![]() |
||
| IMB Home > XRF Home | Soma's Home > Solved Structures > Bernett 2002 > | ||
|
«Previous | Next»
J Biol Chem. 2002 Jul 5;277(27):24562-70. Epub 2002 Apr 30.[DOI Link]Crystal structure and biochemical characterization of human kallikrein 6 reveals that a trypsin-like kallikrein is expressed in the central nervous system.Bernett MJ, Blaber SI, Scarisbrick IA, Dhanarajan P, Thompson SM, Blaber M.Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-4380, USA. The human kallikreins are a large multigene family of closely related
serine-type proteases. In this regard, they are similar to the multigene
kallikrein families characterized in mice and rats. There is a much more
extensive body of knowledge regarding the function of mouse and rat kallikreins
in comparison with the human kallikreins. Human kallikrein 6 has been proposed
as the homologue to rat myelencephalon-specific protease, an arginine-specific
degradative-type protease abundantly expressed in the central nervous system and
implicated in demyelinating disease. We present the x-ray crystal structure of
mature, active recombinant human kallikrein 6 at 1.75-A resolution. This high
resolution model provides the first three-dimensional view of one of the human
kallikreins and one of only a few structures of serine proteases predominantly
expressed in the central nervous system. Enzymatic data are presented that
support the identification of human kallikrein 6 as the functional homologue of
rat myelencephalon-specific protease and are corroborated by a molecular
phylogenetic analysis. Furthermore, the x-ray data provide support for the
characterization of human kallikrein 6 as a degradative protease with structural
features more similar to trypsin than the regulatory kallikreins.
PMID: 11983703 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] This publication is one of the several that describes a structure solved either at the Kasha Laboratory, Institute of Molecular Biophysics or in collaboration with the Institute Faculty. The data used for this structure determination came in full or part from the Macromolecular X-Ray Crystallography Facility. |
||||||||||
![]() |
|||
|
www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/02bernett.html
|
|||