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Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions

BACKGROUND: Cysteine cathepsins are known to primarily cleave their substrates at reducing and acidic conditions within endo-lysosomes. Nevertheless, they have also been linked to extracellular proteolysis, that is, in oxidizing and neutral environments. Although the impact of reducing or oxidizing...

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Autores principales: Jordans, Silvia, Jenko-Kokalj, Saša, Kühl, Nicole M, Tedelind, Sofia, Sendt, Wolfgang, Brömme, Dieter, Turk, Dušan, Brix, Klaudia
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2759951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19772638
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-23
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author Jordans, Silvia
Jenko-Kokalj, Saša
Kühl, Nicole M
Tedelind, Sofia
Sendt, Wolfgang
Brömme, Dieter
Turk, Dušan
Brix, Klaudia
author_facet Jordans, Silvia
Jenko-Kokalj, Saša
Kühl, Nicole M
Tedelind, Sofia
Sendt, Wolfgang
Brömme, Dieter
Turk, Dušan
Brix, Klaudia
author_sort Jordans, Silvia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cysteine cathepsins are known to primarily cleave their substrates at reducing and acidic conditions within endo-lysosomes. Nevertheless, they have also been linked to extracellular proteolysis, that is, in oxidizing and neutral environments. Although the impact of reducing or oxidizing conditions on proteolytic activity is a key to understand physiological protease functions, redox conditions have only rarely been considered in routine enzyme activity assays. Therefore we developed an assay to test for proteolytic processing of a natural substrate by cysteine cathepsins which accounts for redox potentials and pH values corresponding to the conditions in the extracellular space in comparison to those within endo-lysosomes of mammalian cells. RESULTS: The proteolytic potencies of cysteine cathepsins B, K, L and S towards thyroglobulin were analyzed under conditions simulating oxidizing versus reducing environments with neutral to acidic pH values. Thyroglobulin, the precursor molecule of thyroid hormones, was chosen as substrate, because it represents a natural target of cysteine cathepsins. Thyroglobulin processing involves thyroid hormone liberation which, under physiological circumstances, starts in the extracellular follicle lumen before being continued within endo-lysosomes. Our study shows that all cathepsins tested were capable of processing thyroglobulin at neutral and oxidizing conditions, although these are reportedly non-favorable for cysteine proteases. All analyzed cathepsins generated distinct fragments of thyroglobulin at extracellular versus endo-lysosomal conditions as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblotting or N-terminal sequencing. Moreover, the thyroid hormone thyroxine was liberated by the action of cathepsin S at extracellular conditions, while cathepsins B, K and L worked most efficiently in this respect at endo-lysosomal conditions. CONCLUSION: The results revealed distinct cleavage patterns at all conditions analyzed, indicating compartment-specific processing of thyroglobulin by cysteine cathepsins. In particular, proteolytic activity of cathepsin S towards the substrate thyroglobulin can now be understood as instrumental for extracellular thyroid hormone liberation. Our study emphasizes that the proteolytic functions of cysteine cathepsins in the thyroid are not restricted to endo-lysosomes but include pivotal roles in extracellular substrate utilization. We conclude that understanding of the interplay and fine adjustment of protease networks in vivo is better approachable by simulating physiological conditions in protease activity assays.
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spelling pubmed-27599512009-10-11 Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions Jordans, Silvia Jenko-Kokalj, Saša Kühl, Nicole M Tedelind, Sofia Sendt, Wolfgang Brömme, Dieter Turk, Dušan Brix, Klaudia BMC Biochem Research Article BACKGROUND: Cysteine cathepsins are known to primarily cleave their substrates at reducing and acidic conditions within endo-lysosomes. Nevertheless, they have also been linked to extracellular proteolysis, that is, in oxidizing and neutral environments. Although the impact of reducing or oxidizing conditions on proteolytic activity is a key to understand physiological protease functions, redox conditions have only rarely been considered in routine enzyme activity assays. Therefore we developed an assay to test for proteolytic processing of a natural substrate by cysteine cathepsins which accounts for redox potentials and pH values corresponding to the conditions in the extracellular space in comparison to those within endo-lysosomes of mammalian cells. RESULTS: The proteolytic potencies of cysteine cathepsins B, K, L and S towards thyroglobulin were analyzed under conditions simulating oxidizing versus reducing environments with neutral to acidic pH values. Thyroglobulin, the precursor molecule of thyroid hormones, was chosen as substrate, because it represents a natural target of cysteine cathepsins. Thyroglobulin processing involves thyroid hormone liberation which, under physiological circumstances, starts in the extracellular follicle lumen before being continued within endo-lysosomes. Our study shows that all cathepsins tested were capable of processing thyroglobulin at neutral and oxidizing conditions, although these are reportedly non-favorable for cysteine proteases. All analyzed cathepsins generated distinct fragments of thyroglobulin at extracellular versus endo-lysosomal conditions as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblotting or N-terminal sequencing. Moreover, the thyroid hormone thyroxine was liberated by the action of cathepsin S at extracellular conditions, while cathepsins B, K and L worked most efficiently in this respect at endo-lysosomal conditions. CONCLUSION: The results revealed distinct cleavage patterns at all conditions analyzed, indicating compartment-specific processing of thyroglobulin by cysteine cathepsins. In particular, proteolytic activity of cathepsin S towards the substrate thyroglobulin can now be understood as instrumental for extracellular thyroid hormone liberation. Our study emphasizes that the proteolytic functions of cysteine cathepsins in the thyroid are not restricted to endo-lysosomes but include pivotal roles in extracellular substrate utilization. We conclude that understanding of the interplay and fine adjustment of protease networks in vivo is better approachable by simulating physiological conditions in protease activity assays. BioMed Central 2009-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2759951/ /pubmed/19772638 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-23 Text en Copyright © 2009 Jordans et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jordans, Silvia
Jenko-Kokalj, Saša
Kühl, Nicole M
Tedelind, Sofia
Sendt, Wolfgang
Brömme, Dieter
Turk, Dušan
Brix, Klaudia
Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title_full Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title_fullStr Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title_short Monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins B, K, L, and S at physiological pH and redox conditions
title_sort monitoring compartment-specific substrate cleavage by cathepsins b, k, l, and s at physiological ph and redox conditions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2759951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19772638
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-23
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