PADI1 is a calcium-dependent peptidylarginine deiminase that reprogrammes substrate protein function through site-specific citrullination, with broad consequences for cell metabolism, migration, and stress signaling (PMID:33741961). Biochemically, PADI1 citrullinates pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) at R106, altering allosteric cross-talk among PKM2 ligands — lowering sensitivity to the inhibitors tryptophan, alanine, and phenylalanine while enhancing serine-driven activation — so that PKM2 bypasses normal regulation by low serine and drives excessive glycolysis (PMID:33741961). In keratinocytes, PADI1 transcription is driven by the transcription factors MZF1 and Sp1/Sp3, which bind its promoter, and MZF1 rises in parallel with PADI1 during differentiation (PMID:17851584). Beyond its biochemical activity, PADI1 acts upstream of MAPK cascades in disease contexts: it promotes pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma migration, invasion, and EMT via ERK1/2-p38 signaling (PMID:34295566), and it drives endoplasmic reticulum stress and apoptosis in trophoblast cells through the FAK/ERK1/2 pathway (PMID:40424721). Apart from the PKM2 R106 site, additional direct substrates underlying these signaling phenotypes have not been identified in the available corpus.