Physiological shedding and C-terminal proteolytic processing of TMEM106B
- PMID: 39709600
- DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.115107
Physiological shedding and C-terminal proteolytic processing of TMEM106B
Abstract
Genetic variants in TMEM106B, coding for a transmembrane protein of unknown function, have been identified as critical genetic modulators in various neurodegenerative diseases with a strong effect in patients with frontotemporal degeneration. The luminal domain of TMEM106B can form amyloid-like fibrils upon proteolysis. Whether this luminal domain is generated under physiological conditions and which protease(s) are involved in shedding remain unclear. We developed a commercially available antibody against the luminal domain of TMEM106B, allowing a detailed survey of the proteolytic processing under physiological conditions in cellular models and TMEM106B-related mouse models. Moreover, fibrillary TMEM106B was detected in human autopsy material. We find that the luminal domain is generated by multiple lysosomal cysteine-type proteases. Cysteine-type proteases perform additional C-terminal trimming, for which experimental evidence has been lacking. The presented results allow an in-depth perception of the processing of TMEM106B, a prerequisite to understanding factors leading to fibril formation.
Keywords: CP: Cell biology; CP: Neuroscience; FTLD; SPPL2A; TMEM106B; cathepsins; fibrils; luminal domain; lysosomes; proteolytic processing; shedding.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests C.E. is an employee at Synaptic Systems GmbH.
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