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1.
The calpains form a growing family of structurally related intracellular multidomainal cysteine proteinases, which exhibit a catalytic domain distantly related to papain. In contrast to papain, however, their activity in most cases depends on calcium. The calpains are believed to play important roles in cytoskeletal remodeling processes, cell differentiation, apoptosis and signal transduction, but have also been implicated in muscular dystrophy, ischemia, traumatic brain injury, neurodegenerative diseases, rheumatoid arthritis and cataract formation. The best characterized calpains are the ubiquitously expressed mu- and m-calpains, consisting of a common 30 kDa small S-subunit (domains V and VI) and slightly differing 80 kDa large L-subunits (domains I to IV). We have recently determined the 2.3 A structure of recombinant full-length human m-calpain in the absence of calcium, which reveals that the catalytic domain and the two calmodulin-like domains, previously believed to represent the unique calcium switch, are not positioned adjacent to each other, but are separated by the beta-sandwich domain III, which distantly resembles C2 domains. Although the catalytic domain of apocalpain is strongly disrupted compared to papain (which explains its inactivity in the absence of calcium), the crystal structure reveals several sites where calcium could bind, thereby causing a subdomain fusion to form a papain-like catalytic center. All current evidence points to the cooperative interaction of several calcium binding sites. Sites identified include the three EF-hand binding sites in each calmodulin-like domain, the negatively charged segments arranged around the active-site cleft (provided by both catalytic subdomains), as well as an exposed acidic loop of domain III, whose charge compensation could allow the adjacent barrel-like subdomain IIb to move toward the helical subdomain IIa. The Gly-rich S-chain N-terminus and the calcium-loaded acidic loop could target the conventional calpains to cellular/nuclear membranes, thereby explaining their strongly reduced calcium requirement in vivo and in vitro in the presence of acidic phospholipids.  相似文献   

2.
3.
A recent hypothesis suggests that proteolytic activity of the micromolar and millimolar Ca2+-requiring forms of the Ca2+-dependent proteinases (mu- and m-calpain, respectively) is regulated in vivo by their association with a phosphatidylinositol-containing site on the plasma membrane followed by autolysis of the proteinases. Phosphatidylinositol association lowers the Ca2+ concentration needed for autolysis, and autolysis, in turn, lowers the Ca2+ concentration needed for proteolytic activity. To test this hypothesis, we have compared the Ca2+ concentrations needed for autolysis and for proteolytic activity of the calpains both in the presence and the absence of phosphatidylinositol. Bovine skeletal muscle mu-calpain required 40-50 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal rate of proteolysis of a casein substrate, 140-150 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal autolysis in the presence of 80 microM phosphatidylinositol, and 190-210 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal autolysis in the absence of phosphatidylinositol. Consequently, mu-calpain is an active proteinase and does not require autolysis for activation. Bovine skeletal muscle m-calpain required 700-740 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal rate of proteolysis of a casein substrate, 370-400 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal autolysis in the presence of 80 microM phosphatidylinositol, and 740-780 microM Ca2+ for half-maximal autolysis in the absence of phosphatidylinositol. These results are consistent with the idea that m-calpain functions in its autolyzed form, but the results do not demonstrate that unautolyzed m-calpain is inactive. 80 microM phosphatidylinositol had no effect on the Ca2+ requirement of the autolyzed forms of either mu- or m-calpain but lowered the specific activity of mu-calpain to 20% of its activity in the absence of phosphatidylinositol. Of the four forms of the calpains, unautolyzed m-calpain, autolyzed m-calpain, and unautolyzed mu-calpain would not be proteolytically active at the free Ca2+ concentrations of 300-1200 nM present inside normal cells, and neither mu- nor m-calpain would undergo autolysis at these Ca2+ concentrations, even in the presence of phosphatidylinositol. Cells must contain a mechanism other than or in addition to membrane association and autolysis to activate the calpains.  相似文献   

4.
Hosfield CM  Elce JS  Davies PL  Jia Z 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(24):6880-6889
The combination of thiol protease activity and calmodulin-like EF-hands is a feature unique to the calpains. The regulatory mechanisms governing calpain activity are complex, and the nature of the Ca(2+)-induced switch between inactive and active forms has remained elusive in the absence of structural information. We describe here the 2.6 A crystal structure of m-calpain in the Ca(2+)-free form, which illustrates the structural basis for the inactivity of calpain in the absence of Ca(2+). It also reveals an unusual thiol protease fold, which is associated with Ca(2+)-binding domains through heterodimerization and a C(2)-like beta-sandwich domain. Strikingly, the structure shows that the catalytic triad is not assembled, indicating that Ca(2+)-binding must induce conformational changes that re-orient the protease domains to form a functional active site. The alpha-helical N-terminal anchor of the catalytic subunit does not occupy the active site but inhibits its assembly and regulates Ca(2+)-sensitivity through association with the regulatory subunit. This Ca(2+)-dependent activation mechanism is clearly distinct from those of classical proteases.  相似文献   

5.
Effect of Ca2+ on binding of the calpains to calpastatin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Autolyzed mu-calpain, unautolyzed mu-calpain, autolyzed m-calpain, and unautolyzed m-calpain (mu-calpain is the micromolar Ca2+-requiring proteinase, m-calpain is the millimolar Ca2+-requiring proteinase) were passed through a calpastatin-affinity column at different free Ca2+ concentrations, and binding of the calpains to calpastatin was compared with proteolytic activity of that calpain at each Ca2+ concentration. Unautolyzed m-calpain, autolyzed m-calpain, and autolyzed mu-calpain required less Ca2+ for half-maximal binding to calpastatin than for half-maximal activity. Unautolyzed mu-calpain, however, required slightly more Ca2+ for half-maximal binding to calpastatin than for half-maximal activity. Half-maximal binding of oxidatively inactivated mu- or m-calpain to calpastatin required approximately the same Ca2+ concentrations as half-maximal binding of unautolyzed mu- or m-calpain, respectively, to calpastatin. Binding of unautolyzed m-calpain and autolyzed mu-calpain to calpastatin occurred over a wide range of Ca2+ concentrations, and it seems likely that two or more Ca2+-binding sites with different Ca2+-binding constants are involved in binding of the calpains to calpastatin. Proteolytic activity occurs at different Ca2+ concentrations than calpastatin binding, suggesting a second set of Ca2+-binding sites associated with proteolytic activity. Third and fourth sets of Ca2+-binding sites may be involved in autolysis and in binding to phosphatidylinositol or cell membranes; these four Ca2+-dependent properties of the calpains may require the eight potential Ca2+-binding sites that amino acid sequences predict are present in the calpain molecules.  相似文献   

6.
Yeast two-hybrid experiments identified alpha(2)-Heremans-Schmid glycoprotein (human fetuin A) as a binding partner for calpain domain III (DIII). The tandem DIIIs of calpain-10 interacted under the most selective culture conditions, but DIIIs of m-calpain, calpain-3, and calpain-5 also interacted under less stringent selection. DIIIs of mu-calpain, calpain-6, and the tandem DIII-like domains of the Dictyostelium Cpl protein did not interact with alpha(2)-Heremans-Schmid glycoprotein in the yeast two-hybrid system. Bovine fetuin A stabilized proteolytic activity of purified m-calpain incubated in the presence of mm calcium chloride and prevented calcium-dependent m-calpain aggregation. Consistent with the yeast two-hybrid studies, fetuin A neither stabilized mu-calpain nor prevented its aggregation. Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy of scratch-damaged L6 myotubes demonstrated accumulation of m-calpain at the wound site in association with the membrane repair protein, dysferlin. m-Calpain also co-localized with fluorescein-labeled fetuin A at the wound site. The effect of fetuin A on calpain-mediated plasma membrane resealing was investigated using fibroblasts from Capns1(-/-) and Capns1(+/+) mouse embryos. Capns1 encodes the small noncatalytic subunit that is required for the proteolytic function of m- and mu-calpains. Thus, Capns1(-/-) fibroblasts do not express these calpains in active form. Fetuin A increased resealing of scrape-damaged wild-type fibroblasts but not Capns1(-/-) fibroblasts. These studies identify fetuin A as a potential extracellular regulator of m-calpain at nascent sites of plasma membrane wounding.  相似文献   

7.
Binding of calpain fragments to calpastatin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Their cDNA-derived amino acid sequences predict that the 80-kDa subunits of the micromolar and millimolar Ca(2+)-requiring forms of the Ca(2+)-dependent proteinase (mu- and m-calpain, respectively) each consist of four domains and that the 28-kDa subunit common to both mu- and m-calpain consists of two domains. The calpains were allowed to autolyze to completion, and the autolysis products were separated and were characterized by using gel permeation chromatography, calpastatin affinity chromatography, and sequence analysis. Three major fragments were obtained after autolysis of either calpain. The largest fragment (34 kDa for mu-calpain, 35 kDa for m-calpain) contains all of domain II, the catalytic domain, plus part of domain I of the 80-kDa subunit of mu- or m-calpain. This fragment does not bind to calpastatin, a competitive inhibitor of the calpains, and has no proteolytic activity in either the absence or presence of Ca2+. The second major fragment (21 kDa for mu-calpain and 22 kDa for m-calpain) contains domain IV, the calmodulin-like domain, plus approximately 50 amino acids from domain III of the 80-kDa subunit of mu- or m-calpain. The third major fragment (18 kDa) contains domain VI, the calmodulin-like domain of the 28-kDa subunit. The second and third major fragments bind to a calpastatin affinity column in the presence of Ca2+ and are eluted with EDTA. The second and third fragments are noncovalently bound, so the 80- and 28-kDa subunits of the intact calpain molecules are noncovalently bound at domains IV and VI. After separation in 1 M NaSCN, the 28-kDa subunit binds completely to calpastatin, approximately 30-40% of the 80-kDa subunit of mu-calpain binds to calpastatin, and the 80-kDa subunit of m-calpain does not bind to calpastatin in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+.  相似文献   

8.
Calpains (EC 3.4.22.17) are nonlysosomal intracellular proteinases which require calcium ion for activity. The calpains are heterodimers composed of a large catalytic subunit and a small subunit which may have a regulatory function during the catalytic cycle. However, whether calpains remain in the dimeric form or dissociate upon exposure to calcium is controversial. To resolve this issue, two monoclonal antibodies which specifically recognize the small calpain subunit were prepared using bovine calpain 2 heterodimer as the antigen. Both antibodies, designated P-1 and P-2, were capable of inhibiting bovine or canine calpain 2, and partially purified human erythrocyte calpain 1. However, neither could produce full inhibition. Further studies with P-1 and bovine calpain 2 indicated that the antibody decreased the calcium requirement for the proteinase. The Km for casein was increased and the Vmax was decreased. The addition of P-1 to the assay mixture several minutes after initiation of proteolytic activity resulted in a rapid inhibition. The P-1 antibody was also capable of decreasing the ability of the protein inhibitor of calpains (calpastatin) to inhibit bovine calpain 2. These studies indicate that the small subunit remains bound to the large subunit during catalysis and may influence its activity.  相似文献   

9.
Proteolytic digestion by trypsin and chymotrypsin was used to probe conformation and domain structure of the mu- and m-calpain molecules in the presence and the absence of Ca(2+). Both calpains have a compact structure in the absence of Ca(2+); incubation with either protease for 120 min results in only three or four major fragments. A 24-kDa fragment was produced by removal of the Gly-rich area in domain V of the 28-kDa subunit. The other fragments were from the 80-kDa subunit. Except for trypsin digestion of m-calpain, the region between amino acids 245 and 265 (human sequence) was very susceptible to cleavage by both proteases in the absence of Ca(2+); this region is in domain II (IIb of the crystallographic structure). Although no proteolytically active fragments could be isolated from either tryptic or chymotryptic digests, the calpain molecule can remain assembled in a proteolytically active complex even after the 80-kDa subunit has been completely degraded. The results suggest that interaction among different regions of the entire calpain molecule is required for its full proteolytic activity. In the presence of 1 mM Ca(2+), both calpains are degraded to fragments less than 40-kDa in less than 5 min. The C-terminal ends of both subunits, from amino acids 503 to 506 to the end of the 80-kDa subunit and from amino acids 85 to 88 to the end of the 28-kDa subunit, were resistant to degradation by either protease in the presence or in the absence of Ca(2+). Hence, this part of the calpain molecule is in a compact structure that does not change significantly in the presence of Ca(2+).  相似文献   

10.
In 1993, Huber and co-workers published the structure of an N-terminally truncated version of human annexin A1 lacking the first 32 amino acid residues (PDB code: 1AIN). In 2001, we reported the structure of full-length porcine annexin A1 including the N-terminal domain in the absence of calcium ions (PDB code: 1HM6). The latter structure did not reflect a typical annexin core fold, but rather a surprising interaction of the N-terminal domain and the core domain. Comparing these two structures revealed that in the full-length structure the first 12 residues of the N-terminal domain insert into the core of the protein, thereby replacing and unwinding one of the alpha-helices (helix D in repeat 3) that is involved in calcium binding. We hypothesized that this structure in the absence of calcium ions represents the inactive form of the protein. Furthermore, we proposed that upon calcium binding, the N-terminal domain would be expelled from the core domain and that the core D-helix would reform in the proper conformation for calcium coordination. Herein, we report the X-ray structure of full-length porcine annexin A1 in the presence of calcium. This new structure shows a typical annexin core structure as we hypothesized, with the D-helix back in place for calcium coordination while parts of the now exposed N-terminal domain are disordered. We could locate eight calcium ions in this structure, two of which are octa-coordinated and two of which were not observed in the structure of the N-terminally truncated annexin A1. Possible implications of this calcium-induced conformational switch for the membrane aggregation properties of annexin A1 will be discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Although the biochemical changes that occur during autolysis of mu- and m-calpain are well characterized, there have been few studies on properties of the autolyzed calpain molecules themselves. The present study shows that both autolyzed mu- and m-calpain lose 50-55% of their proteolytic activity within 5 min during incubation at pH 7.5 in 300 mM or higher salt and at a slower rate in 100 mM salt. This loss of activity is not reversed by dialysis for 18 h against a low-ionic-strength buffer at pH 7.5. Proteolytic activity of the unautolyzed calpains is not affected by incubation for 45 min at ionic strengths up to 1000 mM. Size-exclusion chromatography shows that ionic strengths of 100 mM or above cause dissociation of the two subunits of autolyzed calpains and that the dissociated large subunits (76- or 78-kDa) aggregate to form dimers and trimers, which are proteolytically inactive. Hence, instability of autolyzed calpains is due to aggregation of dissociated heavy chains. Autolysis removes the N-terminal 19 (m-calpain) or 27 (mu-calpain) amino acids from the large subunit and approximately 90 amino acids from the N-terminus of the small subunit. These regions form contacts between the two subunits in unautolyzed calpains, and their removal leaves only contacts between domain IV in the large subunit and domain VI in the small subunit. Although many of these contacts are hydrophobic in nature, ionic-strength-induced dissociation of the two subunits in the autolyzed calpains indicates that salt bridges have an important, possibly indirect, role in the domain IV/domain VI interaction.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of Ca2+ in calpain activation is mediated via several binding sites in the enzyme molecule. To test the contribution of structural elements suspected to be part of this Ca2+ relay system, we made a site-directed mutagenesis study on calpains, measuring consequential changes in Ca2+ binding and Ca2+ sensitivity of enzyme activity. Evidence is provided for earlier suggestions that an acidic loop in domain III and the transducer region connecting domains III and IV are part of the Ca2+ relay system. Wild-type Drosophila Calpain B domain III binds two to three Ca2+ ions with a K(d) of 3400 microm. Phospholipids lower this value to 220 microm. Ca2+ binding decreases in parallel with the number of mutated loop residues. Deletion of the entire loop abolishes binding of the ion. The Ca2+ dependence of enzyme activity of various acidic-loop mutants of Calpain B and rat m-calpain suggests the importance of the loop in regulating activity. Most conspicuously, the replacement of two adjacent acidic residues in the N-terminal half of the loop evokes a dramatic decrease in the Ca2+ need of both enzymes, lowering half-maximal Ca2+ concentration from 8.6 to 1.3 mm for Calpain B and from 250 to 7 microm for m-calpain. Transducer-region mutations in m-calpain also facilitate Ca2+ activation with the most profound effect seen upon shortening the region by deletion mutagenesis. All of these data along with structural considerations suggest that the acidic loop and the transducer region form an interconnected, extended structural unit that has the capacity to integrate and transduce Ca2+-evoked conformational changes over a long distance. A schematic model of this "extended transducer" mechanism is presented.  相似文献   

13.
The unique conformation of the active site in calpains along with the implication of their role in several diseases has prompted widespread research interest in the scientific community. Structural studies devoted to m- and μ-calpains have proposed a two-stage calcium-dependent activation mechanism for calpains. In this work, we performed conventional and targeted molecular dynamics simulations to investigate global and local changes in the structure of the protease core of m-calpain upon calcium binding. Simulations were performed on the protease core of calcium free (pdbid: 1kfu) and calcium bound (pdbid: 3df0) m-calpain with and without the presence of calcium ions. Our results indicate that the inactive, open conformation of the protease core does not transform into the active, closed conformation simply upon removal of constraints from the neighbor domains. The role of other factors, including calcium binding and the subsequent formation of an Arg94–Glu305 inter-domain salt bridge and the change in the orientation of Trp288 side chain, in the activation of the protease core is elicited.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of pressure on mu and m-calpain stability and specific activity have been examined. Activity and stability of these neutral calcium-dependent heterodimeric proteinases were studied using an in-house built bioreactor allowing on-line spectrophotometric monitoring with retention of pressure. Both isozymes were founded to be rather baro-sensitive with t1/2 at 1500 bar of 6 min and 11 min for mu and m-calpain respectively. Activity measurements under pressure showed a biphasic behavior for both proteinases with a slight activation for pressure up to 500 bar and 750 bar for m and mu-calpain respectively. Activation volume changes indicated that the proteolytic reaction was alternatively favored and disfavored by pressure due to catalytic step activation associated with enzyme-substrate binding step being continuously inhibited by pressure. Furthermore, autoproteolysis of calpain, a calcium dependent phenomenon was inhibited by application of pressure indicating that pressure inhibition of proteolytic activity could also be due to Ca2(+)-binding decrease under pressure. Implication of these results with catalytic mechanism of these heterodimeric proteinases is also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Calpains, also called calcium activated neutral cysteine proteases are presently known to play pivotal roles in physiological and biological phenomena such as signal transduction, cell spreading and motility, apoptosis, regulation of cell cycle and regulation of muscle cell differentiation. Concerning this last point, calpains have been shown to play a crucial role during the earlier myogenesis. In this study we have analyzed the involvement of calpains during an important step of myogenesis: myoblast migration. Our findings show that myoblast migration was drastically reduced when the expression of micro- and m-calpain was decreased. We have also observed that MARCKS (myristoylated alanine rich C kinase substrate), a protein localized at focal adhesion sites, was significantly accumulated when the expression levels of calpains were decreased. Also, using phorbol myristate acetate, (an activator of PKC) and plasmids carrying the full-length cDNA of MARCKS or a cDNA fragment lacking the phosphorylation site domain, we demonstrated that normal myoblast migration is dependent on MARCKS phosphorylation and localization.  相似文献   

16.
Tissue type plasminogen activator (tPA) is the physiological initiator of fibrinolysis, activating plasminogen via highly specific proteolysis; plasmin then degrades fibrin with relatively broad specificity. Unlike other chymotrypsin family serine proteinases, tPA is proteolytically active in a single-chain form. This form is also preferred for therapeutic administration of tPA in cases of acute myocardial infarction. The proteolytic cleavage which activates most other chymotrypsin family serine proteinases increases the catalytic efficiency of tPA only 5- to 10-fold. The X-ray crystal structure of the catalytic domain of recombinant human single-chain tPA shows that Lys156 forms a salt bridge with Asp194, promoting an active conformation in the single-chain form. Comparisons with the structures of other serine proteinases that also possess Lys156, such as trypsin, factor Xa and human urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), identify a set of secondary interactions which are required for Lys156 to fulfil this activating role. These findings help explain the anomalous single-chain activity of tPA and may suggest strategies for design of new therapeutic plasminogen activators.  相似文献   

17.
We have applied small angle x-ray scattering and protein cross-linking coupled with mass spectrometry to determine the architectures of full-length HIV integrase (IN) dimers in solution. By blocking interactions that stabilize either a core-core domain interface or N-terminal domain intermolecular contacts, we show that full-length HIV IN can form two dimer types. One is an expected dimer, characterized by interactions between two catalytic core domains. The other dimer is stabilized by interactions of the N-terminal domain of one monomer with the C-terminal domain and catalytic core domain of the second monomer as well as direct interactions between the two C-terminal domains. This organization is similar to the “reaching dimer” previously described for wild type ASV apoIN and resembles the inner, substrate binding dimer in the crystal structure of the PFV intasome. Results from our small angle x-ray scattering and modeling studies indicate that in the absence of its DNA substrate, the HIV IN tetramer assembles as two stacked reaching dimers that are stabilized by core-core interactions. These models of full-length HIV IN provide new insight into multimer assembly and suggest additional approaches for enzyme inhibition.  相似文献   

18.
The X-ray structure of m-calpain shows that domain III of the large subunit is structurally related to C2 domains, Ca2+-regulated lipid binding modules in many enzymes. To address whether this structural similarity entails functional analogy, we have characterized recombinant domain III from rat micro- and m-calpain and Drosophila CALPB. In a Ca2+ overlay assay domain III displays a large capacity for Ca2+ binding, commensurable with that of domain IV, the principal Ca2+-binding domain of calpains. The amount of Ca2+ bound to domain III increases 2- to 10-fold upon the addition of liposomes containing 20-40% di- and triphosphoinositides. Conversely, phospholipid-binding in spin-column size-exclusion chromatography is significantly promoted by Ca2+, in a manner similar to known C2 domains. These results suggest that domain III might be the primary lipid binding site of calpain and may play a decisive role in orchestrating Ca2+- and lipid activation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
We have compared ubiquitous calpains in chicken (Gallus gallus), turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) and mammals. In chicken, we studied their distribution in different tissues. The calpain activity was determined by casein zymography, a technique avoiding any prior sample purification, thus limiting any autolysis and denaturation reactions. Our results show that two ubiquitous calpains are present in chicken: (1) a mu-calpain having a greater calcium sensitivity and a lower electrophoretic mobility than the mammalian one, (2) a mu/m-calpain, named like this by Sorimachi et al. [Sorimachi, H., Tsukahara, T., Okada-Ban, M., Sugita, H., Ishiura, S., Suzuki, K., 1995. Identification of a third ubiquitous calpain species-chicken muscle expresses four distinct calpains. Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1261, 381-93.], having a calcium sensitivity intermediate between that of the two mammalian mu-calpain and the m-calpain. Tissue distribution of the two chicken isozymes vary and mu/m-calpain predominates, whereas mu-calpain levels are very low in some tissues, unlike in mammalian tissues. The characteristics of mu/m-calpain and its preponderance in all organs suggest that it may play a different role in chicken than in mammals.  相似文献   

20.
The calpains: modular designs and functional diversity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The calpain family is named for the calcium dependence of the papain-like, thiol protease activity of the well-studied ubiquitous vertebrate enzymes calpain-1 (μ-calpain) and calpain-2 (m-calpain). Proteins showing sequence relatedness to the catalytic core domains of these enzymes are included in this ancient and diverse eukaryotic protein family. Calpains are examples of highly modular organization, with several varieties of amino-terminal or carboxy-terminal modules flanking a conserved core. Acquisition of the penta-EF-hand module involved in calcium binding (and the formation of heterodimers for some calpains) seems to be a relatively late event in calpain evolution. Several alternative mechanisms for binding calcium and associating with membranes/phospholipids are found throughout the family. The gene family is expanded in mammals, trypanosomes and ciliates, with up to 26 members in Tetrahymena, for example; in striking contrast to this, only a single calpain gene is present in many other protozoa and in plants. The many isoforms of calpain and their multiple splice variants complicate the discussion and analysis of the family, and challenge researchers to ascertain the relationships between calpain gene sequences, protein isoforms and their distinct or overlapping functions. In mammals and plants it is clear that a calpain plays an essential role in development. There is increasing evidence that ubiquitous calpains participate in a variety of signal transduction pathways and function in important cellular processes of life and death. In contrast to relatively promiscuous degradative proteases, calpains cleave only a restricted set of protein substrates and use complex substrate-recognition mechanisms, involving primary and secondary structural features of target proteins. The detailed physiological significance of both proteolytically active calpains and those lacking key catalytic residues requires further study.  相似文献   

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