Caspase-3 Regulatory Mechanisms

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(Importance of Loop Orientation)
(Importance of Loop Orientation)
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== Caspase-3 Active Site and Loop Bundle Analysis==
== Caspase-3 Active Site and Loop Bundle Analysis==
=== Importance of Loop Orientation===
=== Importance of Loop Orientation===
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<StructureSection load='Scene1' size='500' side='right' caption='Structure of Caspase-3 (PDB entry [[2H5I]])' scene=''>
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<StructureSection load='2H5I' size='500' side='right' caption='Structure of Caspase-3 (PDB entry [[2H5I]])' scene=''>
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<scene name='Caspase-3_Regulatory_Mechanisms/Scene1/1'>Caspase-3 Dimer</scene>
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<scene name='Caspase-3_Regulatory_Mechanisms/Dimer/1'>Caspase-3 Dimer</scene>
Caspases are extremely dependent on the orientation and geometry of their active site loops. If the loops are not ordered properly the enzyme fails to function. Caspase-3 has four active site loops on each half of the dimer constituting the active site bundle. Proteolytic activity is dependent on cleavage of an intersubunit linker, which releases loop 2 (L2) and L2’. <scene name='Caspase-3_Regulatory_Mechanisms/Scene2_nospin_labels/1'>L2'(green spheres) interacts with the opposite half of the dimer by holding up L2 (blue spheres) </scene>. This allows L2 to make critical contacts with L3 and L4, allowing them to organize the active site, bind substrate, and orient the nucleophilic cysteine 163 (bright green) so that it can cleave after aspartate residues.
Caspases are extremely dependent on the orientation and geometry of their active site loops. If the loops are not ordered properly the enzyme fails to function. Caspase-3 has four active site loops on each half of the dimer constituting the active site bundle. Proteolytic activity is dependent on cleavage of an intersubunit linker, which releases loop 2 (L2) and L2’. <scene name='Caspase-3_Regulatory_Mechanisms/Scene2_nospin_labels/1'>L2'(green spheres) interacts with the opposite half of the dimer by holding up L2 (blue spheres) </scene>. This allows L2 to make critical contacts with L3 and L4, allowing them to organize the active site, bind substrate, and orient the nucleophilic cysteine 163 (bright green) so that it can cleave after aspartate residues.

Revision as of 20:54, 12 December 2012

Contents

Introduction

Caspases are cysteine-dependent aspartic acid proteases and are the key facilitators of apoptosis or programmed cell death. Apoptosis is tightly regulated by these caspases, and dysregulation of caspase functions have been implicated in wide variety of diseases such as neurodegeneration, cancer, heart disease and some metabolic disorders. As such, caspases are considered to be attractive drug targets to treat these disorders.

Existing as proenzymes, caspases undergo proteolytic processing at conserved aspartate residues in their intersubunit linker to produce the large and small subunit. These subunits then dimerize to form the active enzyme. Any apoptotic signal received by the cell results in sequential activation of caspases. Upstream or initator caspases (-2,-8, -9 and -10) are first activated by forming a holoenzyme wherein they associate with another protein platform or adaptor protein. Once active, initiator caspases cleave and activate the executioner caspases (-3, -6 and -7) which in turn cleave their respective protein targets initiating cell death.


Caspase-3 structure









Caspase-3 Active Site and Loop Bundle Analysis

Structure of Caspase-3 with substrate bound (PDB entry 2H5I)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


Caspase-3 Active Site and Loop Bundle Analysis

Importance of Loop Orientation

Structure of Caspase-3 (PDB entry 2H5I)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
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