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Symbol report for MBTPS1

HGNC data for MBTPS1

Approved symbol
MBTPS1
Approved name

membrane bound transcription factor peptidase, site 1

Locus type
gene with protein product
HGNC ID
HGNC:15456
Symbol status
Approved
Previous names
membrane-bound transcription factor protease, site 1
Alias symbols
S1P
KIAA0091
SKI-1
PCSK8
Alias names
subtilisin kexin isozyme 1
site-1 protease
Chromosomal location
16q23.3-q24.1
Bos taurus
MBTPS1 VGNC:31291 VGNC
Canis familiaris
MBTPS1 VGNC:43064 VGNC
Equus caballus
MBTPS1 VGNC:20018 VGNC
Felis catus
MBTPS1 VGNC:63408 VGNC
Macaca mulatta
MBTPS1 VGNC:74512 VGNC
Mus musculus
Mbtps1 MGI:1927235 Curated
Pan troglodytes
MBTPS1 VGNC:9087 VGNC
Rattus norvegicus
Mbtps1 RGD:70935
Sus scrofa
MBTPS1 VGNC:90061 VGNC
IUPHAR/BPS Guide to PHARMACOLOGY
Genomic structure and chromosomal mapping of the human site-1 protease (S1P) gene.
Nakajima T et al. J Hum Genet 2000 ;45(4)212-217
Nakajima T, Iwaki K, Kodama T, Inazawa J, Emi M.
J Hum Genet 2000 ;45(4)212-217
Abstract: Site-1 protease (S1P) is a subtilisin-related enzyme that cleaves sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs) in the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum, thereby initiating the release of transcriptionally active NH2-terminal fragments of SREBPs from membranes. In the experiments reported here, we localized the human S1P gene to chromosome 16q24 by fluorescent in situ hybridization and radiation-hybrid mapping, and determined its genomic structure. This gene is more than 60 kb long and contains 23 exons and 22 introns. Its transcription-initiation site within exon 1 is separate from the initiation codon in exon 2. Analysis of the exon/intron structure revealed that the S1P gene consists of a mosaic of functional units: exon 1 encodes the 5' non-translated region; exon 2 encodes the NH2-terminal signal sequence; and exons 2 and 3 encode the pro-peptide sequence that is released when S1P is self-activated by intramolecular cleavage. Exons 5-10 encode the subtilisin-homology domain that is critical for catalytic activity, and exon 23 encodes the transmembrane region. Analysis of the putative promoter region revealed a highly G/C-rich region containing a binding site for ADD1/SREBP-1, as well as Sp1 and AP2 sites. Therefore, expression of the S1P gene may be under the control of SREBP-1, a key regulator of the expression of genes essential for intracellular lipid metabolism. Our data establish a basis for investigations to detect molecular variants in this gene that may alter levels of plasma lipoproteins and/or otherwise disrupt intracellular lipid metabolism.
Molecular identification of the sterol-regulated luminal protease that cleaves SREBPs and controls lipid composition of animal cells.
Sakai J et al. Mol Cell 1998 Oct;2(4)505-514
Sakai J, Rawson RB, Espenshade PJ, Cheng D, Seegmiller AC, Goldstein JL, Brown MS.
Mol Cell 1998 Oct;2(4)505-514
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.