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1: Genes Dev. 1996 May 1;10(9):1073-83.Click here to read Links

The Caenorhabditis elegans cell-death protein CED-3 is a cysteine protease with substrate specificities similar to those of the human CPP32 protease.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.

The Caenorhabditis elegans cell-death gene ced-3 encodes a protein similar to mammalian interleukin-1beta-converting enzyme (ICE), a cysteine protease implicated in mammalian apoptosis. We show that the full-length CED-3 protein undergoes proteolytic activation to generate a CED-3 cysteine protease and that CED-3 protease activity is required for killing cells by programmed cell death in C. elegans. We developed an easy and general method for the purification of CED-3/ICE-like proteases and used this method to facilitate a comparison of the substrate specificities of four different purified cysteine proteases. We found that in its substrate preferences CED-3 was more similar to the mammalian CPP32 protease than to mammalian ICE or NEDD2/ICH-1 protease. Our results suggest that different mammalian CED-3/ICE-like proteases may have distinct roles in mammalian apoptosis and that CPP32 is a candidate for being a mammalian functional equivalent of CED-3.

PMID: 8654923 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]