Cystatin
Proteinase inhibitor I25, cystatin | |||||||||
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Crystal structure of an immunomodulatory salivary cystatin from the soft tick Ornithodoros moubata from PDB entry 3L0R.[1] | |||||||||
Identifiers | |||||||||
Symbol | Prot_inh_cystat | ||||||||
Pfam | PF00031 | ||||||||
Pfam clan | CL0121 | ||||||||
InterPro | IPR000010 | ||||||||
SMART | SM00043 | ||||||||
PROSITE | PDOC00259 | ||||||||
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The cystatins are a family of cysteine protease inhibitors which share a sequence homology and a common tertiary structure of an alpha helix lying on top of an anti-parallel beta sheet. The family is subdivided as described below.
Cystatins show similarity to fetuins, kininogens, histidine-rich glycoproteins and cystatin-related proteins.[2][3][4] Cystatins mainly inhibit peptidase enzymes (another term for proteases) belonging to peptidase families C1 (papain family) and C13 (legumain family). They are known to mis-fold to form amyloid deposits and are implicated in several diseases.
Types
The cystatin family includes:
- The Type 1 cystatins, which are intracellular and are present in the cytosol of many cell types, but can also appear in body fluids at significant concentrations. They are single-chain polypeptides of about 100 residues, which have neither disulfide bonds nor carbohydrate side-chains. Type 1 cystatins are also known as Stefins (after the Stefan Institute where they were first discovered [5])
- The Type 2 cystatins, which are mainly extracellular secreted polypeptides are largely acidic, contain four conserved cysteine residues known to form two disulfide bonds, may be glycosylated and/or phosphorylated. They are synthesised with a 19- to 28-residue signal peptide. They are broadly distributed and found in most body fluids.
- The Type 3 cystatins, which are multidomain proteins. The mammalian representatives of this group are the kininogens. There are three different kininogens in mammals: H- (high-molecular-mass, InterPro: IPR002395) and L- (low-molecular-mass) kininogen, which are found in a number of species, and T-kininogen, which is found only in rats.
- Unclassified cystatins. These are cystatin-like proteins found in a range of organisms: plant phytocystatins, fetuin in mammals, insect cystatins, and a puff adder venom cystatin, which inhibits metalloproteases of the MEROPS peptidase family M12 (astacin/adamalysin). Also, a number of the cystatin-like proteins have been shown to be devoid of inhibitory activity.
Human cystatins
- CST1, CST2, CST3 (cystatin C, a marker of kidney function), CST4, CST5, CST6, CST7, CST8, CST9, CST11, CSTA (cystatin A), CSTB (cystatin B)
Plant cystatins
van Wyk et al found some 19 different cystatins similar to oryzacystatin-I in the soybean along with related cysteine proteases.[6]
Membrane permeability
Chicken cystatin quickly passed the membrane of MCF-10A neo T cells and inhibited cathepsin B when it was acylated with fatty acyl residues of 6-18 carbon atoms.[7]
See also
- Affimer, a type of engineered protein that is based on the cystatin scaffold
References
- ↑ Salát, Jiří; Paesen, Guido C.; Řezáčová, Pavlína; Kotsyfakis, Michalis; Kovářová, Zuzana; Šanda, Miloslav; Majtán, Juraj; Grunclová, Lenka; Horká, Helena; Andersen, John F.; Brynda, Jiří; Horn, Martin; Nunn, Miles A.; Kopáček, Petr; Kopecký, Jan; Mareš, Michael (2010). "Crystal structure and functional characterization of an immunomodulatory salivary cystatin from the soft tick Ornithodoros moubata". Biochemical Journal. 429 (1): 103–12. doi:10.1042/BJ20100280. PMC 3523712. PMID 20545626.; rendered with PyMOL
- ↑ Rawlings, Neil D.; Barrett, Alan J. (1990). "Evolution of proteins of the cystatin superfamily". Journal of Molecular Evolution. 30 (1): 60–71. doi:10.1007/BF02102453. PMID 2107324.
- ↑ Abrahamson, Magnus; Alvarez-Fernandez, Marcia; Nathanson, Carl-Michael (2003). "Cystatins". Biochemical Society Symposium. 70 (70): 179–99. doi:10.1042/bss0700179. PMID 14587292.
- ↑ Turk, Vito; Bode, Wolfram (1991). "The cystatins: Protein inhibitors of cysteine proteinases". FEBS Letters. 285 (2): 213–9. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(91)80804-C. PMID 1855589.
- ↑ Machleidt, Werner; Borchart, Ursula; Fritz, Hans; Brzin, Jože; Ritonja, Anka; Turk, Vito (1983). "Protein Inhibitors of Cysteine Proteinases. II. Primary Structure of Stefin, a Cytosolic Protein Inhibitor of Cysteine Proteinases from Human Polymorphonuclear Granulocytes". Hoppe-Seyler's Zeitschrift für physiologische Chemie. 364 (11): 1481–6. doi:10.1515/bchm2.1983.364.2.1481. PMID 6689312.
- ↑ van Wyk, Stefan George; Du Plessis, Magdeleen; Cullis, Christoper Ashley; Kunert, Karl Josef; Vorster, Barend Juan (2014). "Cysteine protease and cystatin expression and activity during soybean nodule development and senescence". BMC Plant Biology. 14: 294. doi:10.1186/s12870-014-0294-3. PMC 4243279. PMID 25404209.
- ↑ Kočevar, Nina; Obermajer, Nataša; Kreft, Samo (2008). "Membrane Permeability of Acylated Cystatin Depends on the Fatty Acyl Chain Length". Chemical Biology & Drug Design. 72 (3): 217–24. doi:10.1111/j.1747-0285.2008.00693.x. PMID 18702630.
Further reading
- Cystatin: a protein that flips out! QUite Interesting PDB Structure article at PDBe
- Lee, Chunsik; Bongcam-Rudloff, Erik; Sollner, Christian; Jahnen-Dechent, Willi; Claesson-Welsh, Lena (2009). "Type 3 cystatins; fetuins, kininogen and histidine-rich glycoprotein". Frontiers in Bioscience. 14 (14): 2911–22. doi:10.2741/3422. PMID 19273244.
External links
- Cystatins at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro IPR000010