Caspase 3

Caspase-3 is a caspase protein that interacts with caspase-8 and caspase-9. It is encoded by the CASP3 gene. CASP3 orthologs have been identified in numerous mammals for which complete genome data are available. Unique orthologs are also present in birds, lizards, lissamphibians, and teleosts.

CASP3
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
AliasesCASP3, CPP32, CPP32B, SCA-1, caspase 3
External IDsOMIM: 600636 MGI: 107739 HomoloGene: 37912 GeneCards: CASP3
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez

836

12367

Ensembl

ENSG00000164305

ENSMUSG00000031628

UniProt

P42574

P70677

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_004346
NM_032991

NM_009810
NM_001284409

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001271338
NP_033940

Location (UCSC)n/aChr 8: 47.07 – 47.09 Mb
PubMed search
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse

The CASP3 protein is a member of the cysteine-aspartic acid protease (caspase) family. Sequential activation of caspases plays a central role in the execution-phase of cell apoptosis. Caspases exist as inactive proenzymes that undergo proteolytic processing at conserved aspartic residues to produce two subunits, large and small, that dimerize to form the active enzyme. This protein cleaves and activates caspases 6 and 7; and the protein itself is processed and activated by caspases 8, 9, and 10. It is the predominant caspase involved in the cleavage of amyloid-beta 4A precursor protein, which is associated with neuronal death in Alzheimer's disease. Alternative splicing of this gene results in two transcript variants that encode the same protein.

Caspase-3 shares many of the typical characteristics common to all currently-known caspases. For example, its active site contains a cysteine residue (Cys-163) and histidine residue (His-121) that stabilize the peptide bond cleavage of a protein sequence to the carboxy-terminal side of an aspartic acid when it is part of a particular 4-amino acid sequence. This specificity allows caspases to be incredibly selective, with a 20,000-fold preference for aspartic acid over glutamic acid. A key feature of caspases in the cell is that they are present as zymogens, termed procaspases, which are inactive until a biochemical change causes their activation. Each procaspase has an N-terminal large subunit of about 20 kDa followed by a smaller subunit of about 10 kDa, called p20 and p10, respectively.

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