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Publicly Available Published by De Gruyter September 1, 2012

Current and prospective applications of non-proteinogenic amino acids in profiling of proteases substrate specificity

  • Paulina Kasperkiewicz , Anna D. Gajda and Marcin Drąg EMAIL logo
From the journal Biological Chemistry

Abstract

Proteases recognize their endogenous substrates based largely on a sequence of proteinogenic amino acids that surrounds the cleavage site. Currently, several methods are available to determine protease substrate specificity based on approaches employing proteinogenic amino acids. The knowledge about the specificity of proteases can be significantly extended by application of structurally diverse families of non-proteinogenic amino acids. From a chemical point of view, this information may be used to design specific substrates, inhibitors, or activity-based probes, while biological functions of proteases, such as posttranslational modifications can also be investigated. In this review, we discuss current and prospective technologies for application of non-proteinogenic amino acids in protease substrate specificity profiling.


Corresponding author

Received: 2012-3-23
Accepted: 2012-4-26
Published Online: 2012-09-01
Published in Print: 2012-09-01

©2012 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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