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  2. Serine protease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serine_protease

    Serine proteases (or serine endopeptidases) are enzymes that cleave peptide bonds in proteins. Serine serves as the nucleophilic amino acid at the (enzyme's) active site . [ 1 ] They are found ubiquitously in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes .

  3. Glutamyl endopeptidase I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamyl_endopeptidase_I

    Glutamyl endopeptidase I is a family of extracellular bacterial serine proteases. The proteases within this family have been identified in species of Staphylococcus, Bacillus, and Streptomyces, among others. The two former are more closely related, while the Streptomyces-type is treated as a separate family, glutamyl endopeptidase II. [1]

  4. Endopeptidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endopeptidase

    For this reason, endopeptidases cannot break down peptides into monomers, while exopeptidases can break down proteins into monomers. A particular case of endopeptidase is the oligopeptidase, whose substrates are oligopeptides instead of proteins. They are usually very specific for certain amino acids. Examples of endopeptidases include:

  5. Glutamyl endopeptidase GluV8 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamyl_endopeptidase_GluV8

    Glutamyl endopeptidase (EC 3.4.21.19, SspA, V8 protease, GluV8, endoproteinase Glu-C, staphylococcal serine proteinase) is an extracellular bacterial serine protease of the glutamyl endopeptidase I family that was initially isolated from the Staphylococcus aureus strain V8.

  6. Category:EC 3.4.21 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:EC_3.4.21

    EC 3.4.21 Serine endopeptidases. Pages in category "EC 3.4.21" The following 127 pages are in this category, out of 127 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *

  7. Subtilase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtilase

    They appear to have independently and convergently evolved an Asp/Ser/His catalytic triad, like in the trypsin serine proteases. The structure of proteins in this family shows that they have an alpha/beta fold containing a 7-stranded parallel beta sheet. The subtilisin family is the second largest serine protease family characterised to date.

  8. Signal peptidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_peptidase

    All signal peptidases described so far are serine proteases. The active site that endoproteolytically cleaves signal peptides from translocated precursor proteins is located at the extracytoplasmic site of the membrane. The eukaryotic signal peptidase is an integral membrane protein complex. The first subunit, which was identified by yeast ...

  9. Enteropeptidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enteropeptidase

    Enteropeptidase is a type II transmembrane serine protease (TTSP) localized to the brush border of the duodenal and jejunal mucosa and synthesized as a zymogen, proenteropeptidase, which requires activation by duodenase or trypsin. [9] TTSPs are synthesized as single chain zymogens with N-terminal propeptide sequences of different lengths.