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Degradation of beta-amyloid by proteolytic antibody light chains.

Biochemistry (2003-12-03)
Srinath Kasturi Rangan, Ruitian Liu, Daniel Brune, Stephanie Planque, Sudhir Paul, Michael R Sierks
RÉSUMÉ

Deposition of beta-amyloid (Abeta) is considered an important early event in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Clearance of Abeta thus represents a potential therapeutic approach. Antibody-mediated clearance of Abeta by vaccination inhibited and cleared Abeta deposition in animal models; however, inflammatory side effects were observed in humans. An alternative potentially noninflammatory approach to facilitate clearance is to proteolytically cleave Abeta. We screened 12 proteolytic recombinant antibody fragments for potential alpha-secretase activity, a naturally occurring enzyme that cleaves between the Lys16 and Leu17 residues of the amyloid precursor protein (APP). We utilized the synthetic alpha-secretase substrate, benzyloxycarbonyl-l-lysine o-nitrophenyl ester (Z-lys-o-Np) as a preliminary screen for alpha-secretase activity. Two antibody light chain fragments that hydrolyzed Z-lys-o-Np were identified. Abeta hydrolysis was studied using mass spectrometry to identify the cleavage patterns of the antibodies. The recombinant antibody light chain antibody fragment, c23.5, showed alpha-secretase-like activity, producing the 1-16 and 17-40 amino acid fragments of Abeta. The second light chain antibody fragment, hk14, demonstrated carboxypeptidase-like activity, cleaving sequentially from the carboxyl terminal of Abeta. These antibody light chains provide a novel route toward engineering efficient therapeutic antibodies capable of cleaving Abeta in vivo.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Z-L-Lys-ONp hydrochloride