| Literature DB >> 34198546 |
Gillian A Kelly-Robinson1, James A Reihill1, Fionnuala T Lundy2, Lorcan P McGarvey2, John C Lockhart3, Gary J Litherland3, Keith D Thornbury4, S Lorraine Martin1.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a debilitating heterogeneous disease characterised by unregulated proteolytic destruction of lung tissue mediated via a protease-antiprotease imbalance. In COPD, the relationship between the neutrophil serine protease, neutrophil elastase, and its endogenous inhibitor, alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) is the best characterised. AAT belongs to a superfamily of serine protease inhibitors known as serpins. Advances in screening technologies have, however, resulted in many members of the serpin superfamily being identified as having differential expression across a multitude of chronic lung diseases compared to healthy individuals. Serpins exhibit a unique suicide-substrate mechanism of inhibition during which they undergo a dramatic conformational change to a more stable form. A limitation is that this also renders them susceptible to disease-causing mutations. Identification of the extent of their physiological/pathological role in the airways would allow further expansion of knowledge regarding the complexity of protease regulation in the lung and may provide wider opportunity for their use as therapeutics to aid the management of COPD and other chronic airways diseases.Entities:
Keywords: antiprotease; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD); protease inhibitor; serine protease; serpin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34198546 PMCID: PMC8231800 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The canonical serpin tertiary structure (PDB code: 1QLP) comprises three β-sheets (orange), seven to nine α-helices (blue) and the reactive centre loop (red) shown in the front (A) and back (B) orientations. PDB code 1QLP was accessed on 25 March 2021. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 2The inhibitory or alternative substrate mechanisms of serpin-protease interaction. (A) The metastable native serpin exists with its reactive centre loop (RCL) exposed as a pseudo-substrate for its target protease (PDB code: 1QLP). (B) The target protease binds to the P1 site located on the RCL forming a Michaelis-Menten complex (PDB code: 1OPH). (C) The target protease cleaves the target scissile bond inducing a dramatic conformational shift in the serpin resulting in the formation of a covalent serpin-protease complex where the RCL is pulled down into the centre of the serpin molecule and incorporated into β-sheet A, subsequently trapping and inactivating the covalently bound target protease (PDB code: 1EZX). (D) The “substrate” pathway will be favoured if the reaction does not occur rapidly enough. The protease escapes the conformational trap resulting in an inactive cleaved serpin and a free active protease (PDB code: 7API). PDB code 1QLP was accessed on 25 March 2021; 1OPH, 1EZX and 7API were accessed on 21 April 2021. Created with BioRender.com.