The metalloprotease
ADAM
10 is a drug target in Alzheimer's disease, where it cleaves the amyloid precursor protein (
APP
) and lowers amyloid‐beta. Yet,
ADAM
10 has additional substrates, which may cause mechanism‐based side effects upon therapeutic
ADAM
10 activation. However, they may also serve—in addition to
APP
—as biomarkers to monitor
ADAM
10 activity in patients and to develop
APP
‐selective
ADAM
10 activators. Our study demonstrates that one such substrate is the neuronal cell adhesion protein Nr
CAM
.
ADAM
10 controlled Nr
CAM
surface levels and regulated neurite outgrowth
in vitro
in an Nr
CAM
‐dependent manner. However,
ADAM
10 cleavage of Nr
CAM
, in contrast to
APP
, was not stimulated by the
ADAM
10 activator acitretin, suggesting that substrate‐selective
ADAM
10 activation may be feasible. Indeed, a whole proteome analysis of human
CSF
from a phase
II
clinical trial showed that acitretin, which enhanced
APP
cleavage by
ADAM
10, spared most other
ADAM
10 substrates in brain, including Nr
CAM
. Taken together, this study demonstrates an Nr
CAM
‐dependent function for
ADAM
10 in neurite outgrowth and reveals that a substrate‐selective, therapeutic
ADAM
10 activation is possible and may be monitored with Nr
CAM
.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.