1. Academic Validation
  2. Purification and characterization of active caspase-14 from human epidermis and development of the cleavage site-directed antibody

Purification and characterization of active caspase-14 from human epidermis and development of the cleavage site-directed antibody

  • J Cell Biochem. 2010 Feb 15;109(3):487-97. doi: 10.1002/jcb.22425.
Toshihiko Hibino 1 Eriko Fujita Yumiko Tsuji Jotaro Nakanishi Haruhi Iwaki Chika Katagiri Takashi Momoi
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Shiseido Life Science Research Center, 2-12-1 Fukuura, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236-8643, Japan.
Abstract

Restricted expression of caspase-14 in differentiating keratinocytes suggests the involvement of caspase-14 in terminal differentiation. We purified active caspase-14 from human cornified cells with sequential chromatographic procedures. Specific activity increased 764-fold with a yield of 9.1%. Purified caspase-14 revealed the highest activity on WEHD-methylcoumaryl-amide (MCA), although YVAD-MCA, another Caspase-1 substrate, was poorly hydrolyzed. The purified protein was a heterodimer with 17 and 11 kDa subunits. N-terminal and C-terminal analyses demonstrated that the large subunit consisted of Ser(6)-Asp(146) and N-terminal of small subunit was identified as Lys(153). We successfully developed an antiserum (anti-h14D146) directed against the Asp(146) cleavage site, which reacted only with active caspase-14 but not with procaspase-14. Furthermore we confirmed that anti-h14D146 did not show any reactivity to the active forms of other caspases. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that anti-h14D146 staining was mostly restricted to the cornified layer and co-localized with some of the TUNEL positive-granular cells in the normal human epidermis. UV radiation study demonstrated that Caspase-3 was activated and co-localized with TUNEL-positive cells in the middle layer of human epidermis. In contrast, we could not detect caspase-14 activation in response to UV. Our study revealed tightly regulated action of caspase-14, in which only the terminal differentiation of keratinocytes controls its activation process.

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