Gary A. Silverman, M.D., Ph.D. |
Peptide bond hydrolysis is one of the final common events leading to cellular injury and death. Excessive proteolytic activity occurs in virtually all disease states including cancer, atherosclerosis, autoimmunity and infection. To counter the deleterious effects of proteolytic activity, cells express several groups of anti-proteases, of which the serine protease inhibitors (serpins) superfamily is the largest. Serpins evolved over 1000 million years and employ a unique suicide substrate-like inhibitory mechanism to neutralize target proteases. We have characterized a novel subset of serpins that, unlike the canonical circulating serpins such as α1-antitrypsin (SERPINA1), reside predominantly within the cell. The intracellular serpins (serpinsIC) are conserved in all metazoa, lack typical signal peptides and neutralize a diversity of serine and, paradoxically, cysteine proteases. We are using transgenic models in mice and the small nematode, C. elegans, to determine how serpinsIC protect both the intracellular and pericellular milieu of multicellular organisms from the collateral damage inflicted by promiscuous proteolysis and protection from cell death.
- Luke Cliff J., Pak Stephen C., Askew Yuko S., Naviglia Terra L., Askew David J., Nobar Shila M., Vetica Anne C., Long Olivia S, Watkins Simon C., Stolz Donna B., Barstead Robert J., Moulder Gary L., Bromme Dieter, Silverman GA. An intracellular serpin regulates necrosis by inhibiting the induction and sequelae of Lysosomal injury. Cell. 2007 Sep 21;130(6):1108-19.
- Askew DJ, Cataltepe S, Kumar V, Edwards C, Pace SM, Howarth RN, Pak SC, Askew YS, Bromme D, Luke CJ, Whisstock JC, Silverman GA. SERPINB11 Is a New Noninhibitory Intracellular Serpin: Common single nucleotide polymorphisms in the scaffold impair conformational change. J Biol Chem. 282 (34): 24948-60, 2007.
- Pak SC, Kumar V, Tsu C, Luke CJ, Askew YS, Askew DJ, Mills DR, Bromme D, Silverman, GA. Srp-2 Is a Cross-Class Inhibitor that Participates in Post-embryonic Development of the Nematode Caenorhabditis elegans: Initial Characterization of the Clade L Serpins. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2004; 279(15): 15448-15459.
- Silverman GA, Bird PI, Carrell RW, Church FC, Coughlin PB, Gettins PGW, Irving JA, Lomas DA, Luke CJ, Moyer RW, Pemberton PA, Remold-O\'Donnell E. Salvesen FS, Travis J, Whisstock JC. The Serpins are an Expanding Superfamily of Structurally Similar but Functionally Diverse Proteins. J Biol Chem, 2001 Sep 7; 276(36): 33292-33296


