The Notch1 receptor is cleaved constitutively by a furin-like convertase
- Frédérique Logeat*,
- Christine Bessia*,
- Christel Brou*,
- Odile LeBail*,
- Sophie Jarriault*,
- Nabil G. Seidah†, and
- Alain Israël*,‡
- *Unité de Biologie Moléculaire de l’Expression Génique, Unité de Recherche Associée 1773 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France; and †J. A. DeSève Laboratory of Biochemical Neuroendocrinology, Clinical Research Institute of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, H2W 1R7, Canada
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Communicated by Judith Kimble, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI (received for review April 16, 1998)
Abstract
The Notch receptor, which is involved in numerous cell fate decisions in invertebrates and vertebrates, is synthesized as a 300-kDa precursor molecule (p300). We show here that proteolytic processing of p300 is an essential step in the formation of the biologically active receptor because only the cleaved fragments are present at the cell surface. Our results confirm and extend recent reports indicating that the Notch receptor exists at the plasma membrane as a heterodimeric molecule, but disagree as to the nature of the protease that is responsible for the cleavage that takes place in the extracellular region. We report here that constitutive processing of murine Notch1 involves a furin-like convertase. We show that the calcium ionophore A23187 and the α1-antitrypsin variant, α 1-PDX, a known inhibitor of furin-like convertases, inhibit p300 processing. When expressed in the furin-deficient Lovo cell line, p300 is not processed. In vitro digestion of a recombinant Notch-derived substrate with purified furin allowed mapping of the processing site to the carboxyl side of the sequence RQRR (amino acids 1651–1654). Mutation of these four amino acids (and of two secondary dibasic furin sites located nearby) completely abolished processing of the Notch1 receptor.
Footnotes
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↵ ‡ To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: aisrael{at}pasteur.fr.
- ABBREVIATION:
- BFA,
- brefeldin A
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences








