Eglin C, a small protein from the medicinal leech, has been long considered a general high-affinity inhibitor of chymotrypsins and elastases. Here, we demonstrate that eglin C inhibits human chymotrypsin-like protease (CTRL) weaker by several orders of magnitude than other chymotrypsins. In order to identify the underlying structural aspects of this unique deviation, we performed comparative molecular dynamics simulations on experimental and AlphaFold model structures of bovine CTRA and human CTRL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChymotrypsin-like protease (CTRL) is one of the four chymotrypsin isoforms expressed in the human exocrine pancreas. Human genetic and experimental evidence indicate that chymotrypsins B1, B2, and C (CTRB1, CTRB2 and CTRC) are important not only for protein digestion but also for protecting the pancreas against pancreatitis by degrading potentially harmful trypsinogen. CTRL has not been reported to play a similar role, possibly due to its low abundance and/or different substrate specificity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutual synergistic folding (MSF) proteins belong to a recently emerged subclass of disordered proteins, which are disordered in their monomeric forms but become ordered in their oligomeric forms. They can be identified by experimental methods following their unfolding, which happens in a single-step cooperative process, without the presence of stable monomeric intermediates. Only a limited number of experimentally validated MSF proteins are accessible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPancreatic chymotrypsins (CTRs) are digestive proteases that in humans include CTRB1, CTRB2, CTRC, and CTRL. The highly similar CTRB1 and CTRB2 are the products of gene duplication. A common inversion at the CTRB1-CTRB2 locus reverses the expression ratio of these isoforms in favor of CTRB2.
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