adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) cells. Insulin-degrading activity was localized in the cytosol of Caco-2 cells, accounting for 88% of total activity. Western blots and immunoprecipitation showed that IDE was present in the cytosol of Caco-2 cells and contributed to more than 93% cytosolic insulin-degrading activity. Cytosolic insulin degradation was strongly inhibited by IDE inhibitors, including N-ethylmaleimide, 1,10-phenanthroline, p-chloromericuribenzoate, and EDTA, but was not significantly or not as extensively inhibited by strong inhibitors of proteasome, i.e., chymostatin, soybean trypsin inhibitor, leupeptin, and Dip-F. These results suggest that IDE is present in Caco-2 cells, that Caco-2 IDE has properties similar to those of its counterparts in insulin-target tissues, and that it significantly contributes to intracellular insulin degradation.
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PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme in a human colon adenocarcinoma cell line (Caco-2). 759 85

A periplasmic insulin-cleaving proteinase (ICP), purified to its electrophoretic homogeneity in the SDS-PAGE from the Gram-negative bacterium Acinetobacter calcoaceticus, was examined and compared in its properties with the protease III (protease Pi, pitrilysin, EC 3.4.99.44) of Escherichia coli and the insulin-destroying proteinase (IDE, insulinase, EC 3.4.99.45) from eucaryotes. The enzyme was proven to be a metalloprotease like protease III and IDE, as was shown by the inhibitory effects exerted by EDTA and o-phenanthroline. Furthermore, dialysis against EDTA and o-phenanthroline led to a complete loss of activity, which could be restored by addition of Co2+, and, to a lesser extent, but at a lower metal ion concentration by Zn2+. Similar to protease III and IDE, ICP prefers the cleavage of small polypeptides (insulin, insulin B-chain, glucagon) to the cleavage of proteins (casein, human serum albumin, globin) and was inactive against synthetic amino acid derivates (esters, p-nitranilides, and furoylacroleyl substrates) of subtilisin, thermolysin, trypsin, and chymotrypsin. The peptide-bond-specificity of the ICP in the cleavage of the oxidized insulin B-chain was investigated and the results were compared to the specificity of protease III of E. coli, IDE, protease-24,11, and thermolysin. Cleavage sites in the oxidized insulin B-chain generated by ICP are Asn3-Gln4, His10-Leu11, Ala14-Leu15, Leu17-Val18, Gly23-Phe24, Phe24-Phe25, and Phe25-Tyr26. Principally, ICP cleaves between hydrophobic amino acids and amides. The ICP shares one of the only two cleavage sites with the protease III and four sites with the IDE.
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PMID:A periplasmic insulin-cleaving proteinase (ICP) from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus sharing properties with protease III from Escherichia coli and IDE from eucaryotes. 773 84

Insulin degrading enzyme (IDE) is an evolutionarily conserved, nonlysosomal metalloprotease that has been implicated in the cellular degradation and processing of insulin. However, the site and the mode of the action of this enzyme are unclear. We have addressed these questions by establishing several Ltk- cell lines that can overexpress human insulin-degrading enzyme (hIDE) upon glucocorticoid induction. The level of overexpression of hIDE protein and transcripts in these lines correlates well with an increase in insulin degradation in both cell lysates and intact cells. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of mammalian and Drosophila IDEs reveals a conserved carboxyl-terminal peroxisomal targeting sequence (A/S-K-L), suggesting that IDE may be localized in peroxisomes. To test this possibility, we determined the cellular location of the stably transfected hIDE by both immunofluorescence and immunocryoelectron microscopy. The overexpressed hIDE predominantly colocalized with catalase in peroxisomes, although IDE was also found in the cytosol at a much lower concentration. These results demonstrate that stably transfected IDE catalyzes a rate-limiting step in cellular insulin degradation and is localized predominantly in peroxisomes.
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PMID:Inducible expression and cellular localization of insulin-degrading enzyme in a stably transfected cell line. 807 10

Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), a nonlysosomal metalloprotease involved in metabolizing internalized insulin, has catalytic properties that have been strongly conserved through evolution. Two major properties distinguish IDE from the prototypic metalloprotease thermolysin. 1) It is inhibited by cysteine protease inhibitors as well as metalloprotease inhibitors; 2) it contains an inversion of the HEXXH active site motif of thermolysin, where the histidines coordinate zinc and the glutamate participates in catalysis. Furthermore, cysteine is adjacent to the glutamate residue (HXCEH) in human, rat, and Drosophila IDE, although it is not conserved in their close homologue, Escherichia coli protease III. This cysteine has been postulated to mediate the differential sensitivity of IDE and protease III to cysteine protease inhibitors and chelators. The role of the cysteine in IDE catalysis and inhibitor sensitivity was examined by mutating Cys110 to glycine or serine. To determine whether glutamate in this unusual motif participates in catalysis, we mutated Glu111 to aspartate, valine, or glutamine. Vectors containing wild type or mutant enzymes were transfected into COS cells, and expression was confirmed by Western blotting. Although the glutamate mutants were devoid of insulin degrading activity, the cysteine mutants were indistinguishable from wild type enzyme in both catalytic activity and sensitivity to inhibitors. The loss of activity in the glutamate mutants was not due to gross alterations in tertiary structure, as shown by retention of the ability to bind substrate and by conservative and nonconservative mutation of a neighboring residue with no apparent effect on catalysis. These results demonstrate that the conserved glutamate in the zinc-binding site of human insulin-degrading enzyme is a major catalytic residue, while a conserved cysteine in this region is not essential for catalysis or inhibitor sensitivity.
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PMID:Functional analysis of conserved residues in the active site of insulin-degrading enzyme. 810 41

Insulin-degrading enzyme is a nonlysosomal metalloprotease that initiates degradation of internalized insulin in some cells. We previously identified a potential catalytic site containing an inversion of the Zn(2+)-binding domain of the thermolysin family (Kuo, W.-L., Gehm, B. D., and Rosner, M. R. (1991) Mol. Endocrinol. 4, 1580-1591). The role of this site in catalysis was examined by mutating one of the presumptive Zn(2+)-coordinating histidines (His108) in human insulin-degrading enzyme to leucine or glutamine, which were predicted to reduce or eliminate Zn2+ binding without substantially altering secondary structure. cDNAs for the mutant and wild-type enzymes were incorporated into an expression vector and transfected into COS cells. Expression of the transfected genes was confirmed by Northern and Western blots. In contrast to the wild-type gene, which increased insulin degradation by cell extracts and intact cells several-fold, the mutated genes had no effect on insulin degradation, indicating a loss of catalytic activity. However, the mutants' ability to bind substrate was unimpaired, as affinity labeling with 125I-insulin was increased compared to the wild type. These results suggest that an intact Zn(2+)-binding domain in human insulin-degrading enzyme is required for catalytic activity and can affect, but is not required for, substrate binding.
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PMID:Mutations in a zinc-binding domain of human insulin-degrading enzyme eliminate catalytic activity but not insulin binding. 846 15

Excessive cerebral accumulation of the 42-residue amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) is an early and invariant step in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Many studies have examined the cellular production of Abeta from its membrane-bound precursor, including the role of the presenilin proteins therein, but almost nothing is known about how Abeta is degraded and cleared following its secretion. We previously screened neuronal and nonneuronal cell lines for the production of proteases capable of degrading naturally secreted Abeta under biologically relevant conditions and concentrations. The major such protease identified was a metalloprotease released particularly by a microglial cell line, BV-2. We have now purified and characterized the protease and find that it is indistinguishable from insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), a thiol metalloendopeptidase that degrades small peptides such as insulin, glucagon, and atrial natriuretic peptide. Degradation of both endogenous and synthetic Abeta at picomolar to nanomolar concentrations was completely inhibited by the competitive IDE substrate, insulin, and by two other IDE inhibitors. Immunodepletion of conditioned medium with an IDE antibody removed its Abeta-degrading activity. IDE was present in BV-2 cytosol, as expected, but was also released into the medium by intact, healthy cells. To confirm the extracellular occurrence of IDE in vivo, we identified intact IDE in human cerebrospinal fluid of both normal and Alzheimer subjects. In addition to its ability to degrade Abeta, IDE activity was unexpectedly found be associated with a time-dependent oligomerization of synthetic Abeta at physiological levels in the conditioned media of cultured cells; this process, which may be initiated by IDE-generated proteolytic fragments of Abeta, was prevented by three different IDE inhibitors. We conclude that a principal protease capable of down-regulating the levels of secreted Abeta extracellularly is IDE.
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PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme regulates extracellular levels of amyloid beta-protein by degradation. 983 16

Several human disorders are caused by or associated with the deposition of protein aggregates known as amyloid fibrils. Despite the lack of sequence homology among amyloidogenic proteins, all amyloid fibrils share a common morphology, are insoluble under physiological conditions and are resistant to proteolytic degradation. Because amyloidogenic proteins are being produced continuously, eukaryotic organisms must have developed a form of proteolytic machinery capable of controlling these aggregation-prone species before their fibrillization. This article suggests that an intracellular metalloprotease called insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is responsible for the elimination of proteins with amyloidogenic potential and proposes a mechanism for the selectivity of the enzyme. In this respect, IDE can also be referred to as ADE: amyloid-degrading enzyme.
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PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme: embarking on amyloid destruction. 1144 Aug 53

The deposition of amyloid beta-protein (A beta or beta A4) is a key feature of Alzheimer's disease. Most studies have focused on the generation of A beta, but little is known about the degradation of A beta. Recent reports suggest that insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) and neutral endopeptidase (NEP) are involved in the extracellular degradation of A beta. To date, however, far less is known about the degradation of intracellular A beta. To elucidate the protease(s) responsible for the degradation of intracellular A beta, we investigated the effect of various protease inhibitors on A beta in two distinct intracellular pools (i.e., nonionic detergent-soluble and detergent-insoluble pools) in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Treatment with thiol and metal inhibitors resulted in the accumulation of intracellular A beta and oligomers in detergent-soluble and -insoluble fractions. The overexpression of thiol-metalloprotease IDE resulted in a marked reduction in levels of detergent-soluble intracellular A beta as well as extracellular A beta 40 and A beta 42. Moreover, intracellular A beta in the detergent-insoluble fraction extracted with 70% formic acid or 6 M guanidine hydrochloride decreased markedly in the cells overexpressing IDE. In contrast, expression of NEP degraded the A beta in the detergent-insoluble fraction markedly and partially degraded extracellular A beta 40 and A beta 42, but not intracellular soluble A beta. Thiorphan, an inhibitor of NEP, accumulated, albeit to a lesser extent, in insoluble A beta but not in soluble A beta. Thus, IDE appears to degrade intracellular A beta more effectively than does NEP in both the detergent-soluble and -insoluble fractions.
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PMID:Differential effects of proteases involved in intracellular degradation of amyloid beta-protein between detergent-soluble and -insoluble pools in CHO-695 cells. 1180 7

The intramembranous gamma-secretase cleavage of the beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP) is dependent on biologically active presenilins (PS). Notch also undergoes a similar PS-dependent gamma-secretase-like cleavage, resulting in the liberation of the Notch intracellular domain (NICD), which is critically required for developmental signal transduction. gamma-Secretase processing of APP results in the production of a similar fragment called AICD (APP intracellular domain), which may function in nuclear signaling as well. AICD, like NICD, is rapidly removed. By using a battery of protease inhibitors we demonstrate that AICD, in contrast to NICD, is degraded by a cytoplasmic metalloprotease. In vitro degradation of AICD can be reconstituted with cytoplasmic fractions obtained from neuronal and non-neuronal cells. Taking into account the inhibition profile and the cytoplasmic localization, we identified three candidate enzymes (neurolysin, thimet oligopeptidase, and insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), also known as insulysin), which all are involved in the degradation of bioactive peptides in the brain. When insulin, a well characterized substrate of IDE, was added to the in vitro degradation assay, removal of AICD was efficiently blocked. Moreover, overexpression of IDE resulted in enhanced degradation of AICD, whereas overexpression of the inactive IDE E111Q mutant did not affect AICD degradation. Finally, immunodepletion of IDE significantly reduced the AICD degrading activity. Therefore our data demonstrate that IDE, which is one of the proteases implicated in the removal of extracellular Abeta, also removes the cytoplasmic product of gamma-secretase cleaved APP.
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PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme rapidly removes the beta-amyloid precursor protein intracellular domain (AICD). 1180 55


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