4.5 Editorial Material

Kinases leave their mark on caspase substrates

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 478, Issue 17, Pages 3179-3184

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20210399

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Funding

  1. Career Award at the Scientific Interface from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund [1017065]
  2. Steenbock Career Award from the University of Wisconsin

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Phosphorylation within caspase cleavage sites can affect the efficiency of substrate cleavage by attenuating the rate, but inhibition can sometimes be overcome by additional favorable substrate features, suggesting nuanced physiological roles for phosphorylation of caspase substrates. These findings have implications for targeting caspases with chemical probes and therapeutics.
Apoptosis is a cell death program that is executed by the caspases, a family of cysteine proteases that typically cleave after aspartate residues during a proteolytic cascade that systematically dismantles the dying cell. Extensive signaling crosstalk occurs between caspase-mediated proteolysis and kinase-mediated phosphorylation, enabling integration of signals from multiple pathways into the decision to commit to apoptosis. A new study from Maluch et al. examines how phosphorylation within caspase cleavage sites impacts the efficiency of substrate cleavage. The results demonstrate that while phosphorylation in close proximity to the scissile bond is generally inhibitory, it does not necessarily abrogate substrate cleavage, but instead attenuates the rate. In some cases, this inhibition can be overcome by additional favorable substrate features. These findings suggest potential nuanced physiological roles for phosphorylation of caspase substrates with exciting implications for targeting caspases with chemical probes and therapeutics.

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