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Toxins

Publication date: 2021-12-01
Volume: 13
Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)

Author:

Linhares, Debora do Carmo
Faria, Fernanda ; Kodama, Roberto Tadashi ; Amorim, Adriane Michele Xavier Prado ; Portaro, Fernanda Calheta Vieira ; Trevisan-Silva, Dilza ; Ferraz, Karla Fernanda ; Chudzinski-Tavassi, Ana Marisa

Keywords:

cathepsin L, CELLS, cysteine proteases inhibitor, Food Science & Technology, FUNCTIONAL-CHARACTERIZATION, Haementeria vizottoi, IMMUNITY, INNATE, INVOLVEMENT, leech, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, NUCLEAR CATHEPSIN-L, PROTEINASES, recombinant cystatin, SALIVARY CYSTATIN, Science & Technology, SIALOSTATIN-L, TICK, Toxicology, Animals, Cathepsin L, Cystatins, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors, DNA, Complementary, Humans, Leeches, Recombinant Proteins, Saccharomycetales, 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology, 1115 Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 3214 Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences

Abstract:

Cathepsin L (CatL) is a lysosomal cysteine protease primarily involved in the terminal degradation of intracellular and endocytosed proteins. More specifically, in humans, CatL has been implicated in cancer progression and metastasis, as well as coronary artery diseases and others. Given this, the search for potent CatL inhibitors is of great importance. In the search for new molecules to perform proteolytic activity regulation, salivary secretions from hematophagous animals have been an important source, as they present protease inhibitors that evolved to disable host proteases. Based on the transcriptome of the Haementeria vizzotoi leech, the cDNA of Cystatin-Hv was selected for this study. Cystatin-Hv was expressed in Pichia pastoris and purified by two chromatographic steps. The kinetic results using human CatL indicated that Cystatin-Hv, in its recombinant form, is a potent inhibitor of this protease, with a Ki value of 7.9 nM. Consequently, the present study describes, for the first time, the attainment and the biochemical characterization of a recombinant cystatin from leeches as a potent CatL inhibitor. While searching out for new molecules of therapeutic interest, this leech cystatin opens up possibilities for the future use of this molecule in studies involving cellular and in vivo models.