Croall Dorothy E, Ersfeld Klaus
Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Molecular Biology, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5735, USA.
Genome Biol. 2007;8(6):218. doi: 10.1186/gb-2007-8-6-218.
The calpain family is named for the calcium dependence of the papain-like, thiol protease activity of the well-studied ubiquitous vertebrate enzymes calpain-1 (mu-calpain) and calpain-2 (m-calpain). Proteins showing sequence relatedness to the catalytic core domains of these enzymes are included in this ancient and diverse eukaryotic protein family. Calpains are examples of highly modular organization, with several varieties of amino-terminal or carboxy-terminal modules flanking a conserved core. Acquisition of the penta-EF-hand module involved in calcium binding (and the formation of heterodimers for some calpains) seems to be a relatively late event in calpain evolution. Several alternative mechanisms for binding calcium and associating with membranes/phospholipids are found throughout the family. The gene family is expanded in mammals, trypanosomes and ciliates, with up to 26 members in Tetrahymena, for example; in striking contrast to this, only a single calpain gene is present in many other protozoa and in plants. The many isoforms of calpain and their multiple splice variants complicate the discussion and analysis of the family, and challenge researchers to ascertain the relationships between calpain gene sequences, protein isoforms and their distinct or overlapping functions. In mammals and plants it is clear that a calpain plays an essential role in development. There is increasing evidence that ubiquitous calpains participate in a variety of signal transduction pathways and function in important cellular processes of life and death. In contrast to relatively promiscuous degradative proteases, calpains cleave only a restricted set of protein substrates and use complex substrate-recognition mechanisms, involving primary and secondary structural features of target proteins. The detailed physiological significance of both proteolytically active calpains and those lacking key catalytic residues requires further study.
钙蛋白酶家族得名于已被充分研究的普遍存在于脊椎动物中的钙蛋白酶-1(μ-钙蛋白酶)和钙蛋白酶-2(m-钙蛋白酶)的木瓜蛋白酶样巯基蛋白酶活性对钙的依赖性。与这些酶的催化核心结构域具有序列相关性的蛋白质被纳入这个古老且多样的真核蛋白质家族。钙蛋白酶是高度模块化组织的例子,在保守核心的两侧有几种不同类型的氨基末端或羧基末端模块。参与钙结合(以及某些钙蛋白酶形成异二聚体)的五聚体EF手型模块的获得似乎是钙蛋白酶进化过程中相对较晚发生的事件。在整个家族中发现了几种结合钙并与膜/磷脂结合的替代机制。该基因家族在哺乳动物、锥虫和纤毛虫中有所扩展,例如在四膜虫中多达26个成员;与此形成鲜明对比的是,许多其他原生动物和植物中仅存在一个钙蛋白酶基因。钙蛋白酶的众多同工型及其多种剪接变体使该家族的讨论和分析变得复杂,并促使研究人员确定钙蛋白酶基因序列、蛋白质同工型及其独特或重叠功能之间的关系。在哺乳动物和植物中,很明显钙蛋白酶在发育中起着至关重要的作用。越来越多的证据表明,普遍存在的钙蛋白酶参与多种信号转导途径,并在生死攸关的重要细胞过程中发挥作用。与相对随意的降解性蛋白酶不同,钙蛋白酶仅切割一组有限的蛋白质底物,并使用复杂的底物识别机制,涉及靶蛋白的一级和二级结构特征。具有蛋白水解活性的钙蛋白酶和缺乏关键催化残基的钙蛋白酶的详细生理意义都需要进一步研究。