Boivin Wendy Anne, Cooper Dawn Michelle, Hiebert Paul Ryan, Granville David James
UBC James Hogg Research Laboratory, Providence Heart and Lung Institute at St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6, Canada.
Lab Invest. 2009 Nov;89(11):1195-220. doi: 10.1038/labinvest.2009.91. Epub 2009 Sep 21.
The cytotoxic granzyme B (GrB)/perforin pathway has been traditionally viewed as a primary mechanism that is used by cytotoxic lymphocytes to eliminate allogeneic, virally infected and/or transformed cells. Although originally proposed to have intracellular and extracellular functions, upon the discovery that perforin, in combination with GrB, could induce apoptosis, other potential functions for this protease were, for the most part, disregarded. As there are 5 granzymes in humans and 11 granzymes in mice, many studies used perforin knockout mice as an initial screen to evaluate the role of granzymes in disease. However, in recent years, emerging clinical and biochemical evidence has shown that the latter approach may have overlooked a critical perforin-independent, pathogenic role for these proteases in disease. This review focuses on GrB, the most characterized of the granzyme family, in disease. Long known to be a pro-apoptotic protease expressed by cytotoxic lymphocytes and natural killer cells, it is now accepted that GrB can be expressed in other cell types of immune and nonimmune origin. To the latter, an emerging immune-independent role for GrB has been forwarded due to recent discoveries that GrB may be expressed in nonimmune cells such as smooth muscle cells, keratinocytes, and chondrocytes in certain disease states. Given that GrB retains its activity in the blood, can cleave extracellular matrix, and its levels are often elevated in chronic inflammatory diseases, this protease may be an important contributor to certain pathologies. The implications of sustained elevations of intracellular and extracellular GrB in chronic vascular, dermatological, and neurological diseases, among others, are developing. This review examines, for the first time, the multiple roles of GrB in disease pathogenesis.
细胞毒性颗粒酶B(GrB)/穿孔素途径传统上被视为细胞毒性淋巴细胞用于清除异体细胞、病毒感染细胞和/或转化细胞的主要机制。尽管最初认为该途径具有细胞内和细胞外功能,但自发现穿孔素与GrB结合可诱导细胞凋亡后,这种蛋白酶的其他潜在功能在很大程度上被忽视了。由于人类有5种颗粒酶,小鼠有11种颗粒酶,许多研究使用穿孔素基因敲除小鼠作为初步筛选来评估颗粒酶在疾病中的作用。然而,近年来,新出现的临床和生化证据表明,后一种方法可能忽视了这些蛋白酶在疾病中关键的不依赖穿孔素的致病作用。本综述聚焦于颗粒酶家族中特征最明显的GrB在疾病中的作用。长期以来,人们已知GrB是一种由细胞毒性淋巴细胞和自然杀伤细胞表达的促凋亡蛋白酶,现在人们认识到GrB也可在免疫和非免疫来源的其他细胞类型中表达。对于后者,由于最近发现GrB可能在某些疾病状态下在平滑肌细胞、角质形成细胞和软骨细胞等非免疫细胞中表达,GrB出现了一种新的不依赖免疫的作用。鉴于GrB在血液中保持其活性,可裂解细胞外基质,且其水平在慢性炎症性疾病中常升高,这种蛋白酶可能是某些病理过程的重要促成因素。细胞内和细胞外GrB持续升高在慢性血管疾病、皮肤病和神经疾病等中的影响正在逐渐显现。本综述首次探讨了GrB在疾病发病机制中的多种作用。