1. S100A7, S100A10, and S100A11 are transglutaminase substrates.
- Author
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Ruse M, Lambert A, Robinson N, Ryan D, Shon KJ, and Eckert RL
- Subjects
- 3T3 Cells, Animals, Calcium metabolism, Cells, Cultured, Epidermis enzymology, Epidermis metabolism, GTP-Binding Proteins metabolism, Glutamine metabolism, Humans, Keratinocytes enzymology, Keratinocytes metabolism, Lysine metabolism, Mice, Protein Glutamine gamma Glutamyltransferase 2, Psoriasis enzymology, Psoriasis metabolism, Putrescine metabolism, S100 Calcium Binding Protein A7, Substrate Specificity, Swine, Annexins metabolism, Calcium-Binding Proteins metabolism, S100 Proteins metabolism, Transglutaminases metabolism
- Abstract
S100 proteins are a family of 10-14 kDa EF-hand-containing calcium binding proteins that function to transmit calcium-dependent cell regulatory signals. S100 proteins have no intrinsic enzyme activity but bind in a calcium-dependent manner to target proteins to modulate target protein function. Transglutaminases are enzymes that catalyze the formation of covalent epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine bonds between protein-bound glutamine and lysine residues. In the present study we show that transglutaminase-dependent covalent modification is a property shared by several S100 proteins and that both type I and type II transglutaminases can modify S100 proteins. We further show that the reactive regions are at the solvent-exposed amino- and carboxyl-terminal ends of the protein, regions that specify S100 protein function. We suggest that transglutaminase-dependent modification is a general mechanism designed to regulate S100 protein function.
- Published
- 2001
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