[PDF][PDF] Molecular identification of the sterol-regulated luminal protease that cleaves SREBPs and controls lipid composition of animal cells

J Sakai, RB Rawson, PJ Espenshade, D Cheng… - Molecular cell, 1998 - cell.com
J Sakai, RB Rawson, PJ Espenshade, D Cheng, AC Seegmiller, JL Goldstein, MS Brown
Molecular cell, 1998cell.com
The lipid composition of animal cells is controlled by SREBPs, transcription factors released
from membranes by sterol-regulated proteolysis. Release is initiated by Site-1 protease
(S1P), which cleaves SREBPs in the ER luminal loop between two membrane-spanning
regions. To clone S1P, we prepared pCMV-PLAP-BP2, which encodes a fusion protein that
contains placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) in the ER lumen flanked by cleavage sites
for signal peptidase and S1P. In sterol-deprived cells, cleavage by both proteases leads to …
Abstract
The lipid composition of animal cells is controlled by SREBPs, transcription factors released from membranes by sterol-regulated proteolysis. Release is initiated by Site-1 protease (S1P), which cleaves SREBPs in the ER luminal loop between two membrane-spanning regions. To clone S1P, we prepared pCMV-PLAP-BP2, which encodes a fusion protein that contains placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) in the ER lumen flanked by cleavage sites for signal peptidase and S1P. In sterol-deprived cells, cleavage by both proteases leads to PLAP secretion. PLAP is not secreted by SRD-12B cells, cholesterol auxotrophs that lack S1P. We transfected SRD-12B cells with pCMV-PLAP-BP2 plus pools of CHO cDNAs and identified a cDNA that restores Site-1 cleavage and PLAP secretion. The cDNA encodes S1P, an intraluminal 1052-amino-acid membrane-bound subtilisin-like protease. We propose that S1P is the sterol-regulated protease that controls lipid metabolism in animal cells.
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