Proteases occur in all organisms, from
prokaryotes to
eukaryotes to
viruses. These enzymes are involved in a multitude of physiological reactions from simple digestion of food proteins to highly regulated cascades (e.g., the
blood-clotting cascade, the
complement system,
apoptosis pathways, and the invertebrate prophenoloxidase-activating cascade). Proteases can either break specific peptide bonds (
limited proteolysis), depending on the
amino acid sequence of a protein, or completely break down a peptide to amino acids (
unlimited proteolysis). The activity can be a destructive change (abolishing a protein's function or digesting it to its principal components), it can be an activation of a function, or it can be a signal in a signalling pathway.
Plants Plant genomes encode hundreds of proteases, largely of unknown function. Those with known function are largely involved in
developmental regulation. Plant proteases also play a role in regulation of
photosynthesis.
Animals Proteases are used throughout an organism for various metabolic processes. Acid proteases secreted into the stomach (such as
pepsin) and serine proteases present in the
duodenum (
trypsin and
chymotrypsin) enable the digestion of protein in food. Proteases present in blood serum (
thrombin,
plasmin,
Hageman factor, etc.) play an important role in blood-clotting, as well as lysis of the clots, and the correct action of the immune system. Other proteases are present in leukocytes (
elastase,
cathepsin G) and play several different roles in metabolic control. Some
snake venoms are also proteases, such as
pit viper haemotoxin, which interferes with the victim's blood clotting cascade. Proteases determine the lifetime of other proteins playing important physiological roles like hormones, antibodies, or other enzymes. This is one of the fastest "switching on" and "switching off" regulatory mechanisms in the physiology of an organism. By a complex cooperative action, proteases can catalyze
cascade reactions, which result in rapid and efficient amplification of an organism's response to a physiological signal.
Bacteria Bacteria secrete proteases to
hydrolyse the peptide bonds in proteins and therefore break the proteins down into their constituent
amino acids. Bacterial and fungal proteases are particularly important to the global
carbon and
nitrogen cycles in the recycling of proteins, and such activity tends to be regulated by nutritional signals in these organisms. The net impact of nutritional regulation of protease activity among the thousands of species present in soil can be observed at the overall microbial community level as proteins are broken down in response to carbon, nitrogen, or sulfur limitation. Bacteria contain proteases responsible for general protein quality control (e.g. the AAA+
proteasome) by degrading
unfolded or misfolded proteins. A secreted bacterial protease may also act as an exotoxin, and be an example of a
virulence factor in bacterial
pathogenesis (for example,
exfoliative toxin). Bacterial exotoxic proteases destroy extracellular structures.
Viruses The genomes of some
viruses encode one massive
polyprotein, which needs a protease to cleave this into functional units (e.g. the
hepatitis C virus and the
picornaviruses). These proteases (e.g.
TEV protease) have high specificity and only cleave a very restricted set of substrate sequences. They are therefore a common target for
protease inhibitors.
Archaea Archaea use proteases to regulate various cellular processes from
cell-signaling,
metabolism,
secretion and protein quality control. Only two ATP-dependent proteases are found in archaea: the membrane associated LonB protease and a soluble
20S proteosome complex. ==Uses==