Literature DB >> 28498362

Caspases and their substrates.

Olivier Julien1, James A Wells1.   

Abstract

Protease biology is intimately linked to the functional consequences of substrate cleavage events. Human caspases are a family of 12 fate-determining cysteine proteases that are best known for driving cell death, either apoptosis or pyroptosis. More recently, caspases have been shown to be involved in other cellular remodeling events as well including stem cell fate determination, spermatogenesis, and erythroid differentiation. Recent global proteomics methods enable characterization of the substrates that caspases cleave in live cells and cell extracts. The number of substrate targets identified for individual caspases can vary widely ranging from only a (few) dozen targets for caspases-4, -5, -9, and -14 to hundreds of targets for caspases-1, -2, -3, -6, -7, and -8. Proteomic studies characterizing the rates of target cleavage show that each caspase has a preferred substrate cohort that sometimes overlaps between caspases, but whose rates of cleavage vary over 500-fold within each group. Determining the functional consequences of discrete proteolytic events within the global substrate pool is a major challenge for the field. From the handful of individual targets that have been studied in detail, there are only a few so far that whose single cleavage event is capable of sparking apoptosis alone, such as cleavage of caspase-3/-7 and BIMEL, or for pyroptosis, gasdermin D. For the most part, it appears that cleavage events function cooperatively in the cell death process to generate a proteolytic synthetic lethal outcome. In contrast to apoptosis, far less is known about caspase biology in non-apoptotic cellular processes, such as cellular remodeling, including which caspases are activated, the mechanisms of their activation and deactivation, and the key substrate targets. Here we survey the progress made in global identification of caspase substrates using proteomics and the exciting new avenues these studies have opened for understanding the molecular logic of substrate cleavage in apoptotic and non-apoptotic processes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28498362      PMCID: PMC5520456          DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2017.44

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Death Differ        ISSN: 1350-9047            Impact factor:   15.828


  100 in total

1.  Global kinetic analysis of proteolysis via quantitative targeted proteomics.

Authors:  Nicholas J Agard; Sami Mahrus; Jonathan C Trinidad; Aenoch Lynn; Alma L Burlingame; James A Wells
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-01-23       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Molecular mechanisms of caspase regulation during apoptosis.

Authors:  Stefan J Riedl; Yigong Shi
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 94.444

Review 3.  Death by a thousand cuts: an ever increasing list of caspase substrates.

Authors:  C Stroh; K Schulze-Osthoff
Journal:  Cell Death Differ       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 15.828

4.  Quantitative MS-based enzymology of caspases reveals distinct protein substrate specificities, hierarchies, and cellular roles.

Authors:  Olivier Julien; Min Zhuang; Arun P Wiita; Anthony J O'Donoghue; Giselle M Knudsen; Charles S Craik; James A Wells
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-03-22       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Global identification of peptidase specificity by multiplex substrate profiling.

Authors:  Anthony J O'Donoghue; A Alegra Eroy-Reveles; Giselle M Knudsen; Jessica Ingram; Min Zhou; Jacob B Statnekov; Alexander L Greninger; Daniel R Hostetter; Gang Qu; David A Maltby; Marc O Anderson; Joseph L Derisi; James H McKerrow; Alma L Burlingame; Charles S Craik
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2012-09-30       Impact factor: 28.547

6.  Degradomics reveals that cleavage specificity profiles of caspase-2 and effector caspases are alike.

Authors:  Magdalena Wejda; Francis Impens; Nozomi Takahashi; Petra Van Damme; Kris Gevaert; Peter Vandenabeele
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2012-07-23       Impact factor: 5.157

7.  On the size of the active site in proteases. I. Papain.

Authors:  I Schechter; A Berger
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  1967-04-20       Impact factor: 3.575

8.  Structural and kinetic determinants of protease substrates.

Authors:  John C Timmer; Wenhong Zhu; Cristina Pop; Tim Regan; Scott J Snipas; Alexey M Eroshkin; Stefan J Riedl; Guy S Salvesen
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2009-09-20       Impact factor: 15.369

9.  The C. elegans cell death gene ced-3 encodes a protein similar to mammalian interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme.

Authors:  J Yuan; S Shaham; S Ledoux; H M Ellis; H R Horvitz
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1993-11-19       Impact factor: 41.582

10.  Functional complementation between FADD and RIP1 in embryos and lymphocytes.

Authors:  Haibing Zhang; Xiaohui Zhou; Thomas McQuade; Jinghe Li; Francis Ka-Ming Chan; Jianke Zhang
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 49.962

View more
  188 in total

1.  Caspase-1 Engages Full-Length Gasdermin D through Two Distinct Interfaces That Mediate Caspase Recruitment and Substrate Cleavage.

Authors:  Zhonghua Liu; Chuanping Wang; Jie Yang; Yinghua Chen; Bowen Zhou; Derek W Abbott; Tsan Sam Xiao
Journal:  Immunity       Date:  2020-06-17       Impact factor: 31.745

2.  Extended subsite profiling of the pyroptosis effector protein gasdermin D reveals a region recognized by inflammatory caspase-11.

Authors:  Betsaida Bibo-Verdugo; Scott J Snipas; Sonia Kolt; Marcin Poreba; Guy S Salvesen
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2020-06-18       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 3.  Ischemic stroke and mitochondria: mechanisms and targets.

Authors:  Syed Suhail Andrabi; Suhel Parvez; Heena Tabassum
Journal:  Protoplasma       Date:  2019-10-14       Impact factor: 3.356

Review 4.  Fundamental Mechanisms of Regulated Cell Death and Implications for Heart Disease.

Authors:  Dominic P Del Re; Dulguun Amgalan; Andreas Linkermann; Qinghang Liu; Richard N Kitsis
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2019-10-01       Impact factor: 37.312

5.  A Nanopore Approach for Analysis of Caspase-7 Activity in Cell Lysates.

Authors:  Bach Pham; Scott J Eron; Maureen E Hill; Xin Li; Monifa A Fahie; Jeanne A Hardy; Min Chen
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2019-08-02       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Specificity for latent C termini links the E3 ubiquitin ligase CHIP to caspases.

Authors:  Matthew Ravalin; Panagiotis Theofilas; Koli Basu; Kwadwo A Opoku-Nsiah; Victoria A Assimon; Daniel Medina-Cleghorn; Yi-Fan Chen; Markus F Bohn; Michelle Arkin; Lea T Grinberg; Charles S Craik; Jason E Gestwicki
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2019-07-18       Impact factor: 15.040

Review 7.  The nuclear envelope: target and mediator of the apoptotic process.

Authors:  Liora Lindenboim; Hila Zohar; Howard J Worman; Reuven Stein
Journal:  Cell Death Discov       Date:  2020-04-27

8.  A single-cell analytical approach to quantify activated caspase-3/7 during osteoblast proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis.

Authors:  Michael Killinger; Barbora Veselá; Markéta Procházková; Eva Matalová; Karel Klepárník
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 4.142

9.  Tri-arginine exosite patch of caspase-6 recruits substrates for hydrolysis.

Authors:  Derek J MacPherson; Caitlyn L Mills; Mary Jo Ondrechen; Jeanne A Hardy
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2018-11-12       Impact factor: 5.157

10.  ApoE-modified liposomes mediate the antitumour effect of survivin promoter-driven HSVtk in hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Xiuli Mu; Xi Wang; Yan Wei; Chaochao Wen; Qi Zhang; Chunyang Xu; Chang Liu; Chan Zhang; Fanxiu Meng; Na Zhao; Tao Gong; Rui Guo; Gongqin Sun; Gaopeng Li; Hongwei Zhang; Qin Qin; Jun Xu; Xiushan Dong; Lumei Wang; Baofeng Yu
Journal:  Cancer Gene Ther       Date:  2019-10-23       Impact factor: 5.987

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.