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Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:O95477 (
membrane-bound
)
29,236
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mammalian cells proteolytically release (shed) the extracellular domains of many cell-surface proteins. Modification of the cell surface in this way can alter the cell's responsiveness to its environment and release potent soluble regulatory factors. The release of soluble tumour-necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) from its
membrane-bound
precursor is one of the most intensively studied shedding events because this inflammatory cytokine is so physiologically important. The inhibition of TNF-alpha release (and many other shedding phenomena) by hydroxamic acid-based inhibitors indicates that one or more metalloproteinases is involved. We have now purified and cloned a metalloproteinase that specifically cleaves precursor TNF-alpha. Inactivation of the gene in mouse cells caused a marked decrease in soluble TNF-alpha production. This enzyme (called the TNF-alpha-converting enzyme, or
TACE
) is a new member of the family of mammalian adamalysins (or ADAMs), for which no physiological catalytic function has previously been identified. Our results should facilitate the development of therapeutically useful inhibitors of TNF-alpha release, and they indicate that an important function of adamalysins may be to shed cell-surface proteins.
...
PMID:A metalloproteinase disintegrin that releases tumour-necrosis factor-alpha from cells. 903 90
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) is a cytokine that induces protective inflammatory reactions and kills tumor cells but also causes severe damage when produced in excess, as in rheumatoid arthritis and septic shock. Soluble TNFalpha is released from its
membrane-bound
precursor by a membrane-anchored proteinase, recently identified as a multidomain metalloproteinase called TNFalpha-converting enzyme or
TACE
. We have cocrystallized the catalytic domain of
TACE
with a hydroxamic acid inhibitor and have solved its 2.0 A crystal structure. This structure reveals a polypeptide fold and a catalytic zinc environment resembling that of the snake venom metalloproteinases, identifying
TACE
as a member of the adamalysin/ADAM family. However, a number of large insertion loops generate unique surface features. The pro-TNFalpha cleavage site fits to the active site of
TACE
but seems also to be determined by its position relative to the base of the compact trimeric TNFalpha cone. The active-site cleft of
TACE
shares properties with the matrix metalloproteinases but exhibits unique features such as a deep S3' pocket merging with the S1' specificity pocket below the surface. The structure thus opens a different approach toward the design of specific synthetic
TACE
inhibitors, which could act as effective therapeutic agents in vivo to modulate TNFalpha-induced pathophysiological effects, and might also help to control related shedding processes.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of the catalytic domain of human tumor necrosis factor-alpha-converting enzyme. 952 Mar 79
TNF-alpha converting enzyme (
TACE
; ADAM-17) is a
membrane-bound
disintegrin metalloproteinase that processes the membrane-associated cytokine proTNF-alpha to a soluble form. Because of its putative involvement in inflammatory diseases,
TACE
represents a significant target for the design of specific synthetic inhibitors as therapeutic agents. In order to study its inhibition by tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) and synthetic inhibitors of metalloproteinases, the catalytic domain of mouse
TACE
(rTACE) was overexpressed as a soluble Ig fusion protein from NS0 cells. rTACE was found to be well inhibited by peptide hydroxamate inhibitors as well as by TIMP-3 but not by TIMP-1, -2 and -4. These results suggest that TIMP-3, unlike the other TIMPs, may be important in the modulation of pathological events in which TNF-alpha secretion is involved.
...
PMID:TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) is inhibited by TIMP-3. 975 55
The adamalysins are a family of proteins in the metzincin superfamily of metalloproteases, which also includes the matrix metalloproteinases. There are two subfamilies of adamalysins: the snake venom metalloproteases (SVMPs) and the ADAMs (proteins containing a disintegrin and metalloprotease domain). At least 23 ADAMs have been identified to date. The ADAMs are expressed by a wide variety of cell types, and are involved in functions as diverse as sperm-egg binding, myotube formation, neurogenesis, and proteolytic processing of cell surface proteins. An overview of the ADAM family and their functions will be presented.
TACE
is a unique member of the ADAM family that cleaves
membrane-bound
TNF-alpha to generate soluble TNF-alpha. Mice lacking proteolytically active
TACE
have been generated and characterized. The
TACE
knock-out results in perinatal lethality. Cells from the
TACE
-deficient mice release 80-90% less soluble TNF-alpha than do wild-type cells. Irradiated mice that are reconstituted with
TACE
knock-out hematopoeitic stem cells have markedly reduced levels of serum TNF-alpha following LPS challenge, compared to irradiated mice reconstituted with wild-type cells, suggesting that
TACE
is the major TNF-alpha converting enzyme in vivo.
TACE
-deficient cells are compromised in the generation of other soluble proteins that are produced as the result of cleavage of a membrane precursor form, suggesting that
TACE
is involved in multiple shedding events.
...
PMID:Adamalysins. A family of metzincins including TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE). 1041 47
Numerous proteins are cleaved or "shed" from their
membrane-bound
form. One such protein, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), is synthesized as a type 2 transmembrane protein. Recently, a human protease responsible for this shedding, the TNF-alpha converting enzyme (
TACE
/ADAM17), was isolated.
TACE
/ADAM17 is a member of the adamalysin class of zinc-binding metalloproteases or ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease). We report the isolation and characterization of the mouse
TACE
/ADAM17 cDNA and gene. Mouse
TACE
/ADAM17 has a 92% amino-acid identity with the human protein and was ubiquitously expressed. A recombinant form of the protease is found to cleave a peptide representing the cleavage site of precursor mouse TNF-alpha. An alternatively spliced form of mouse
TACE
/ADAM17 was found that would produce a soluble protein. The gene for
TACE
/ADAM17 is approximately 50 kb and contains 19 exons. Chromosomal mapping places
TACE
/ADAM17 on mouse chromosome 12 and human chromosome 2p25.
...
PMID:Characterization of the cDNA and gene for mouse tumour necrosis factor alpha converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM17) and its location to mouse chromosome 12 and human chromosome 2p25. 1043
Many
membrane-bound
proteins, including cytokines, receptors, and growth factors, are proteolytically cleaved to release a soluble form of their extracellular domain. The tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha converting enzyme (
TACE
/ADAM-17) is a transmembrane metalloproteinase responsible for the proteolytic release or "shedding" of several cell-surface proteins, including TNF and p75 TNFR. We established a
TACE
-reconstitution system using
TACE
-deficient cells co-transfected with
TACE
and substrate cDNAs to study
TACE
function and regulation. Using the
TACE
-reconstitution system, we identified two additional substrates of
TACE
, interleukin (IL)-1R-II and p55 TNFR. Using truncations and chimeric constructs of
TACE
and another ADAM family member, ADAM-10, we studied the function of the different domains of
TACE
in three shedding activities. We found that
TACE
must be expressed with its membrane-anchoring domain for phorbol ester-stimulated shedding of TNF, p75 TNFR, and IL-1R-II, but that the cytoplasmic domain is not required for the shedding of these substrates. The catalytic domain of ADAM-10 could not be functionally substituted for that of
TACE
. IL-1R-II shedding required the cysteine-rich domain of
TACE
as well as the catalytic domain, whereas TNF and p75 TNFR shedding required only the tethered
TACE
catalytic domain.
...
PMID:Functional analysis of the domain structure of tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme. 1079 47
Many
membrane-bound
protein precursors, including cytokines and growth factors, are proteolytically shed to yield soluble intercellular regulatory ligands. The responsible protease, tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (
TACE
/ADAM-17), is a transmembrane metalloprotease-disintegrin that cleaves multiple cell surface proteins, although it was initially identified for the enzymatic release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). Mammalian lung growth and development are tightly controlled by cytokines and peptide growth factors. However, the biological function of the cell shedding mechanism during lung organogenesis is not understood. We therefore evaluated the role of
TACE
as a "sheddase" during lung morphogenesis by analyzing the developmental phenotypes of lungs in mice with an inactive
TACE
gene in both in vivo and ex vivo organ explant culture. Neonatal
TACE
-deficient mice had visible respiratory distress and their lungs failed to form normal saccular structures. These newborn mutant lungs had fewer peripheral epithelial sacs with deficient septation and thick-walled mesenchyme, resulting in reduced surface for gas exchange. At the canalicular stage of E16.5, the lungs of
TACE
mutant mice were impaired in branching morphogenesis, inhibited in epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation, and delayed in vasculogenesis. Embryonic
TACE
knockout mouse lungs (E12) branched poorly compared to wild-type lungs, when placed into serumless organ culture. Gene expression of both surfactant protein-C and aquaporin-5 were inhibited in cultured
TACE
-mutant embryonic lungs, indicating defects in both branching and peripheral epithelial cytodifferentiation in the absence of
TACE
protein. Furthermore, both the hypoplastic phenotype and the delayed cytodifferentiation in
TACE
-deficient lungs were rescued by exogenous addition of soluble stimulatory factors including either TNF-alpha or epidermal growth factor in embryonic lung culture. Thus, the impaired lung branching and maturation without
TACE
suggest a broad role for
TACE
in the processing of multiple membrane-anchored proteins, one or more of which is essential for normal lung morphogenesis. Taken together, our data indicate that the
TACE
-mediated proteolytic mechanism which enzymatically releases membrane-tethered proteins plays an indispensable role in lung morphogenesis, and its inactivation leads to abnormal lung development.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hypoplasia in mice lacking tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme indicates an indispensable role for cell surface protein shedding during embryonic lung branching morphogenesis. 1125 58
Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-converting enzyme (
TACE
) is a membrane protein belonging to the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase) family that cleaves various membrane proteins, including the proform of TNF-alpha. In this study, we constructed expression vectors for the
membrane-bound
full-length
TACE
(mTACE) and its truncated soluble form (sTACE). When a human TNF-alpha expression vector was introduced into human 293 cells, processing of TNF-alpha to its mature form was enhanced by coexpressing mTACE, and this processing was inhibited by a metalloproteinase inhibitor. On the other hand, coexpression of sTACE had no effect on the processing of TNF-alpha, although the culture medium of sTACE-transfected cells could cleave a peptide containing the TNF-alpha cleavage site. Fas ligand (FasL)-transfected 293 cells released a considerable amount of soluble FasL, and coexpression of neither mTACE nor sTACE enhanced this shedding. Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting analysis with cells that were cotransfected with
TACE
and TNF-alpha indicated that both mTACE and sTACE could interact with the proform of TNF-alpha. In the same assay, neither mTACE nor sTACE interacted with FasL. The catalytic domain-lacking
TACE
mutant, which could also interact TNF-alpha, showed a dominant negative effect on not only TNF-alpha secretion but also FasL secretion. These results suggest that binding of the membrane-anchored but not the soluble form of
TACE
to TNF-alpha results in efficient ectodomain shedding, and that FasL secretase is a metalloproteinase similar, but not identical, to
TACE
.
...
PMID:Processing of tumor necrosis factor by the membrane-bound TNF-alpha-converting enzyme, but not its truncated soluble form. 1127 30
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-converting enzyme (
TACE
) and other ADAM proteases (those that contain a disintegrin and a metalloprotease domain) have emerged as potential therapeutic targets in the areas of arthritis, cancer, diabetes and HIV cachexia.
TACE
is the first ADAM protease to process the known physiological substrate and inflammatory cytokine,
membrane-bound
precursor-TNF-alpha, to its mature soluble form. Subsequently,
TACE
was shown to be required for several different processing events such as tumor growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) precursor and amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleavage. With the recent discoveries of the proteolytic specificities of other ADAM family members, the information surrounding these metalloproteases is expanding at an exponential rate. This review focuses on
TACE
and other family members with known proteolytic function as well as the inhibitors of this class of enzyme.
...
PMID:TACE and other ADAM proteases as targets for drug discovery. 1130 Dec 86
Fractalkine (CX3CL1) is an unusual member of the chemokine family that is synthesized with its chemokine domain at the end of a mucin-rich, transmembrane stalk. This
membrane-bound
localization allows fractalkine to function as an adhesion molecule for cells bearing its receptor, CX3CR1. In addition, fractalkine can be proteolytically released from the cell surface, generating a soluble molecule that functions as a chemoattractant similar to the other members of the chemokine family. In this study, we have examined the mechanisms that regulate the conversion between these two functionally distinct forms of fractalkine. We demonstrate that under normal conditions fractalkine is synthesized as an intracellular precursor that is rapidly transported to the cell surface where it becomes a target for metalloproteinase-dependent cleavage that causes the release of a fragment containing the majority of the fractalkine extracellular domain. We show that the cleavage of fractalkine can be markedly enhanced by stimulating cells with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), and we identify tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (
TACE
; ADAM17) as the protease responsible for this PMA-induced fractalkine release. In addition, we provide data showing that
TACE
-mediated fractalkine cleavage occurs at a site distinct from the dibasic juxtamembrane motif that had been suggested previously based on protein sequence homologies. The identification of
TACE
as a major protease responsible for the conversion of fractalkine from a
membrane-bound
adhesion molecule to a soluble chemoattractant will provide new information for understanding the physiological function of this chemokine.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha-converting enzyme (ADAM17) mediates the cleavage and shedding of fractalkine (CX3CL1). 1149 25
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