Dictionary Definition
proteinase n : any enzyme that catalyzes the
splitting of proteins into smaller peptide fractions and amino
acids by a process known as proteolysis [syn: protease, peptidase, proteolytic
enzyme]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
A protease is any enzyme that conducts proteolysis, that is, begins
protein catabolism by
hydrolysis of the
peptide bonds that link amino acids together in the polypeptide chain.
Classification
Proteases are currently classified into six groups:- Serine proteases
- Threonine proteases
- Cysteine proteases
- Aspartic acid proteases
- Metalloproteases
- Glutamic acid proteases
The threonine and glutamic acid proteases were
not described until 1995 and 2004, respectively.
The mechanism used to cleave a peptide bond involves making an
amino acid residue that has the cysteine and threonine (peptidases)
or a water molecule (aspartic acid, metallo- and glutamic acid
peptidases) nucleophilic so that it can attack the peptide carbonyl group. One way to make
a nucleophile is by a catalytic
triad, where a histidine residue is used to
activate serine, cysteine, or threonine as a
nucleophile.
Occurrence
Proteases occur naturally in all organisms. These enzymes are involved in a multitude of physiological reactions from simple digestion of food proteins to highly-regulated cascades (e.g., the blood-clottin cascade, the complement system, apoptosis pathways, and the invertebrate prophenoloxidase-activating cascade). Peptidases can either break specific peptide bonds (limited proteolysis), depending on the amino acid sequence of a protein, or break down a complete peptide to amino acids (unlimited proteolysis). The activity can be a destructive change, abolishing a protein's function or digesting it to its principal components; it can be an activation of a function, or it can be a signal in a signaling pathway.Bacteria also secrete proteases to hydrolyse the
peptide bonds in proteins and therefore break the proteins down
into their constituent monomers.
Proteases are also a type of exotoxin, which is a
virulence factor in bacteria pathogenesis. Bacteria exotoxic
proteases destroy extracellular structures. Protease enzymes are
also found used extensively in the bread industry in Bread
improver.
Proteases, also known as proteinases or
proteolytic enzymes, are a large group of enzymes. Proteases belong to the
class of enzymes known as hydrolases, which catalyse
the reaction of hydrolysis of various bonds
with the participation of a water molecule.
Proteases are involved in digesting long protein
chains into short fragments, splitting the peptide
bonds that link amino acid
residues. Some of them can detach the terminal amino acids from the
protein chain (exopeptidases, such as
aminopeptidases,
carboxypeptidase A);
the others attack internal peptide bonds of a protein (endopeptidases, such as
trypsin, chymotrypsin, pepsin, papain, elastase).
Proteases are divided into four major groups
according to the character of their catalytic active site
and conditions of action: serine proteinases, cysteine (thiol)
proteinases, aspartic proteinases, and metalloproteinases.
Attachment of a protease to a certain group depends on the
structure of catalytic site and the amino acid (as one of the
constituents) essential for its activity.
Proteases are used throughout an organism for
various metabolic processes. Acid proteases secreted into the
stomach (such as pepsin)
and serine proteases present in duodenum (trypsin and chymotrypsin) enable us to
digest the protein in food; proteases present in blood serum
(thrombin, plasmin, Hageman
factor, etc.) play important role in blood-clotting, as well as
lysis of the clots, and the correct action of the immune system.
Other proteases are present in leukocytes (elastase, cathepsin G)
and play several different roles in metabolic control. Proteases
determine the lifetime of other proteins playing important
physiological role like hormones, antibodies, or other enzymes --
this is one of the fastest "switching on" and "switching off"
regulatory mechanisms in the physiology of an organism. By complex
cooperative action the proteases may proceed as cascade reactions, which result
in rapid and efficient amplification of an organism's response to a
physiological signal.
Inhibitors
The function of peptidases is inhibited by protease inhibitor enzymes. Examples of protease inhibitors are the class of serpins (serine protease or peptidase inhibitors), incorporating alpha 1-antitrypsin. Other serpins are complement 1-inhibitor, antithrombin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (coagulation, fibrinolysis) and the recently discovered neuroserpin.Natural protease inhibitors include the family of
lipocalin proteins,
which play a role in cell regulation and differentiation. Lipophilic
ligands, attached to lipocalin proteins, have been found to possess
tumor protease inhibiting properties. The natural
protease inhibitors are not to be confused with the
protease inhibitors used in antiretroviral therapy. Some
viruses,
with HIV among
them, depend on proteases in their reproductive cycle. Thus,
protease inhibitors are developed as antiviral means.
Degradation
Proteases, being themselves proteins, are known to be cleaved by other protease molecules, sometimes of the same variety. This may be an important method of regulation of peptidase activity.Protease research
The field of protease research is enormous. Barrett and Rawlings estimated that approximately 8000 papers related to this field are published each year. For a look at current activities and interests of protease researchers, see the International Proteolysis Society web page.References
- Barrett A.J., Rawlings ND, Woessner JF. The Handbook of Proteolytic Enzymes, 2nd ed. Academic Press, 2003. ISBN 0-12-079610-4.
- Hedstrom L. Serine Protease Mechanism and Specificity. Chem Rev 2002;102:4501-4523.
- Southan C. A genomic perspective on human proteases as drug targets. Drug Discov Today 2001;6:681-688.
- Hooper NM. Proteases in Biology and Medicine. London: Portland Press, 2002. ISBN 1-85578-147-6.
- Puente XS, Sanchez LM, Overall CM, Lopez-Otin C. Human and Mouse Proteases: a Comparative Genomic Approach. Nat Rev Genet 2003;4:544-558.
- Ross J, Jiang H, Kanost MR, Wang Y. Serine proteases and their homologs in the Drosophila melanogaster genome: an initial analysis of sequence conservation and phylogenetic relationships. Gene 2003;304:117-31.
- Puente XS, Lopez-Otin C. A Genomic Analysis of Rat Proteases and Protease Inhibitors. Genome Biol 2004;14:609-622.
External links
proteinase in Catalan: Peptidasa
proteinase in Czech: Proteáza
proteinase in Danish: Protease
proteinase in German: Peptidase
proteinase in Spanish: Peptidasa
proteinase in French: Peptidase
proteinase in Italian: Proteasi
proteinase in Hebrew: פרוטאז
proteinase in Hungarian: Proteáz
proteinase in Dutch: Protease
proteinase in Japanese: プロテアーゼ
proteinase in Norwegian: Protease
proteinase in Polish: Proteazy
proteinase in Portuguese: Protease
proteinase in Simple English: Protease
proteinase in Slovenian: Peptidaza
proteinase in Swedish: Proteas
proteinase in Turkish: Proteaz
proteinase in Chinese: 蛋白酶