- Kwak, Minsuk;
- Southard, Kaden M;
- Kim, Woon Ryoung;
- Lin, Annie;
- Kim, Nam Hyeong;
- Gopalappa, Ramu;
- Lee, Hyun Jung;
- An, Minji;
- Choi, Seo Hyun;
- Jung, Yunmin;
- Noh, Kunwoo;
- Farlow, Justin;
- Georgakopoulos, Anastasios;
- Robakis, Nikolaos K;
- Kang, Min K;
- Kutys, Matthew L;
- Seo, Daeha;
- Kim, Hyongbum Henry;
- Kim, Yong Ho;
- Cheon, Jinwoo;
- Gartner, Zev J;
- Jun, Young-wook
Adherens junctions (AJs) create spatially, chemically and mechanically discrete microdomains at cellular interfaces. Here, using a mechanogenetic platform that generates artificial AJs with controlled protein localization, clustering and mechanical loading, we find that AJs also organize proteolytic hotspots for γ-secretase with a spatially regulated substrate selectivity that is critical in the processing of Notch and other transmembrane proteins. Membrane microdomains outside of AJs exclusively organize Notch ligand-receptor engagement (LRE microdomains) to initiate receptor activation. Conversely, membrane microdomains within AJs exclusively serve to coordinate regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP microdomains). They do so by concentrating γ-secretase and primed receptors while excluding full-length Notch. AJs induce these functionally distinct microdomains by means of lipid-dependent γ-secretase recruitment and size-dependent protein segregation. By excluding full-length Notch from RIP microdomains, AJs prevent inappropriate enzyme-substrate interactions and suppress spurious Notch activation. Ligand-induced ectodomain shedding eliminates size-dependent segregation, releasing Notch to translocate into AJs for processing by γ-secretase. This mechanism directs radial differentiation of ventricular zone-neural progenitor cells in vivo and more broadly regulates the proteolysis of other large cell-surface receptors such as amyloid precursor protein. These findings suggest an unprecedented role of AJs in creating size-selective spatial switches that choreograph γ-secretase processing of multiple transmembrane proteins regulating development, homeostasis and disease.