A Coupled Protein and Probe Engineering Approach for
Selective Inhibition and Activity-Based Probe Labeling of the Caspases
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Abstract
Caspases
are cysteine proteases that play essential roles in apoptosis
and inflammation. Unfortunately, their highly conserved active sites
and overlapping substrate specificities make it difficult to use inhibitors
or activity-based probes to study the function, activation, localization,
and regulation of individual members of this family. Here we describe
a strategy to engineer a caspase to contain a latent nucleophile that
can be targeted by a probe containing a suitably placed electrophile,
thereby allowing specific, irreversible inhibition and labeling of
only the engineered protease. To accomplish this, we have identified
a non-conserved residue on the small subunit of all caspases that
is near the substrate-binding pocket and that can be mutated to a
non-catalytic cysteine residue. We demonstrate that an active-site
probe containing an irreversible binding acrylamide electrophile can
specifically target this cysteine residue. Here we validate the approach
using the apoptotic mediator, caspase-8, and the inflammasome effector,
caspase-1. We show that the engineered enzymes are functionally identical
to the wild-type enzymes and that the approach allows specific inhibition
and direct imaging of the engineered targets in cells. Therefore,
this method can be used to image localization and activation as well
as the functional contributions of individual caspase proteases to
the process of cell death or inflammation