Squash Inhibitors: From Structural Motifs to Macrocyclic Knottins

  • Chiche L
  • Heitz A
  • Gelly J
  • et al.
155Citations
Citations of this article
59Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

In this article, we will first introduce the squash inhibitor, a well established family of highly potent canonical serine proteinase inhibitors isolated from Cucurbitaceae. The squash inhibitors were among the first discovered proteins with the typical knottin fold shared by numerous peptides extracted from plants, animals and fungi. Knottins contain three knotted disulfide bridges, two of them arranged as a Cystine-Stabilized Beta-sheet motif. In contrast to cyclotides for which no natural linear homolog is known, most squash inhibitors are linear. However, Momordica cochinchinensis Trypsin Inhibitor-I and (MCoTI-I and -II), 34-residue squash inhibitors isolated from seeds of a common Cucurbitaceae from Vietnam, were recently shown to be macrocyclic. In these circular squash inhibitors, a short peptide linker connects residues that correspond to the N- and C-termini in homologous linear squash inhibitors. In this review we present the isolation, characterization, chemical synthesis, and activity of these macrocyclic knottins. The solution structure of MCoTI-II will be compared with topologically similar cyclotides, homologous linear squash inhibitors and other knottins, and potential applications of such scaffolds will be discussed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chiche, L., Heitz, A., Gelly, J.-C., Gracy, J., Chau, P., Ha, P., … Le-Nguyen, D. (2005). Squash Inhibitors: From Structural Motifs to Macrocyclic Knottins. Current Protein & Peptide Science, 5(5), 341–349. https://doi.org/10.2174/1389203043379477

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free