Back to Search Start Over

Granzyme A is an interleukin 1 beta-converting enzyme

Authors :
Sylvie Hertig
Roberto Solari
Juerg Tschopp
J. D. Becherer
A Proudfoot
Martin Irmler
R. Sadoul
H R MacDonald
Source :
The Journal of experimental medicine, vol. 181, no. 5, pp. 1917-1922, The Journal of Experimental Medicine
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

Apoptosis is critically dependent on the presence of the ced-3 gene in Caenorhabditis elegans, which encodes a protein homologous to the mammalian interleukin (IL)-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE). Overexpression of ICE or ced-3 promotes apoptosis. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated rapid apoptosis is induced by the proteases granzyme A and B. ICE and granzyme B share the rare substrate site of aspartic acid, after which amino acid cleavage of precursor IL-1 beta (pIL-1 beta) occurs. Here we show that granzyme A, but not granzyme B, converts pIL-1 beta to its 17-kD mature form. Major cleavage occurs at Arg120, four amino acids downstream of the authentic processing site, Asp116. IL-1 beta generated by granzyme A is biologically active. When pIL-1 beta processing is monitored in lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophage target cells attacked by cytotoxic T lymphocytes, intracellular conversion precedes lysis. Prior granzyme inactivation blocks this processing. We conclude that the apoptosis-inducing granzyme A and ICE share at least one downstream target substrate, i.e., pIL-1 beta. This suggests that lymphocytes, by means of their own converting enzyme, could initiate a local inflammatory response independent of the presence of ICE.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of experimental medicine, vol. 181, no. 5, pp. 1917-1922, The Journal of Experimental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9dcfd87510bf3d4298babfe2dbcd15b8