Vol. 116 No. 1 (2011)
Original Article

Imaging of protease functions – current guide to spotting cysteine cathepsins in classical and novel scenes of action in mammalian epithelial cells and tissues

Published 2011-07-19

Keywords

  • activity based probes,
  • enzyme cytochemistry,
  • green fluorescent protein,
  • immunofluorescence,
  • protein trafficking

How to Cite

Arampatzidou, M., Rehders, M., Dauth, S., Yu, D. M., Tedelind, S., & Brix, K. (2011). Imaging of protease functions – current guide to spotting cysteine cathepsins in classical and novel scenes of action in mammalian epithelial cells and tissues. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 116(1), 1–19. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/1087

Abstract

The human genome encodes some hundreds of proteases. Many of these are well studied and understood with respect to their biochemistry, molecular mechanisms of proteolytic cleavage, expression patterns, molecular structure, substrate preferences and regulatory mechanisms, including their endogenous inhibitors. Moreover, precise determination of protease localisation within subcellular compartments, peri- and extracellular spaces has been extremely useful in elucidating biological functions of peptidases. This can be achieved by refined methodology as will be demonstrated herein for the cysteine cathepsins. Besides localisation, it is now feasible to study in situ enzymatic activity at the various levels of subcellular compartments, cells, tissues, and even whole organisms including mouse.