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      Proteolytic ectodomain shedding of membrane proteins in mammals—hardware, concepts, and recent developments

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      The EMBO Journal
      EMBO

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          Abstract

          <p id="d6603063e290">Proteolytic removal of membrane protein ectodomains (ectodomain shedding) is a post‐translational modification that controls levels and function of hundreds of membrane proteins. The contributing proteases, referred to as sheddases, act as important molecular switches in processes ranging from signaling to cell adhesion. When deregulated, ectodomain shedding is linked to pathologies such as inflammation and Alzheimer's disease. While proteases of the “a disintegrin and metalloprotease” ( <span style="fixed-case">ADAM</span>) and “beta‐site <span style="fixed-case">APP</span> cleaving enzyme” ( <span style="fixed-case">BACE</span>) families are widely considered as sheddases, in recent years a much broader range of proteases, including intramembrane and soluble proteases, were shown to catalyze similar cleavage reactions. This review demonstrates that shedding is a fundamental process in cell biology and discusses the current understanding of sheddases and their substrates, molecular mechanisms and cellular localizations, as well as physiological functions of protein ectodomain shedding. Moreover, we provide an operational definition of shedding and highlight recent conceptual advances in the field. While new developments in proteomics facilitate substrate discovery, we expect that shedding is not a rare exception, but rather the rule for many membrane proteins, and that many more interesting shedding functions await discovery. </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The EMBO Journal
          EMBO J.
          EMBO
          0261-4189
          1460-2075
          0261-4189
          1460-2075
          August 01 2018
          August 01 2018
          August 01 2018
          July 05 2018
          : 37
          : 15
          : e99456
          Article
          10.15252/embj.201899456
          6068445
          29976761
          fa103767-5ad4-42d4-8cae-3afcefd947d0
          © 2018
          History

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