- Series
- Mathematical Biology Seminar
- Time
- Wednesday, October 19, 2011 - 11:00am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Manu O. Platt – Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology & Emory University
- Organizer
- Christine Heitsch
Cathepsins
are enzymes that can cleave collagen and elastin, major structural proteins of
tissue and organs, and participate in tissue-destructive disease progression
seen in osteoporosis, arthritis, atherosclerosis, and cancer metastasis. Detection
of mature cathepsins and quantification of specific activity have proven
difficult due to instability of the mature, active enzyme extracellularly, which
has led to them being overlooked in a number of diseases. During this
seminar, Dr. Platt will discuss the important development of a reliable,
sensitive method to detect the activity of mature cathepsins K, L, S, and V. Then he will focus on their progress
towards developing a comprehensive computational model of cathepsin-mediated
degradation of extracellular matrix, based on systems of ordinary differential
equations. From the computational model and
experimental results, a general assumption of inertness between familial
enzymes was shown to be invalid as it failed to account for the interaction of
these proteases among themselves and within their microenvironment. A consequence of this was significant
overestimation of total degradative potential in multiple cathepsin reaction
systems. After refining the system to capture the cathepsin interactive
dynamics and match the experimental degradation results, novel mechanisms of
cathepsin degradation and inactivation were revealed and suggest new ways to
inhibit their activity for therapeutic benefit.