The substrate specificity profile of human granzyme A
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Petra Van Damme
, Sebastian Maurer-Stroh , Han Hao , Niklaas Colaert , Evy Timmerman , Frank Eisenhaber , Joël Vandekerckhove und Kris Gevaert
Abstract
The exact biological function of granzyme A, a granule-associated serine protease belonging to the tryptase family of proteases, is still a matter of debate because conflicting roles have been suggested, such as initiation of caspase-independent apoptosis-like cell death and endogenous modulation of inflammatory processes. In contrast to its well-studied family member, granzyme B, far less is known about the physiological targets of granzyme A. Using an N-terminal peptide-centric proteomics technology, the substrate specificity of human granzyme A was extensively characterized at the level of macromolecular protein substrates. Overall, more than 260 cleavage sites, almost exclusively favoring basic residues at the P1 position, in approximately 200 unique protein substrates, including the well-known in vitro substrates APEX-endonuclease 1 and different histones, were identified. Further substrate characterization was used to delineate physical properties in the substrate specificity profiles, which further highlights important aspects in protease/substrate biology.
©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Guest Editorial
- Highlight: The Biology of Proteolytic Systems
- Highlight: 6th General Meeting of the International Proteolysis Society
- Structure, mechanism and inhibition of γ-secretase and presenilin-like proteases
- Is BACE1 a suitable therapeutic target for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease? Current strategies and future directions
- Pharmacogenetic features of cathepsin B inhibitors that improve memory deficit and reduce β-amyloid related to Alzheimer's disease
- Proteases in lymphocyte killer function: redundancy, polymorphism and questions remaining
- Pseudo-active sites of protease domains: HGF/Met and Sonic hedgehog signaling in cancer
- Proteolysis of platelet receptors in humans and other species
- Blunting the knife: development of vaccines targeting digestive proteases of blood-feeding helminth parasites
- Impaired turnover of autophagolysosomes in cathepsin L deficiency
- Nuclear cysteine cathepsin variants in thyroid carcinoma cells
- Deletion of cathepsin H perturbs angiogenic switching, vascularization and growth of tumors in a mouse model of pancreatic islet cell cancer
- Cathepsin E enhances anticancer activity of doxorubicin on human prostate cancer cells showing resistance to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis
- Hydrophilic residues surrounding the S1 and S2 pockets contribute to dimerisation and catalysis in human dipeptidyl peptidase 8 (DP8)
- Molecular contortionism – on the physical limits of serpin ‘loop-sheet’ polymers
- The substrate specificity profile of human granzyme A
- Use of granzyme B-based fluorescent protein reporters to monitor granzyme distribution and granule integrity in live cells