Coding

Part:BBa_K258002

Designed by: Ozkan IS   Group: iGEM09_METU-Gene   (2009-10-03)
Revision as of 11:12, 17 October 2009 by Metugen (Talk | contribs)

Granulysin, a protein located in the acidic granules of human NK cells and cytotoxic T cells, has antimicrobial activity against a broad spectrum of microbial pathogens. Granulysin increased the permeability of bacterial membranes, as judged by its ability to allow access of cytosolic ß-galactosidase to its impermeant substrate. It functions to create holes in the target cell membrane and destroy it. Granulysin is able to induce apoptosis in target cells and also has antimicrobial action.

Moreover,it induces lesions on the surface of bacteria and separation of the cell wall and membranes from the cytoplasm.

Properties of Granulysin
1. A substance released by cytotoxic T cells (CD8) when attached to infected body cells.
2. Creating holes in the target cell membrane and destroy it.
3. Inducing apoptosis in target cells and have antimicrobial action.
4. Cytolytic and proinflammatory molecule first identified by subtractive hybridization during a search for genes expressed by human cytotoxic T lymphocytes 3-5 days after their activation.
5. Expressed in cytolytic granules with perforin, a pore forming protein, and granzymes involved in cytolysis.
6. Broadly antimicrobial, killing microbes (whole gram-positive and gram-negatif bacteria) that cause, for example, tuberculosis and malaria, and can destroy some tumors.
7. A series of peptides of Granulysin used as potential antibiotics.
8. A member of the saposin-like protein (SAPLIP) family.

[edit]
Categories
//chassis/eukaryote/human
//collections/antimicrobial
//function/celldeath
//function/immunology
Parameters
function
protein