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ABSTRACT: A new mouse cysteine protease, termed cathepsin R, has been identified. The complete nucleotide sequence of this gene was derived from a set of cDNAs generated from 15.5-day mouse placenta. Sequence analysis revealed an open reading frame encoding a 334 amino acid long polypeptide closely related to placentally expressed cathepsins P, Q, and M. RT-PCR analysis indicated that cathepsin R is only expressed in placenta and thus is a new member of the emerging family of cathepsins whose expression is regulated during mouse embryonic development. Modeling and structural analysis suggests that cathepsin R will have a restricted substrate specificity when compared to that of cathepsin L.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 08/2000; 1492(2-3):488-92. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The complete nucleotide sequence of a novel cathepsin cDNA derived from mouse placenta was determined and is termed cathepsin M. The predicted protein of 333 amino acid is a member of the family C1A proteases and is related to mouse cathepsins L and P. Mouse cathepsin M is highly expressed in placenta, whereas no detectable levels were found in lung, spleen, heart, brain, kidney, thymus, testicle, liver, or embryo. Phylogenic analyses of the sequences of human and mouse cathepsins show that cathepsin M is most closely related to cathepsins P and L. However, the differences are sufficiently large to indicate that the enzymes will be found in other species. This is in contrast to human cathepsins L and V, which probably resulted from a gene duplication after divergence of mammalian species.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 05/2000; 1491(1-3):289-94. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The complete nucleotide sequence of a novel cathepsin cDNA derived from rat placenta was determined and is termed cathepsin Q. The predicted protein of 343 amino acid is a member of the family C1A protease related to cathepsin L. Rat cathepsin Q and its mouse counterpart were found highly expressed in placenta, whereas no detectable levels were found in lung, spleen, heart, brain, kidney, thymus, testicle, liver, or embryonic tissues. It is predicted that cathepsin Q will differ in catalytic specificity to another placental-specific protease, cathepsin P, indicating that these enzymes will have unique proteolytic functions in extra-embryonic tissues.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 02/2000; 267(3):791-5. · 2.48 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The expression of cathepsin B- and L-specific mRNAs as well as active forms of the enzymes was determined in mouse placenta and visceral yolk sac from 7.5 through 17.5 days postconception, a period marked by major anatomic transitions in the mouse conceptus. The level of specific mRNA was determined relative to the 28S ribosomal RNA in a series of multiprobe ribonuclease protection assays using high-specific-activity antisense cathepsin B and L riboprobes. The molecular forms of active cysteine proteases present in the tissues at the time of extraction were detected using a membrane-permeant radiolabeled active site-specific inhibitor, Fmoc-[(125)I(2)]Tyr-Ala-CHN(2). The results of this study show that the expression of active cathepsin L relative to active cathepsin B is significantly higher in visceral yolk sac than in placenta, consistent with a higher proteolytic requirement for the former tissue. Active cathepsin L was highest at Day 9.5 in visceral yolk sac, a stage at which it has been shown that proteolysis in this organ is required for production of amino acids for embryonic protein synthesis. Cathepsin L mRNA was also elevated in the Day 9.5 placenta, but paradoxically this did not result in an increase in cellular active enzyme. An unknown protein, termed p14, highly expressed in placenta, also reacted with the inhibitor. Expression of this protein was highest early during gestation in the ectoplacental cone, suggesting that p14 may be important in the implantation process.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 01/2000; 372(2):375-81. · 2.93 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The complete cDNA nucleotide sequence of a novel cathepsin derived from mouse placenta, termed cathepsin P, was determined. mRNA for cathepsin P was expressed in placenta and at lower levels in visceral yolk sac, but could not be detected in a range of adult tissues. The expression pattern of this protease indicates that it probably plays an important role during implantation and fetal development.
Biochemical Journal 11/1999; 343 Pt 2:307-9. · 4.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We used site-directed mutagenesis to alter the specificity of human cystatin C, an inhibitor with a broad reactivity against cysteine proteinases. Nine cystatin C variants containing amino acid substitutions in the N-terminal (L9W, V10W, V10F and V10R) and/or the C-terminal (W106G) enzyme-binding regions were designed and produced in Escherichia coli. It was discovered that the inhibition profile of the cystatin could be altered by changing residues 9 and 10, which are proposed to bind in the S3 and S2 substrate-binding pockets respectively of the enzymes. All of the variants with substitutions in the N-terminal segment displayed decreased binding to cathepsins B and H, indicating that the S3 and S2 pockets of these enzymes cannot easily accommodate large aromatic residues. The introduction of a charged residue into S2 (variant V10R) created a more specific inhibitor to distinguish cathepsin B from cathepsin H. Cathepsin L showed a preference for larger aromatic residues in S2. In contrast, cathepsin S preferred phenylalanine to valine in S2, but bound less tightly to the V10W cystatin variant. The latter variant proved to be valuable for discriminating between cathepsin L and cathepsin S (Ki 2.4 and 190 pM respectively). The equilibrium dissociation constant of the complex between cathepsin L and variant L9W/W106G showed little difference in affinity from that of the cathepsin L complex with the singly substituted W106G variant. In contrast, the L9W/W106G variant displayed increased specificity for cathepsin S with a Ki of 10 pM. Our results clearly indicate differences in the specificity of interaction between the N-terminal region of cystatin C and cathepsins B, H, L and S, and that, although cystatin C has evolved to be a good inhibitor of all of the mammalian cysteine proteinases, more specific inhibitors of the individual enzymes can be engineered.
Biochemical Journal 04/1998; 330 ( Pt 2):833-8. · 4.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Human cystatins C and D share almost identical primary structures of two out of the three segments proposed to be of importance for enzyme interactions but have markedly different profiles for inhibition of the target cysteine peptidases, cathepsins B, H, L, and S. To investigate if the N-terminal binding regions of the inhibitors are responsible for the different inhibition profiles, and thereby confer biological selectivity, two hybrid cystatins were produced in Escherichia coli expression systems. In one hybrid, the N-terminal segment of cystatin C was placed on the framework of cystatin D, and the second was engineered with the N-terminal segment of cystatin D on the cystatin C scaffold. Truncated cystatin C and D variants, devoid of their N-terminal segments, were obtained by incubation with glycyl endopeptidase and isolated, in a second approach to assess the importance of the N-terminal binding regions for cystatin function and specificity. The affinities of the four cystatin variants for cathepsins B, H, L, and S were measured. By comparison with corresponding results for wild-type cystatins C and D, it was concluded (1) that both the N-terminal and framework part of the molecules significantly contribute to the observed differences in inhibitory activities of cystatins C and D and (2) that the N-terminal segment of cystatin C increases the inhibitory activity of cystatin D against cathepsin S and cathepsin L but results in decreased activity against cathepsin H. These differences in specificity were explained by the residues interacting with the S2 subsite of peptidases (Val- and Ala-10 in cystatin C and D, respectively). Also, removal of the N-terminal segment results in total loss of enzyme affinity for cystatin D but not for cystatin C. Therefore, structural differences in the framework parts, as well as in the N-terminal segments, are critical for both inhibitory specificity and potency. Homology modeling was used to identify residues likely responsible for the generally reduced inhibitory potency of cystatin D.
Biochemistry 03/1998; 37(12):4071-9. · 3.42 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The structural basis for the biological specificity of human cystatin C has been investigated. Cystatin C and other inhibitors belonging to family 2 of the cystatin superfamily interact reversibly with target peptidases, seemingly by independent affinity contributions from a wedge-shaped binding region built from two loop-forming inhibitor segments and a binding region corresponding to the N-terminal segment of the inhibitor. Human cystatin C variants with Gly substitutions for residues Arg-8, Leu-9, and/or Val-10 of the N-terminal binding region, and/or the evolutionarily conserved Trp-106 in the wedge-shaped binding region, were produced by site-directed mutagenesis and Escherichia coli expression. A total of 10 variants were isolated, structurally verified, and compared to wild-type cystatin C with respect to inhibition of the mammalian cysteine peptidases, cathepsins B, H, L, and S. Varying contributions from the N-terminal binding region and the wedge-shaped binding region to cystatin C affinity for the four target peptidases were observed. Interactions from the side chains of residues in the N-terminal binding region and Trp-106 are jointly responsible for the major part of cystatin C affinity for cathepsin L and are also of considerable importance for cathepsin B and H affinity. In contrast, for cathepsin S inhibition these interactions are of lesser significance, as reflected by a Ki value of 10(-8) M for the cystatin C variant devoid of Arg-8, Leu-9, Val-10, and Trp-106 side chains. The side chain of Val-10 is responsible for most of the affinity contribution from the N-terminal binding region, for all four enzymes. The contribution of the Arg-8 side chain is minor, but significant for cystatin C interaction with cathepsin B. The Leu-9 side chain confers selectivity to the inhibition of the target peptidases; it contributes to cathepsin B and L affinity by factors of 200 and 50, respectively, to cathepsin S binding by a factor of 5 only, and results in a 10-fold decreased affinity between cystatin C and cathepsin H.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 04/1995; 270(10):5115-21. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Human cystatin D is a novel member of the cystatin superfamily of cysteine proteinase inhibitors present in saliva and tears. Two alleles of the cystatin D gene (CST5), encoding protein variants with either Cys or Arg as residue 26 in their 122-residue polypeptide chains, are present in the population. Expression of the two alleles was investigated by immunochemical analyses of the secreted cystatin D in saliva from individuals homozygous for each of the two alleles, with results demonstrating that both are expressed at similar levels. The inhibitory characteristics of the two cystatin D variants were studied, by determination of dissociation equilibrium constants (Ki) for their complexes with papain and with the mammalian cysteine proteinases, cathepsins B, H, L, and S. The results demonstrate that 1) cystatin D has a characteristic inhibition profile since it does not inhibit cathepsin B (Ki > 1 microM), and when compared to cystatin C and all other known cystatins it is a much poorer inhibitor of cathepsin L (mean Ki 25 nM) but binds cathepsin H and S relatively tightly (mean Ki values of 8.5 and 0.24 nM, respectively); and 2) the inhibitory activities of the two cystatin D variants are not significantly different, demonstrating that the presence of an extra cysteine residue in the cystatin D molecule affects neither the stability nor the functional activity of the inhibitor, thus explaining the widespread distribution of the Cys26-cystatin D encoding allele in the population. The inhibitory properties displayed by cystatin D suggest that it has a function in saliva as inhibitor of either endogenous or exogenous enzymes with cathepsin S- or H-like properties.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 09/1994; 269(37):23156-62. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Leucocyte elastase in catalytic amounts was observed to rapidly cleave the Val-10-Gly-11 bond of the human cysteine-proteinase inhibitor cystatin C at neutral pH. The resulting modified inhibitor had size and amino acid composition consistent with a cystatin C molecule devoid of the N-terminal Ser-1-Val-10 decapeptide. Leucocyte-elastase-modified cystatin C had more than 240-fold lower affinity than native cystatin C for papain. Removal of the N-terminal decapeptide of human cystatin C also decreased inhibition of human cathepsins B and L by three orders of magnitude, but decreased inhibition of cathepsin H by only 5-fold. A tripeptidyldiazomethane analogue of of the N-terminal portion of cystatin C was a good inhibitor of cathepsins B and L but a poor inhibitor of cathepsin H. It therefore appears that amino acid side chains of the N-terminal segment of cystatin C bind in the substrate-binding pockets of cathepsins B and L but not in those of cathepsin H. It is argued that the N-terminal cystatin C interaction with cathepsin B is physiologically important and hence that leucocyte elastase could have a function as a regulator of extracellular cysteine-proteinase inhibitory activity at sites of inflammation.
Biochemical Journal 03/1991; 273 ( Pt 3):621-6. · 4.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The effect of four human serine proteinases on the human cysteine proteinase inhibitor, cystatin C, has been studied in vitro. Neutrophil elastase in catalytic amounts was observed to rapidly cleave cystatin C at neutral pH, thereby giving rise to a modified form of the inhibitor lacking the N-terminal Ser1-Val10 decapeptide. The two other leukocyte serine proteinases, cathepsin G and neutrophil proteinase 4, did not catalytically hydrolyse cystatin C bonds. Neither had the seminal plasma serine proteinase, prostate-specific antigen, any effect on cystatin C. The physiological implications of neutrophil elastase catalysed modification of cystatin C are discussed, and recent findings indicating that this reaction also occurs in vivo are reviewed.
Biomedica biochimica acta 02/1991; 50(4-6):587-93.