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Notch1 Protein

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Notch1 Protein

Overview

Notch1 is a transmembrane receptor protein encoded by the NOTCH1 gene located on chromosome 9q34.3 in humans. As a member of the Notch family of cell surface receptors, Notch1 plays fundamental roles in cell fate determination, differentiation, and survival across multiple cell types and developmental contexts. The protein functions as a ligand-activated transcriptional regulator that processes extracellular signals into intracellular responses through a highly conserved proteolytic cascade. Beyond its well-established roles in developmental biology and hematopoiesis, emerging evidence indicates that Notch1 dysfunction contributes to neurodegeneration through mechanisms involving neuroinflammation, cellular stress responses, and aberrant cell survival pathways.

Function and Biology

Notch1 operates as a large transmembrane receptor (approximately 300 kDa) consisting of an extracellular domain containing epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like repeats, a transmembrane domain, and an intracellular domain. Upon ligand binding by Delta-like (DLL1, DLL4) or Jagged (JAG1, JAG2) proteins expressed on adjacent cells, Notch1 undergoes sequential cleavage. First, ADAM10 protease removes the extracellular domain at the S2 site. Subsequently, the intramembranous protease γ-secretase cleaves the transmembrane domain at the S3/S4 sites, releasing the Notch1 intracellular domain (N1ICD) into the cytoplasm.

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