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The under‐appreciated world of the serpin family of serine proteinase inhibitors

Marie‐Christine Bouton, Margarethe Geiger, William P. Sheffield, James A. Irving, David A. Lomas, Sihong Song, Ritvik Srivant Satyanarayanan, Liqiang Zhang, Grant McFadden, Alexandra Lucas

2023EMBO Molecular Medicine35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the practice of medicine, many fundamental biological pathways that require tight on/off control, such as inflammation and circulatory homeostasis, are regulated by serine proteinases, but we rarely consider the unique protease inhibitors that, in turn, regulate these proteases. The serpins are a family of proteins with a shared tertiary structure, whose members largely act as serine protease inhibitors, found in all forms of life, ranging from viruses, bacteria, and archaea to plants and animals. These proteins represent up to 2-10% of proteins in the human blood and are the third most common protein family.

Topics & Concepts

SerpinProteasesSerine Proteinase InhibitorsSerine proteaseSerineBiologyProtein familyProteaseMASP1BiochemistryComputational biologyCell biologyEnzymeGeneProtease and Inhibitor MechanismsBlood Coagulation and Thrombosis MechanismsVenomous Animal Envenomation and Studies