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  lüll Proteases for cell suicide: functions and regulation of caspases Chang HY; Yang XMicrobiol Mol Biol Rev  2000[Dec]; 64 (4): 821-46Caspases are a large family of evolutionarily conserved proteases found from  Caenorhabditis elegans to humans. Although the first caspase was identified as a  processing enzyme for interleukin-1beta, genetic and biochemical data have  converged to reveal that many caspases are key mediators of apoptosis, the  intrinsic cell suicide program essential for development and tissue homeostasis.  Each caspase is a cysteine aspartase; it employs a nucleophilic cysteine in its  active site to cleave aspartic acid peptide bonds within proteins. Caspases are  synthesized as inactive precursors termed procaspases; proteolytic processing of  procaspase generates the tetrameric active caspase enzyme, composed of two  repeating heterotypic subunits. Based on kinetic data, substrate specificity, and  procaspase structure, caspases have been conceptually divided into initiators and  effectors. Initiator caspases activate effector caspases in response to specific  cell death signals, and effector caspases cleave various cellular proteins to  trigger apoptosis. Adapter protein-mediated oligomerization of procaspases is now  recognized as a universal mechanism of initiator caspase activation and underlies  the control of both cell surface death receptor and mitochondrial cytochrome  c-Apaf-1 apoptosis pathways. Caspase substrates have bene identified that induce  each of the classic features of apoptosis, including membrane blebbing, cell body  shrinkage, and DNA fragmentation. Mice deficient for caspase genes have  highlighted tissue- and signal-specific pathways for apoptosis and demonstrated  an independent function for caspase-1 and -11 in cytokine processing.  Dysregulation of caspases features prominently in many human diseases, including  cancer, autoimmunity, and neurodegenerative disorders, and increasing evidence  shows that altering caspase activity can confer therapeutic benefits.|*Apoptosis[MESH]|Animals[MESH]|Caspases/*metabolism[MESH]|Disease/etiology[MESH]|Enzyme Activation[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Signal Transduction[MESH]|Substrate Specificity[MESH] |