Maureen E. Hill/Sandbox1
From Proteopedia
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It has been shown that caspases -3 and -7 can be inhibited at a site other than the active site by allosteric inhibitors, such as 5-Fluoro-1H-indole-2-carboxylic acid (2-mercapto-ethyl)-amide ('''FICA''') or 2-(2,4-Dichlorophenoxy)-N-(2-mercapto-ethyl)-acetamide ('''DICA'''), at the dimer-interface cavity. These inhibitors inactivate the enzyme on three different levels by: A) locking the L2' in a down conformation preventing it from ordering the active site loop bundles, B) rearrangement of the active site dyad H144 and C186, movements within the active site affect the ability to perform its chemistry, C) a conformational shift of residue R187 blocks substrate binding. | It has been shown that caspases -3 and -7 can be inhibited at a site other than the active site by allosteric inhibitors, such as 5-Fluoro-1H-indole-2-carboxylic acid (2-mercapto-ethyl)-amide ('''FICA''') or 2-(2,4-Dichlorophenoxy)-N-(2-mercapto-ethyl)-acetamide ('''DICA'''), at the dimer-interface cavity. These inhibitors inactivate the enzyme on three different levels by: A) locking the L2' in a down conformation preventing it from ordering the active site loop bundles, B) rearrangement of the active site dyad H144 and C186, movements within the active site affect the ability to perform its chemistry, C) a conformational shift of residue R187 blocks substrate binding. | ||
- | <scene name='56/566502/Dica_bound_caspase_7/2'>Caspase-7 bound to allosteric inhibitor DICA</scene> at the dimer interface. The mechanism of allosteric inhibition of DICA starts with binding to C290 within the dimer interface, this displaces Y223. The displacement of tyrosine from the active site conformation of the enzyme forces R187 into a position that both physically blocks substrate binding, as well as, move the active site | + | <scene name='56/566502/Dica_bound_caspase_7/2'>Caspase-7 bound to allosteric inhibitor DICA</scene> at the dimer interface. The mechanism of allosteric inhibition of DICA starts with binding to C290 within the dimer interface, this displaces Y223. The displacement of tyrosine from the active site conformation of the enzyme forces R187 into a position that both physically blocks substrate binding, as well as, move the active site cysteine 186. Ultimately, these conformational changes inactivate the enzyme. |
Revision as of 19:31, 3 December 2013
Caspases are a family of CBI Molecules being studied in the Hardy Lab in the University of Massachusetts Amherst Chemistry-Biology Interface Program at UMass Amherst and on display at the Molecular Playground.
Executioner Caspase-7
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