Literature DB >> 9190289

A combinatorial approach for determining protease specificities: application to interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE).

T A Rano1, T Timkey, E P Peterson, J Rotonda, D W Nicholson, J W Becker, K T Chapman, N A Thornberry.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE/caspase-1) is the protease responsible for interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) production in monocytes. It was the first member of a new cysteine protease family to be identified. Members of this family have functions in both inflammation and apoptosis.
RESULTS: A novel method for identifying protease specificity, employing a positional-scanning substrate library, was used to determine the amino-acid preferences of ICE. Using this method, the complete specificity of a protease can be mapped in the time required to perform one assay. The results indicate that the optimal tetrapeptide recognition sequence for ICE is WEHD, not YVAD, as previously believed, and this led to the synthesis of an unusually potent aldehyde inhibitor, Ac-WEHD-CHO (Ki = 56 pM). The structural basis for this potent inhibition was determined by X-ray crystallography.
CONCLUSIONS: The results presented in this study establish a positional-scanning library as a powerful tool for rapidly and accurately assessing protease specificity. The preferred sequence for ICE (WEHD) differs significantly from that found in human pro-interleukin-1beta (YVHD), which suggests that this protease may have additional endogenous substrates, consistent with evidence linking it to apoptosis and IL-1alpha production.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9190289     DOI: 10.1016/s1074-5521(97)90258-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Biol        ISSN: 1074-5521


  45 in total

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8.  Structure-based combinatorial library design: discovery of non-peptidic inhibitors of caspases 3 and 8.

Authors:  M S Head; M D Ryan; D Lee; Y Feng; C A Janson; N O Concha; P M Keller; W E deWolf
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9.  Caspase substrates won't be defined by a four-letter code.

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10.  Discovery of an allosteric site in the caspases.

Authors:  Jeanne A Hardy; Joni Lam; Jack T Nguyen; Tom O'Brien; James A Wells
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