| Literature DB >> 11258932 |
M Ruse1, A Lambert, N Robinson, D Ryan, K J Shon, R L Eckert.
Abstract
S100 proteins are a family of 10-14 kDa EF-hand-containing calcium binding proteins that function to transmit calcium-dependent cell regulatory signals. S100 proteins have no intrinsic enzyme activity but bind in a calcium-dependent manner to target proteins to modulate target protein function. Transglutaminases are enzymes that catalyze the formation of covalent epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine bonds between protein-bound glutamine and lysine residues. In the present study we show that transglutaminase-dependent covalent modification is a property shared by several S100 proteins and that both type I and type II transglutaminases can modify S100 proteins. We further show that the reactive regions are at the solvent-exposed amino- and carboxyl-terminal ends of the protein, regions that specify S100 protein function. We suggest that transglutaminase-dependent modification is a general mechanism designed to regulate S100 protein function.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11258932 DOI: 10.1021/bi0019747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162