The defining features of the widely conserved HtrA (high temperature requirement) family of serine proteases are the combination of a catalytic protease domain with one or more C-terminal PDZ domains and reversible zymogen activation. Even though HtrAs have previously been implicated in protein quality control and various diseases, including cancer, arthritis, and neuromuscular disorder, the biology of the human family members is not well understood. Our data suggest that HtrA1 is directly involved in the β-amyloid pathway as it degrades various fragments of amyloid precursor protein while an HtrA1 inhibitor causes accumulation of Aβ in astrocyte cell culture supernatants. Furthermore, HtrA1 colocalizes with β-amyloid deposits in human brai...
HtrA1 belongs to a family of serine proteases found in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. Ba...
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....
The defining features of the widely conserved HtrA (high temperature requirement) family of serine p...
Protective proteases are key elements of protein quality control pathways that are up-regulated, for...
Protective proteases are key elements of protein quality control pathways that are up-regulated, for...
Human HtrA1 belongs to a widely conserved family of serine proteases involved in various aspects of ...
The mammalian high temperature requirement A (HtrA) proteins are a family of evolutionarily conserve...
High-temperature requirement serine protease A1 (HTRA1) is one of four known proteases belonging to ...
HtrA1 (High temperature requirement A1) family proteins include four members, widely conserved from ...
HTRA1 is a serine protease of the trypsin family, as discussed below. The scientific data suggests ...
Human HTRA1 is a highly conserved secreted serine protease that degrades numerous extracellular matr...
Mammalian HtrA (high temperature requirement factor A) proteases, comprising 4 multi-domain members ...
ABSTRACT: Human HtrA1 (high-temperature requirement protein A1) belongs to a conserved family of ser...
Excessive aggregation of proteins has a major impact on cell fate and is a hallmark of amyloid disea...
HtrA1 belongs to a family of serine proteases found in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. Ba...
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....
The defining features of the widely conserved HtrA (high temperature requirement) family of serine p...
Protective proteases are key elements of protein quality control pathways that are up-regulated, for...
Protective proteases are key elements of protein quality control pathways that are up-regulated, for...
Human HtrA1 belongs to a widely conserved family of serine proteases involved in various aspects of ...
The mammalian high temperature requirement A (HtrA) proteins are a family of evolutionarily conserve...
High-temperature requirement serine protease A1 (HTRA1) is one of four known proteases belonging to ...
HtrA1 (High temperature requirement A1) family proteins include four members, widely conserved from ...
HTRA1 is a serine protease of the trypsin family, as discussed below. The scientific data suggests ...
Human HTRA1 is a highly conserved secreted serine protease that degrades numerous extracellular matr...
Mammalian HtrA (high temperature requirement factor A) proteases, comprising 4 multi-domain members ...
ABSTRACT: Human HtrA1 (high-temperature requirement protein A1) belongs to a conserved family of ser...
Excessive aggregation of proteins has a major impact on cell fate and is a hallmark of amyloid disea...
HtrA1 belongs to a family of serine proteases found in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. Ba...
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....
Cells precisely monitor the concentration and functionality of each protein for optimal performance....