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Specific inactivation of cysteine protease-type cathepsin by singlet oxygen generated from naphthalene endoperoxides.

   
Author Nagaoka, Yuki, et al.
Citation Information Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 331: 215-23 (2005), : (2005)
Related Products S7150
Pub Med ID 15845381
   

Abstract

Singlet oxygen is a causal factor in light-induced skin photoaging and the cytotoxic process of tumor cells in photodynamic chemotherapy. To develop a better understanding of the functional consequences of protein modification by singlet oxygen, the effects of naphthalene endoperoxide on lysosomal protease, cathepsin, were examined. When the soluble fraction of normal human fetal skin fibroblast cells was treated with the endoperoxide, the activities of cysteine proteases, cathepsins B and L/S, were inhibited, but that of aspartate protease, cathepsin D/E, was not. The reduction of the endoperoxide-treated soluble fractions by treatment with dithiothreitol barely recovered the activities. Cathepsin B, purified from normal human liver, exhibited similar profiles to that in cytosol. These data suggest that singlet oxygen oxidatively modifies an amino acid residue essential for catalysis and consequently results in the irreversible inactivation of cysteine protease-type cathepsin.