serpin family B member 6, cytoplasmic antiproteinase
Cytoplasmic antiproteinase (CAP, also called proteinase inhibitor 6/PI6 or placental thrombin inhibitor/PTI) is thought to be involved in the regulation of serine proteinases present in the brain or extravasated from the blood. It may play an important role in the inner ear in the protection against leakage of lysosomal content during stress; loss of this protection results in cell death and sensorineural hearing loss. It is an inhibitor of cathepsin G, kallikrein-8 and thrombin. The ovalbumin family of serpins (ov-serpins) is a family of closely related proteins, whose members can be secreted (ovalbumin), cytosolic (leukocyte elastase inhibitor, LEI), or targeted to both compartments (plasminogen activator inhibitor 2, PAI-2). It also characterized by N- and C-terminal extensions, the absence of a signal peptide, and a Ser rather than an Asn residue at the penultimate position. The ov-serpins corresponds to clade B of the serpin superfamily. In general, SERine Proteinase INhibitors (serpins) exhibit conformational polymorphism shifting from native to cleaved, latent, delta, or polymorphic forms. Many serpins, such as antitrypsin and antichymotrypsin, function as serine protease inhibitors which regulate blood coagulation cascades. Non-inhibitory serpins perform many diverse functions such as chaperoning proteins or transporting hormones. Serpins are of medical interest because mutants can cause blood clotting disorders, emphysema, cirrhosis, and dementia. A classification based on evolutionary relatedness has resulted in the assignment of serpins to 16 clades designated A-P along with some orphans.
Comment:depending on the conformational state, RCL is surface accessible in the active form or buried and inserted as the central beta strand in the inactive form