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Protease inhibitors and proteolytic signalling cascades in insects
- Source :
- Biochimie. 92(12)
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Proteolytic signalling cascades control a wide range of physiological responses. In order to respond rapidly, protease activity must be maintained at a basal level: the component zymogens must be sequentially activated and actively degraded. At the same time, signalling cascades must respond precisely: high target specificity is required. The insects have a wide range of trapping- and tight-binding protease inhibitors, which can regulate the activity of individual proteases. In addition, the interactions between component proteases of a signalling cascade can be modified by serine protease homologues. The suicide-inhibition mechanism of serpin family inhibitors gives rapid turnover of both protease and inhibitor, but target specificity is inherently broad. Similarly, the TEP/macroglobulins have extremely broad target specificity, which suits them for roles as hormone transport proteins and sensors of pathogenic virulence factors. The tight-binding inhibitors, on the other hand, have a lock-and-key mechanism capable of high target specificity. In addition, proteins containing multiple tight-binding inhibitory domains may act as scaffolds for the assembly of signalling complexes. Proteolytic cascades regulated by combinations of different types of inhibitor could combine the rapidity of suicide-inhibitors with the specificity lock-and-key inhibitors. This would allow precise control of physiological responses and may turn out to be a general rule.
- Subjects :
- Serine protease
Proteases
Protease
Insecta
medicine.diagnostic_test
biology
medicine.medical_treatment
Proteolysis
General Medicine
Serpin
Biochemistry
Cell biology
Signalling
Macroglobulins
medicine
biology.protein
Animals
Insect Proteins
Protease Inhibitors
Hormone transport
Signal transduction
Serpins
Peptide Hydrolases
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 16386183
- Volume :
- 92
- Issue :
- 12
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biochimie
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4cc057a7356121c2e1118e2ebf52904a