| Literature DB >> 18824507 |
Ozlem Doğan Ekici1, Mark Paetzel, Ross E Dalbey.
Abstract
Serine proteases comprise nearly one-third of all known proteases identified to date and play crucial roles in a wide variety of cellular as well as extracellular functions, including the process of blood clotting, protein digestion, cell signaling, inflammation, and protein processing. Their hallmark is that they contain the so-called "classical" catalytic Ser/His/Asp triad. Although the classical serine proteases are the most widespread in nature, there exist a variety of "nonclassical" serine proteases where variations to the catalytic triad are observed. Such variations include the triads Ser/His/Glu, Ser/His/His, and Ser/Glu/Asp, and include the dyads Ser/Lys and Ser/His. Other variations are seen with certain serine and threonine peptidases of the Ntn hydrolase superfamily that carry out catalysis with a single active site residue. This work discusses the structure and function of these novel serine proteases and threonine proteases and how their catalytic machinery differs from the prototypic serine protease class.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18824507 PMCID: PMC2590910 DOI: 10.1110/ps.035436.108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Sci ISSN: 0961-8368 Impact factor: 6.725