Abstract
Cystatins are natural inhibitors of papain-like (family C1) and legumain-related (family C13) cysteine peptidases. Cystatin D is a type 2 cystatin, a secreted inhibitor found in human saliva and tear fluid. Compared with its homologues, cystatin D presents an unusual inhibition profile with a preferential inhibition cathepsin S > cathepsin H > cathepsin L and no inhibition of cathepsin B or pig legumain. To elucidate the structural reasons for this specificity, we have crystallized recombinant human Arg 26-cystatin D and solved its structures at room temperature and at cryo conditions to 2.5- and 1.8-Å resolution, respectively. Human cystatin D presents the typical cystatin fold, with a five-stranded anti-parallel β-sheet wrapped around a five-turn α-helix. The structures reveal differences in the peptidase-interacting regions when compared with other cystatins, providing plausible explanations for the restricted inhibitory specificity of cystatin D for some papain-like peptidases and its lack of reactivity toward legumain-related enzymes. © 2005 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Alvarez-Fernandez, M., Liang, Y. H., Abrahamson, M., & Su, X. D. (2005). Crystal structure of human cystatin D, a cysteine peptidase inhibitor with restricted inhibition profile. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 280(18), 18221–18228. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M411914200
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