The α1/2 helical backbone of the prodomains defines the intrinsic inhibitory specificity in the cathepsin L‐like cysteine protease subfamily
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Debouck,et al. The crystal structure of human procathepsin K. , 1999, Biochemistry.
[2] D. Michaud,et al. The proregion of papaya proteinase IV inhibits Colorado potato beetle digestive cysteine proteinases , 1998, FEBS letters.
[3] J. Jenkins,et al. Structural basis for specificity of papain‐like cysteine protease proregions toward their cognate enzymes , 1998, Proteins.
[4] A. Baici,et al. Inhibition of extracellular matrix-degrading endopeptidases: problems, comments, and hypotheses. , 1998, Biological chemistry.
[5] J T Palmer,et al. Crystal structure of human cathepsin S , 1998, Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society.
[6] V. Turk,et al. pH-induced Conformational Transitions of the Propeptide of Human Cathepsin L , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[7] R. Ménard,et al. Autocatalytic Processing of Recombinant Human Procathepsin L , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[8] B. Wiederanders,et al. The inhibition of cathepsin S by its propeptide--specificity and mechanism of action. , 1997, European journal of biochemistry.
[9] Y. Fujisawa,et al. Processing properties of recombinant human procathepsin L. , 1997, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[10] M. Scott,et al. The prosequence of procaricain forms an alpha-helical domain that prevents access to the substrate-binding cleft. , 1996, Structure.
[11] R. Ménard,et al. Structure of human procathepsin L reveals the molecular basis of inhibition by the prosegment. , 1996, The EMBO journal.
[12] R. Ménard,et al. Potency and selectivity of the cathepsin L propeptide as an inhibitor of cysteine proteases. , 1996, Biochemistry.
[13] V. Gnau,et al. Cathepsin L is an intracellular and extracellular protease in Paramecium tetraurelia. Purification, cloning, sequencing and specific inhibition by its expressed propeptide. , 1996, European journal of biochemistry.
[14] N. Cummings,et al. Expression of the pro-regions of papain and papaya proteinase IV in Escherichia coli and their inhibition of mature cysteine proteinases. , 1995, Biochemical Society Transactions.
[15] K. Tao,et al. The proregion of cathepsin L is required for proper folding, stability, and ER exit. , 1994, Archives of biochemistry and biophysics.
[16] J. Mort,et al. Maturation of human procathepsin B. Proenzyme activation and proteolytic processing of the precursor to the mature proteinase, in vitro, are primarily unimolecular processes. , 1994, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[17] A. Erickson,et al. The pH-dependent membrane association of procathepsin L is mediated by a 9-residue sequence within the propeptide. , 1994, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[18] T. Fox,et al. Potent slow-binding inhibition of cathepsin B by its propeptide. , 1992, Biochemistry.
[19] C. Peters,et al. Phylogenetic conservation of cysteine proteinases. Cloning and expression of a cDNA coding for human cathepsin S. , 1992, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[20] M. Gottesman,et al. Activity and deletion analysis of recombinant human cathepsin L expressed in Escherichia coli. , 1989, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[21] S. Cha,et al. Tight-binding inhibitors-I. Kinetic behavior. , 1975, Biochemical pharmacology.
[22] R. Ménard,et al. Crystal structure of wild‐type human procathepsin K , 1999, Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society.
[23] I. Connerton,et al. Recombinant pro-regions from papain and papaya proteinase IV-are selective high affinity inhibitors of the mature papaya enzymes. , 1995, Protein engineering.
[24] H. Kirschke,et al. [34] Cathepsin S and related lysosomal endopeptidases , 1994 .