| Literature DB >> 27199750 |
Sonia Verma1, Rajnikant Dixit1, Kailash C Pandey2.
Abstract
Proteolytic enzymes are crucial for a variety of biological processes in organisms ranging from lower (virus, bacteria, and parasite) to the higher organisms (mammals). Proteases cleave proteins into smaller fragments by catalyzing peptide bonds hydrolysis. Proteases are classified according to their catalytic site, and distributed into four major classes: cysteine proteases, serine proteases, aspartic proteases, and metalloproteases. This review will cover only cysteine proteases, papain family enzymes which are involved in multiple functions such as extracellular matrix turnover, antigen presentation, processing events, digestion, immune invasion, hemoglobin hydrolysis, parasite invasion, parasite egress, and processing surface proteins. Therefore, they are promising drug targets for various diseases. For preventing unwanted digestion, cysteine proteases are synthesized as zymogens, and contain a prodomain (regulatory) and a mature domain (catalytic). The prodomain acts as an endogenous inhibitor of the mature enzyme. For activation of the mature enzyme, removal of the prodomain is necessary and achieved by different modes. The pro-mature domain interaction can be categorized as protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and may be targeted in a range of diseases. Cysteine protease inhibitors are available that can block the active site but no such inhibitor available yet that can be targeted to block the pro-mature domain interactions and prevent it activation. This review specifically highlights the modes of activation (processing) of papain family enzymes, which involve auto-activation, trans-activation and also clarifies the future aspects of targeting PPIs to prevent the activation of cysteine proteases.Entities:
Keywords: auto-catalysis; pH sensor; prodomain; protein–protein interaction; trans-activation; zymogen
Year: 2016 PMID: 27199750 PMCID: PMC4842899 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Types of cysteine proteases on the basis of cleavage property and their mode of activation.
| Enzyme cleavage property | Enzyme (cysteine protease) | Activation mode |
|---|---|---|
| Endopeptidase | Cathepsin L, S, K, V, F, Falcipains | Auto-activation |
| Exopeptidase | Cathepsin C, X, | |
| Endo and Exopeptidase | Cathepsin B, H | Auto-activation |
Cysteine protease with their inactivation and activation modes.
| Enzyme class | Inactivation mechanism | Activation/Processing |
|---|---|---|
| Cysteine protease (Cathepsins and parasitic) | • Steric block of the active site by prodomain | • Generally via auto-activation but some are activated by |
| • Disruption of salt bridges, hydrophobic interactions, e.g., falcipain-2 and falcipain-3 | ||
| • No conformational change in the mature domain during activation in cathepsin L-like cysteine proteases but cathepsin B-like undergo significant change due to occluding loop | ||
| • Some proteases are involved in | ||