Browse views: by Year, by Function, by GLF, by Subfunction, by Conference, by Journal

Crystal structure of an activation intermediate of cathepsin E.

Ostermann, Nils, Gerhartz, Bernd, Worpenberg-Pietruk, Susanne, Trappe, Joerg and Eder, Joerg (2004) Crystal structure of an activation intermediate of cathepsin E. Journal of Molecular Biology, 342 (3). pp. 889-899. ISSN 0022-2836

Abstract

Cathepsin E is an intracellular, non-lysosomal aspartic protease expressed in a variety of cells and tissues. The protease has proposed physiological roles in antigen presentation by the MHC class II system, in the biogenesis of the vasoconstrictor peptide endothelin, and in neurodegeneration associated with brain ischemia and aging. Cathepsin E is the only A1 aspartic protease that exists as a homodimer with a disulfide bridge linking the two monomers. Like many other aspartic proteases, it is synthesized as a zymogen which is catalytically inactive towards its natural substrates at neutral pH and which auto-activates in an acidic environment. Here we report the crystal structure of an activation intermediate of human cathepsin E at 2.35A resolution. The overall structure follows the general fold of aspartic proteases of the A1 family, and the intermediate shares many features with the intermediate 2 on the proposed activation pathway of aspartic proteases like pepsin C and cathepsin D. The pro-sequence is cleaved from the protease and remains stably associated with the mature enzyme by forming the outermost sixth strand of the interdomain beta-sheet. However, different from these other aspartic proteases the pro-sequence of cathepsin E remains intact after cleavage from the mature enzyme. In addition, the active site of cathepsin E in the crystal is occupied by N-terminal amino acid residues of the mature protease in the non-primed binding site and by an artificial N-terminal extension of the pro-sequence from a neighboring molecule in the primed site. The crystal structure of the cathepsin E/pro-sequence complex, therefore, provides further insight into the activation mechanism of aspartic proteases.

Item Type: Article
Related URLs:
Additional Information: author can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing); Publisher's version/PDF cannot be used
Keywords: cathepsin E; aspartic protease; pro-sequence; activation pathway; activation intermediate
Related URLs:
Date Deposited: 14 Dec 2009 13:55
Last Modified: 31 Jan 2013 01:08
URI: https://oak.novartis.com/id/eprint/730

Search

Email Alerts

Register with OAK to receive email alerts for saved searches.