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Review
. 2014;11(5):441-9.
doi: 10.2174/1567205011666140604122059.

The normal and pathologic roles of the Alzheimer's β-secretase, BACE1

Affiliations
Review

The normal and pathologic roles of the Alzheimer's β-secretase, BACE1

Patty C Kandalepas et al. Curr Alzheimer Res. 2014.

Abstract

As the most common neurodegenerative disease, therapeutic avenues for the treatment and prevention of Alzheimer's Disease are highly sought after. The aspartic protease BACE1 is the initiator enzyme for the formation of Aβ, a major constituent of amyloid plaques that represent one of the hallmark pathological features of this disorder. Thus, targeting BACE1 for disease-modifying AD therapies represents a rationale approach. The collective knowledge acquired from investigations of BACE1 deletion mutants and characterization of BACE1 substrates has downstream significance not only for the discovery of AD drug therapies but also for predicting side effects of BACE1 inhibition. Here we discuss the identification and validation of BACE1 as the β-secretase implicated in AD, in addition to information regarding BACE1 cell biology, localization, substrates and potential physiological functions derived from BACE1 knockout models.

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Figures

Fig. (1)
Fig. (1). BACE1 structural organization and post-translational modifications
Colored regions depict BACE1 domains with the corresponding amino acid numbers. The BACE1 catalytic domain contains two aspartic protease active site motifs, DTGS and DSGT, at positions 92–95 and 289–292, respectively (red bars). Acetylation (R), glycosylation (N), S-palmitoylation (C), phosphorylation (P) and ubiquitination (Ub) sites are indicated where known. Three disulfide bonds (S--S) connect amino acids 216–420, 278–443 and 330–380.

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