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Engineering Calpastatin To Develop A Sensor To Detect Active Calpain, Lisa M. Vanhooser
Engineering Calpastatin To Develop A Sensor To Detect Active Calpain, Lisa M. Vanhooser
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Calpains, Ca2+-activated cysteine proteases are essential for early embryonic development and function in signal transduction, cell adhesion, and apoptosis. Calpains also contribute to cataractogenesis, myocardial infarctions, and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. The various methods currently available to demonstrate these roles do not directly identify spatial or temporal activation of calpain in cells. Therefore, a tool to detect active calpain in situ will be useful. Calpastatin is the ubiquitous, endogenous inhibitor that specifically binds the active conformation of the conventional calpains. Calpastatin consists of four homologous domains each containing three subdomains A, B, and C. The crystal structure …