An inflammatory role for the mammalian carboxypeptidase inhibitor latexin: Relationship to cystatins and the tumor suppressor TIG1


Autoria(s): Aagaard, A.; Listwan, P.; Cowieson, N. P.; Huber, T. L.; Ravasi, T.; Wells, C. A.; Flanagan, J. U.; Kellie, S.; Hume, D. A.; Kobe, B.; Martin, J. L.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Latexin, the only known mammalian carboxypeptidase inhibitor, has no detectable sequence similarity with plant and parasite inhibitors, but it is related to a human putative tumor suppressor protein, TIG1. Latexin is expressed in the developing brain, and we find that it plays a role in inflammation, as it is expressed at high levels and is inducible in macrophages in concert with other protease inhibitors and potential protease targets. The crystal structure of mouse latexin, solved at 1.83 Angstrom resolution, shows no structural relationship with other carboxypeptidase inhibitors. Furthermore, despite a lack of detectable sequence duplication, the structure incorporates two topologically analogous domains related by pseudo two-fold symmetry. Surprisingly, these domains share a cystatin fold architecture found in proteins that inhibit cysteine proteases, suggesting an evolutionary and possibly functional relationship. The structure of the tumor suppressor protein TIG1 was modeled, revealing its putative membrane binding surface.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76292

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Cell Press

Palavras-Chave #Biophysics #Cell Biology #Electron-density Maps #Ray Crystal-structure #Induced Gene-1 Tig1 #Angstrom Resolution #Binding-sites #Mast-cells #Protein #Expression #Macrophages #Program #C1 #270199 Biochemistry and Cell Biology not elsewhere classified #780105 Biological sciences
Tipo

Journal Article