Article

  • The EMBO Journal (2007) 26, 1385 - 1396
  • doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7601592

Published online: 22 February 2007

Puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidase is the major peptidase responsible for digesting polyglutamine sequences released by proteasomes during protein degradation

N Bhutani1,a, P Venkatraman1,b and A L Goldberg1

  1. Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

Correspondence to:

A L Goldberg, Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, 240 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA. Tel.: +1 617 432 1855; Fax: +1 617 232 0173; E-mail: Alfred_Goldberg@hms.harvard.edu

aPresent address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, 269 Campus Drive, Stanford, CA 94305, USA

bPresent address: Cancer Research Institute (ACTREC), Mumbai, India

Received 26 July 2006; Accepted 3 January 2007


Long stretches of glutamine (Q) residues are found in many cellular proteins. Expansion of these polyglutamine (polyQ) sequences is the underlying cause of several neurodegenerative diseases (e.g. Huntington's disease). Eukaryotic proteasomes have been found to digest polyQ sequences in proteins very slowly, or not at all, and to release such potentially toxic sequences for degradation by other peptidases. To identify these key peptidases, we investigated the degradation in cell extracts of model Q-rich fluorescent substrates and peptides containing 10–30 Q's. Their degradation at neutral pH was due to a single aminopeptidase, the puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidase (PSA, cytosol alanyl aminopeptidase). No other known cytosolic aminopeptidase or endopeptidase was found to digest these polyQ peptides. Although tripeptidyl peptidase II (TPPII) exhibited limited activity, studies with specific inhibitors, pure enzymes and extracts of cells treated with siRNA for TPPII or PSA showed PSA to be the rate-limiting activity against polyQ peptides up to 30 residues long. (PSA digests such Q sequences, shorter ones and typical (non-repeating) peptides at similar rates.) Thus, PSA, which is induced in neurons expressing mutant huntingtin, appears critical in preventing the accumulation of polyQ peptides in normal cells, and its activity may influence susceptibility to polyQ diseases.

  • Keywords:

    • cytosol alanyl aminopeptidase,
    • glutamine expansion diseases,
    • oligopeptidase,
    • polyQ proteins,
    • proteasome
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