1. Expression and characterization of constitutively active human caspase-14.
- Author
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Park K, Kuechle MK, Choe Y, Craik CS, Lawrence OT, and Presland RB
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones pharmacology, Animals, COS Cells, Caspase 14, Caspase Inhibitors, Caspases metabolism, Cell Differentiation physiology, Chlorocebus aethiops, Cloning, Molecular, Escherichia coli enzymology, Humans, Keratinocytes cytology, Oligopeptides metabolism, Rats, Substrate Specificity, Caspases biosynthesis
- Abstract
Caspase-14 is a cysteine endoproteinase that is expressed in the epidermis and a limited number of other tissues. It is activated during keratinocyte differentiation by zymogen processing, but its precise function is unknown. To obtain caspase-14 for functional studies, we engineered and expressed a constitutively active form of human caspase-14 (Rev-hC14) in Escherichia coli and cultured mammalian cells. Rev-hC14 required no proteolytic processing for activity, showed strong activity against the caspase substrate WEHD, and was inhibited by the pan-caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk. Mammalian cells that expressed active caspase-14 showed normal cell adherence and morphology. Using positional scanning of synthetic tetrapeptide libraries, we determined the substrate preference of human caspase-14 to be W (or Y)-X-X-D. These studies affirm that caspase-14 has a substrate specificity similar to the group I caspases, and demonstrate that it functions in a distinct manner from executioner caspases to carry out specific proteolytic events during keratinocyte differentiation.
- Published
- 2006
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