metalloendopeptidases
Metalloendopeptidases are a broad class of zinc-dependent proteolytic enzymes that cleave peptide bonds at interior sites within polypeptides (endopeptidases). They require a metal ion at the active site to catalyze hydrolysis and are distinguished from exopeptidases that trim residues from the ends of peptide chains. The most common metal is zinc, coordinated by conserved histidine residues; in many enzymes a catalytic glutamate acts as a general base to activate a bound water molecule, which then performs a nucleophilic attack on the peptide bond.
Subfamilies include matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), neprilysin and related zinc metallopeptidases, ADAMs and ADAMTS (a disintegrin and
Biological roles and regulation are broad. They participate in extracellular matrix remodeling, processing of signaling peptides,
Clinical relevance is significant; dysregulation of metalloproteases is associated with cancer invasion and metastasis, arthritis, fibrosis,