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1.
The bioactivity of interleukin-6 (IL-6) was found to be dramatically reduced in fluids from sites of inflammation. Here, we provide evidence that the neutrophil-derived serine proteases elastase, proteinase 3 and cathepsin G are mainly involved in its degradation and subsequent inactivation. The initially hydrolyzed peptide bonds were detected to be Val(11)-Ala(12) and Leu(19)-Thr(20) (elastase), Phe(78)-Asn(79) (cathepsin G) and Ala(145)-Ser(146) (proteinase 3). The soluble IL-6 receptor elicits a protective effect against the IL-6 inactivation by cathepsin G only. The inactivation of IL-6 by neutrophil-derived serine proteases might act as a feedback mechanism terminating the IL-6-induced activation of neutrophils.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction of heparin cofactor II with neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We investigated the interaction of the human plasma proteinase inhibitor heparin cofactor II (HC) with human neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G in order to examine 1) proteinase inhibition by HC, 2) inactivation of HC, and 3) the effect of glycosaminoglycans on inhibition and inactivation. We found that HC inhibited cathepsin G, but not elastase, with a rate constant of 6.0 x 10(6) M-1 min-1. Inhibition was stable, with a dissociation rate constant of 1.0 x 10(-3) min-1. Heparin and dermatan sulfate diminished inhibition slightly. Both neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G at catalytic concentrations destroyed the thrombin inhibition activity of HC. Inactivation was accompanied by a dramatic increase in heat stability, as occurs with other serine proteinase inhibitors. Proteolysis of HC (Mr 66,000) produced a species (Mr 58,000) that retained thrombin inhibition activity, and an inactive species of Mr 48,000. Amino acid sequence analysis led to the conclusion that both neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G cleave HC at Ile66, which does not affect HC activity, and at Val439, near the reactive site Leu444, which inactivates HC. Since cathepsin G is inhibited by HC and also inactivates HC, we conclude that cathepsin G participates in both reactions simultaneously so that small amounts of cathepsin G can inactivate a molar excess of HC. High concentrations of heparin and dermatan sulfate accelerated inactivation of HC by neutrophil proteinases, with heparin having a greater effect. Heparin and dermatan sulfate appeared to alter the pattern, and not just the rate, of proteolysis of HC. We conclude that while HC is an effective inhibitor of cathepsin G, it can be proteolyzed by neutrophil proteinases to generate first an active inhibitor and then an inactive molecule. This two-step mechanism might be important in the generation of chemotactic activity from the amino-terminal region of HC.  相似文献   

3.
MNEI (monocyte/neutrophil elastase inhibitor) is a 42 kDa serpin superfamily protein characterized initially as a fast-acting inhibitor of neutrophil elastase. Here we show that MNEI has a broader specificity, efficiently inhibiting proteases with elastase- and chymotrypsin-like specificities. Reaction of MNEI with neutrophil proteinase-3, an elastase-like protease, and porcine pancreatic elastase demonstrated rapid inhibition rate constants >10(7) M(-1) s(-1), similar to that observed for neutrophil elastase. Reactions of MNEI with chymotrypsin-like proteases were also rapid: cathepsin G from neutrophils (>10(6) M(-1) s(-1)), mast cell chymase (>10(5) M(-1) s(-1)), chymotrypsin (>10(6) M(-1) s(-1)), and prostate-specific antigen (PSA), which had the slowest rate constant at approximately 10(4) M(-1) s(-1). Inhibition of trypsin-like (plasmin, granzyme A, and thrombin) and caspase-like (granzyme B) serine proteases was not observed or highly inefficient (trypsin), nor was inhibition of proteases from the cysteine (caspase-1 and caspase-3) and metalloprotease (macrophage elastase, MMP-12) families. The stoichiometry of inhibition for all inhibitory reactions was near 1, and inhibitory complexes were resistant to dissociation by SDS, further indicating the specificity of MNEI for elastase- and chymotrypsin-like proteases. Determination of the reactive site of MNEI by N-terminal sequencing and mass analysis of reaction products identified two reactive sites, each with a different specificity. Cys(344), which corresponds to Met(358), the P(1) site of alpha1-antitrypsin, was the inhibitory site for elastase-like proteases and PSA, while the preceding residue, Phe(343), was the inhibitory site for chymotrypsin-like proteases. This study demonstrates that MNEI has two functional reactive sites corresponding to the predicted P(1) and P(2) positions of the reactive center loop. The data suggest that MNEI plays a regulatory role at extravascular sites to limit inflammatory damage due to proteases of cellular origin.  相似文献   

4.
alpha 1-Antitrypsin (alpha 1AT) is a highly pleomorphic 52-kDa serum glycoprotein that functions as the major inhibitor of neutrophil elastase. Of these, the most common normal alpha 1AT haplotypes identified by isoelectric focusing (IEF) of serum are those of the M family, including M1, M2, and M3. In the course of studying the alpha 1AT type Z gene, we identified a restriction endonuclease BstEII polymorphism in the M1 gene that predicted the existence of a previously unidentified, but relatively common, haplotype of M, referred to as M1(Ala213) [Nukiwa, T., Satoh, K., Brantly, M. L., Ogushi, F., Fells, G. A., Courtney, M., & Crystal, R. G. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15989-15994]. In this study we have cloned both alpha 1AT genes from an individual heterozygous for the M1(Ala213) and M1(Val213) haplotypes. Sequencing of the coding exons of both demonstrated that they are identical except for the Ala-Val difference at residue 213. The codominant transmission of the M1(Ala213) gene was demonstrated in a family study. Evaluation of 39 genomic samples of Caucasians with the IEF haplotype M1 demonstrated haplotype frequencies of 68% for M1(Val213) and 32% for M1(Ala213). alpha 1AT serum levels of individuals inheriting the M1(Ala213) gene in a homozygous fashion were in the same range as those for homozygous M1(Val213) as was the rate of association of the M1(Ala213) protein with neutrophil elastase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
alpha 1-Antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT) was recently identified as a major physiologic plasma inhibitor of activated protein C. The reaction with activated protein C of recombinant alpha 1-AT containing amino acid substitutions at the reactive center was studied. The substitution of Arg358 for Met, as observed in a patient with a severe bleeding disorder with the mutant alpha 1-AT Pittsburgh, increased the association rate constant for activated protein C from 1.1 x 10(1) to 4.9 x 10(4) M-1 s-1. The association rate constant of activated protein C with protein C inhibitor, a native plasma serpin that contains Arg354 at the reactive site, is 6 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 in the absence of heparin. Plasma containing 4 microM [Arg358]alpha 1-AT inhibited activated protein C activity by greater than 95% in 15 s, and the inhibited activated protein C was shown by immunoblotting to exist as activated protein C-inhibitor complexes. In controls 50% loss of activated protein C activity in normal plasma occurred in 19 min. Double-substituted [Pro357,Met358]alpha 1-AT----[Ala357,Arg358]alpha 1-AT had similar reactivity toward activated protein C as the single-substituted [Arg358]alpha 1-AT. Thus, replacement of the reactive center Met358 of alpha 1-AT by Arg358, analogous to Arg354 of protein C inhibitor, results in an activated protein C inhibitor that is more potent than either of the native inhibitors. Comparison of the association rate constant of the [Arg358]alpha 1-AT for activated protein C to that for thrombin (4 x 10(4) versus 3 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) suggests that thrombin would be more effectively inhibited than activated protein C, thereby giving an explanation for bleeding rather than thrombosis in the alpha 1-AT Pittsburgh patient.  相似文献   

6.
The "deficiency" group of alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1AT) alleles is characterized by alpha 1AT genes that code for alpha 1AT present in serum but in amounts insufficient to protect the lower respiratory tract from progressive destruction by its burden of neutrophil elastase. Mprocida, a rare alpha 1AT allele associated with alpha 1AT serum levels less than 10 mg/dl (normal 150-350 mg/dl), codes for an alpha 1AT molecule that focuses on immobilized pH gradient isoelectric gels slightly cathodal to the common normal M1 (Val213) protein. On a per molecule basis, Mprocida has a mildly reduced function as an inhibitor, with an association rate constant for human neutrophil elastase of 7.0 +/- 0.1 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 (normal M1 (Val213) 9.3 +/- 0.8 x 10(6), p less than 0.01). The Mprocida molecule behaves normally in vivo with a half-life similar to normal M1 alpha 1AT molecules. Restriction endonuclease mapping demonstrates that the cloned Mprocida gene was grossly intact. Sequencing of all the exons, exon-intron junctions, and the major promoter region demonstrated Mprocida to be identical to the M1 (Val213) gene except for a single base substitution in exon II coding for amino acid 41 of the mature protein (M1 (Val213) Leu41 CTG----Mprocida Pro41 CCG). Usefully, the coding sequence of the alpha 1AT residues 40-41 is recognized by the restriction endonuclease PvuII so that using a probe corresponding to this region of exon II, the Mprocida mutation can be rapidly identified by Southern analysis. Evaluation of the crystallographic structure of alpha 1AT suggests the Leu41 to Pro41 mutation may disrupt alpha-helix A in the region of Pro21-Ser45, suggesting the possibility that the alpha 1AT Mprocida molecule is unstable and degraded intracellularly prior to secretion.  相似文献   

7.
The secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI), elafin, and its biologically active precursor trappin‐2 are endogeneous low‐molecular weight inhibitors of the chelonianin family that control the enzymatic activity of neutrophil serine proteases (NSPs) like elastase, proteinase 3, and cathepsin G. These inhibitors may be of therapeutic value, since unregulated NSP activities are linked to inflammatory lung diseases. However SLPI inhibits elastase and cathepsin G but not proteinase 3, while elafin targets elastase and proteinase 3 but not cathepsin G. We have used two strategies to design polyvalent inhibitors of NSPs that target all three NSPs and may be used in the aerosol‐based treatment of inflammatory lung diseases. First, we fused the elafin domain with the second inhibitory domain of SLPI to produce recombinant chimeras that had the inhibitory properties of both parent molecules. Second, we generated the trappin‐2 variant, trappin‐2 A62L, in which the P1 residue Ala is replaced by Leu, as in the corresponding position in SLPI domain 2. The chimera inhibitors and trappin‐2 A62L are tight‐binding inhibitors of all three NSPs with subnanomolar Kis, similar to those of the parent molecules for their respective target proteases. We have also shown that these molecules inhibit the neutrophil membrane‐bound forms of all three NSPs. The trappin‐2 A62L and elafin‐SLPI chimeras, like wild‐type elafin and trappin‐2, can be covalently cross‐linked to fibronectin or elastin by a tissue transglutaminase, while retaining their polypotent inhibition of NSPs. Therefore, the inhibitors described herein have the appropriate properties to be further evaluated as therapeutic anti‐inflammatory agents.  相似文献   

8.
C Boudier  M Cadène  J G Bieth 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8451-8457
Oxidation of mucus proteinase inhibitor (MPI) transforms Met73, the P'1 residue of its active center into methionine sulfoxide and lowers its affinity for neutrophil elastase [Boudier, C., and Bieth, J. G. (1994) Biochem. J. 303, 61-68]. Here, we show that the oxidized inhibitor has also a decreased affinity for neutrophil cathepsin G and pancreatic chymotrypsin. The Ki of the oxidized MPI-cathepsin G complex (1.2 microM) is probably too high to be compatible with significant inhibition of cathepsin G in inflammatory lung secretions. Stopped-flow kinetics shows that, within the inhibitor concentration range used, the mechanism of inhibition of cathepsin G and chymotrypsin by oxidized MPI is consistent with a one-step reaction, [equation in text] whereas the inhibition of elastase takes place in two steps, [equation in text]. Heparin, which accelerates the inhibition of the three proteinases by native MPI, also favors their interaction with oxidized MPI. Flow calorimetry shows that heparin binds oxidized MPI with Kd, Delta H degrees, and Delta S degrees values close to those reported for native MPI. In the presence of heparin, oxidized MPI inhibits cathepsin G via a two-step reaction characterized by Ki = 0.22 microM, k2 = 0.1 s-1, k-2 = 0.023 s-1, and Ki = 42 nM. Under these conditions, in vivo inhibition of cathepsin G is again possible. Heparin also improves the inhibition of chymotrypsin and elastase by oxidized MPI by increasing their kass or k2/Ki and decreasing their Ki. Our data suggest that oxidation of MPI during chronic bronchitis may lead to cathepsin G-mediated lung tissue degradation and that heparin may be a useful adjuvant of MPI-based therapy of acute lung inflammation in cystic fibrosis.  相似文献   

9.
Association rates have been determined for the interaction of human alpha 2-macroglobulin with human neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and human plasma kallikrein. Both of the neutrophil enzymes are rapidly inactivated by this inhibitor; however, the inactivation of plasma kallikrein is much slower. Comparison of the rates of inactivation with those already established for other inhibitors clearly indicate that alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor is the controlling inhibitor for neutrophil elastase and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin for cathepsin G, alpha 2-macroglobulin acting only as a secondary inhibitor. The control of plasma kallikrein would appear to be rather poor since neither alpha 2-macroglobulin nor C1-inhibitor appears to react very rapidly with this proteinase. Thus, a primary role for alpha 2-macroglobulin in directly inactivating proteinases in blood, under normal physiological conditions, remains to be established.  相似文献   

10.
The lysosomal cysteine proteinases cathepsin L and cathepsin B were examined for their effect on the neutrophil elastase inhibitory activity of human alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1PI). Human cathepsin L catalytically inactivated human alpha 1PI by cleavage of the bonds Glu354-Ala355 and Met358-Ser359 (the serine proteinase inhibitory site). Cathepsin B did not inactivate alpha 1PI, even when equimolar amounts of enzyme were employed. Cathepsin L is the first human proteinase shown to catalytically inactivate alpha 1PI. These findings, in conjunction with other reports, suggest that alpha 1PI contains a proteolytically sensitive region encompassing residues 350-358. Taken together with the discovery of the elastinolytic activity of cathepsin L (Mason, R. W., Johnson, D. A., Barrett, A. J., and Chapman, H. A. (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 925-927), the present findings emphasize the possible importance of cathepsin L in the pathological proteolysis of elastin and diminish the role that can be attributed to cathepsin B in such processes.  相似文献   

11.
Human inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor (I alpha I) is a plasma proteinase inhibitor active against cathepsin G, leucocyte elastase, trypsin and chymotrypsin. It owes its broad inhibitory specificity to tandem Kunitz-type inhibitory domains within an N-terminal region. Sequence studies suggest that the reactive-centre residues critical for inhibition are methionine and arginine. Reaction of I alpha I with the arginine-modifying reagent butane-2,3-dione afforded partial loss of inhibitory activity against both cathepsin G and elastase but complete loss of activity against trypsin and chymotrypsin. Reaction of I alpha I with the methionine-modifying reagent cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) resulted in partial loss of activity against cathepsin G and elastase but did not affect inhibition of either trypsin or chymotrypsin. Employment of both reagents eliminated inhibition of cathepsin G and elastase. These findings suggest that both cathepsin G and elastase are inhibited at either of the reactive centres of I alpha I. Trypsin and chymotrypsin, however, appear to be inhibited exclusively at the arginine reactive centre.  相似文献   

12.
The proteolytic attack of the cholesterol-binding pancreatic proteinase (CBPP) on the oxidized insulin A and B chains as well as on glucagon was investigated by kinetic studies. The reaction products were isolated by high-pressure liquid chromatography and identified by amino acid analysis. The combined results reveal a pronounced selectivity of CBPP for the peptide bonds at the carboxy ends of Ala, Val, Leu, Ser, His and Thr residues with Ala, Val and Leu most favoured, indicating a close catalytic relationship to porcine pancreatic elastase [Narayanan, A. S. & Anwar, R. A. (1969) Biochem. J. 114, 11-17] and the anionic porcine pancreatic protease E [Kobayashi R., Kobayashi, Y. & Hirs, C. H. W. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2460-2465] which resembles human pancreatic elastase 1. The immunological comparison indeed disclosed the identity of CBPP with human pancreatic elastase 1.  相似文献   

13.
Neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G are abundant intracellular neutrophil proteinases that have an important role in destroying ingested particles. However, when neutrophils degranulate, these proteinases are released and can cause irreparable damage by degrading host connective tissue proteins. Despite abundant endogenous inhibitors, these proteinases are protected from inhibition because of their ability to bind to anionic surfaces. Plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1), which is not an inhibitor of these proteinases, possesses properties that could make it an effective inhibitor of neutrophil proteinases if its specificity could be redirected. PAI-1 efficiently inhibits surface-sequestered proteinases, and it efficiently mediates rapid cellular clearance of PAI-1-proteinase complexes. Therefore, we examined whether PAI-1 could be engineered to inhibit and clear neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G. By introducing specific mutations in the reactive center loop of wild-type PAI-1, we generated PAI-1 mutants that are effective inhibitors of both proteinases. Kinetic analysis shows that the inhibition of neutrophil proteinases by these PAI-1 mutants is not affected by the sequestration of neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G onto surfaces. In addition, complexes of these proteinases and PAI-1 mutants are endocytosed and degraded by lung epithelial cells more efficiently than either the neutrophil proteinases alone or in complex with their physiological inhibitors, alpha1-proteinase inhibitor and alpha1-antichymotrypsin. Finally, the PAI-1 mutants were more effective in reducing the neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G activities in an in vivo model of lung inflammation than were their physiological inhibitors.  相似文献   

14.
The amino acid sequences of both the alpha and beta subunits of human chorionic gonadotropin have been determined. The amino acid sequence of the alpha subunit is: Ala - Asp - Val - Gln - Asp - Cys - Pro - Glu - Cys-10 - Thr - Leu - Gln - Asp - Pro - Phe - Ser - Gln-20 - Pro - Gly - Ala - Pro - Ile - Leu - Gln - Cys - Met - Gly-30 - Cys - Cys - Phe - Ser - Arg - Ala - Tyr - Pro - Thr - Pro-40 - Leu - Arg - Ser - Lys - Lys - Thr - Met - Leu - Val - Gln-50 - Lys - Asn - Val - Thr - Ser - Glu - Ser - Thr - Cys - Cys-60 - Val - Ala - Lys - Ser - Thr - Asn - Arg - Val - Thr - Val-70 - Met - Gly - Gly - Phe - Lys - Val - Glu - Asn - His - Thr-80 - Ala - Cys - His - Cys - Ser - Thr - Cys - Tyr - Tyr - His-90 - Lys - Ser. Oligosaccharide side chains are attached at residues 52 and 78. In the preparations studied approximately 10 and 30% of the chains lack the initial 2 and 3 NH2-terminal residues, respectively. This sequence is almost identical with that of human luteinizing hormone (Sairam, M. R., Papkoff, H., and Li, C. H. (1972) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 48, 530-537). The amino acid sequence of the beta subunit is: Ser - Lys - Glu - Pro - Leu - Arg - Pro - Arg - Cys - Arg-10 - Pro - Ile - Asn - Ala - Thr - Leu - Ala - Val - Glu - Lys-20 - Glu - Gly - Cys - Pro - Val - Cys - Ile - Thr - Val - Asn-30 - Thr - Thr - Ile - Cys - Ala - Gly - Tyr - Cys - Pro - Thr-40 - Met - Thr - Arg - Val - Leu - Gln - Gly - Val - Leu - Pro-50 - Ala - Leu - Pro - Gin - Val - Val - Cys - Asn - Tyr - Arg-60 - Asp - Val - Arg - Phe - Glu - Ser - Ile - Arg - Leu - Pro-70 - Gly - Cys - Pro - Arg - Gly - Val - Asn - Pro - Val - Val-80 - Ser - Tyr - Ala - Val - Ala - Leu - Ser - Cys - Gln - Cys-90 - Ala - Leu - Cys - Arg - Arg - Ser - Thr - Thr - Asp - Cys-100 - Gly - Gly - Pro - Lys - Asp - His - Pro - Leu - Thr - Cys-110 - Asp - Asp - Pro - Arg - Phe - Gln - Asp - Ser - Ser - Ser - Ser - Lys - Ala - Pro - Pro - Pro - Ser - Leu - Pro - Ser-130 - Pro - Ser - Arg - Leu - Pro - Gly - Pro - Ser - Asp - Thr-140 - Pro - Ile - Leu - Pro - Gln. Oligosaccharide side chains are found at residues 13, 30, 121, 127, 132, and 138. The proteolytic enzyme, thrombin, which appears to cleave a limited number of arginyl bonds, proved helpful in the determination of the beta sequence.  相似文献   

15.
Four stable hybridoma cell lines producing monoclonal antibodies specific for neutrophil proteinase 4 (NP4) were established and one monoclonal antibody was chosen to produce an immunoaffinity-resin for the purification of NP4. In a precipitation assay system these antibodies bound NP4 in a dose-dependent manner, but did so neither with neutrophil elastase nor with cathepsin G. NP4 was purified and electrophoresis of the affinity-purified enzyme in sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels resulted in a single Mr = 30,000 polypeptide. The purified enzyme digested fibrin but not elastin and it cleaved Boc-Ala-ONp readily (Km = 0.47mM) at neutral pH, but had no effect on Suc-[Ala]3 Nan and N-Suc-[Ala]2-Pro-Phe-pNA. The proteolytic activity was inhibited by DFP, alpha 1 PI and alpha 2 M with a Ki of 10(-9)M for the NP4-alpha 1 PI complex. The NH2-terminal sequence and the amino-acid composition of NP4 were distinct from those of elastase and cathepsin G. Neutrophils contain large amounts of NP4 as judged by the comparable amounts of elastase- and NP4-alpha 1 PI complexes present in inflammatory exudates.  相似文献   

16.
Cathepsin C is a cysteine protease required for the activation of several pro-inflammatory serine proteases and, as such, is of interest as a therapeutic target. In cathepsin C-deficient mice and humans, the N-terminal processing and activation of neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase-3 is abolished and is accompanied by a reduction of protein levels. Pharmacologically, the consequence of cathepsin C inhibition on the activation of these serine proteases has not been described, due to the lack of stable and non-toxic inhibitors and the absence of appropriate experimental cell systems. Using novel reversible peptide nitrile inhibitors of cathepsin C, and cell-based assays with U937 and EcoM-G cells, we determined the effects of pharmacological inhibition of cathepsin C on serine protease activity. We show that indirect and complete inhibition of neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase-3 is achievable in intact cells with selective and non-cytotoxic cathepsin C inhibitors, at concentrations approximately 10-fold higher than those required to inhibit purified cathepsin C. The concentration of inhibitor needed to block processing of these three serine proteases was similar, regardless of the cell system used. Importantly, cathepsin C inhibition must be sustained to maintain serine protease inhibition, because removal of the reversible inhibitors resulted in the activation of pro-enzymes in intact cells. These findings demonstrate that near complete inhibition of multiple serine proteases can be achieved with cathepsin C inhibitors and that cathepsin C inhibition represents a viable but challenging approach for the treatment of neutrophil-based inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

17.
Leukolysin/MT6-MMP is a GPI-anchored matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) primarily expressed by neutrophils. It is stored in intracellular granules at resting state, but rapidly discharged upon stimulations into the extracellular milieu, presumably to promote tissue remodeling or destruction. The proteolytic targets for leukolysin at the inflammatory sites remain unknown. Here, we show that alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, or alpha1-PI, a known protective shield against destructive serine proteinases, is a physiological target for leukolysin. We show that alpha1-PI failed to accumulate in media conditioned by cells co-expressing alpha1-PI and leukolysin. Purified leukolysin cleaves alpha1-PI efficiently at the Phe376Leu and Pro381Met bonds and the cleaved alpha1-PI lost its anti-proteolytic activity against human neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G (CatG) and proteinase 3 (PR3). In fact, leukolysin preferentially cleaves alpha1-PI when co-incubated with other extracellular molecules such as laminin and gelatin. Kinetically, leukolysin is more active than two known neutrophil MMPs, MMP8 and MMP9, in cleaving and inactivating alpha1-PI. Taken together, these results suggest that neutrophils may mediate tissue destruction by deploying leukolysin to weaken the alpha1-PI protective shield at inflammatory sites.  相似文献   

18.
Neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G are serine proteases that can damage connective tissue and trigger other pathological reactions. Compounds containing a peptide sequence to impart specificity and bearing an alpha-dicarbonyl unit (alpha-diketone or alpha-keto ester) at the carboxy terminus are potent inhibitors of the neutrophil serine proteases (human neutrophil elastase: R-Val-COCH3, Ki = 0.017 microM; R-Val-COOCH3, Ki = 0.002 microM; human neutrophil cathepsin G: R-Phe-COCH3, Ki = 0.8 microM; R-Phe-COOCH3, Ki = 0.44 microM; R = N-(4-[(4-chlorophenyl)sulfonylaminocarbonyl]phenylcarbonyl)+ ++ValylProlyl).  相似文献   

19.
Human neutrophil proteases cathepsin G and elastase can directly alter platelet function and/or participate in coagulation cascade reactions on the platelet or neutrophil surface to enhance fibrin formation. The clotting of recalcified platelet-free plasma (PFP) or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) supplemented with corn trypsin inhibitor (to shut down contact activation) was studied in well-plates or flow assays. Inhibitors of cathepsin G or elastase significantly delayed the burst time (t(50)) of thrombin generation in neutrophil-supplemented PRP from 49 min to 59 and 77 min, respectively, in well-plate assays as well as reduced neutrophil-promoted fibrin deposition on fibrinogen-adherent platelets under flow conditions. In flow assays, purified cathepsin G was a far more potent activator of platelet-dependent coagulation than elastase. Anti-tissue factor had no effect on neutrophil protease-enhanced thrombin formation in PRP. The addition of cathepsin G (425 nm) or convulxin (10 nm) to PRP dramatically reduced the t(50) of thrombin generation from 53 min to 17 or 23 min, respectively. In contrast, the addition of elastase to PRP left the t(50) unaltered. Whereas perfusion of PFP (gamma(w) = 62.5 s(-1)) over fibrinogen-adherent platelets did not result in fibrin formation until 50 min, massive fibrin could be observed on cathepsin G-treated platelets even at 35 min. Cathepsin G addition to corn trypsin inhibitor-treated PFP produced little thrombin unless anionic phospholipid was present. However, further activation inhibition studies indicated that cathepsin G enhances fibrin deposition under flow conditions by elevating the activation state of fibrinogen-adherent platelets rather than by cleaving coagulation factors.  相似文献   

20.
The granule proteases of human neutrophils are thought to be responsible for the connective tissue destruction associated with certain inflammatory diseases. Using a model system for the degradation of a macromolecular connective tissue substrate, purified neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G were both individually able to degrade cartilage matrix proteoglycan and this degradation was blocked by the appropriate specific inhibitors. Neutrophil granule lysate also produced cartilage matrix degradation but little inhibition of degradation occurred when either elastase or cathepsin G inhibitor was used alone. However, a combination of elastase and cathepsin G inhibitors each at 100 microM or each at 10 microM blocked cartilage matrix degradation by 89% +/- 1 and 65% +/- 9 (mean +/- SEM, n = 3), respectively. The magnitude of the cartilage degradation mediated by neutrophil lysate, and its sensitivity to specific inhibitors, was reproduced using purified elastase and cathepsin G at the concentrations at which they are present in neutrophil lysate. Human neutrophils stimulated with opsonized zymosan degraded cartilage matrix in a dose-dependent manner in the presence of serum antiproteases. Supernatants from stimulated neutrophils cultured in the presence of serum did not degrade cartilage matrix, indicating that neutrophil mediated degradation in the presence of serum was confined to the protected subjacent region between the inflammatory cell and the substratum. A combination of elastase and cathepsin G inhibitors each at 500 microM or each at 100 microM blocked subjacent cartilage matrix degradation by stimulated human neutrophils by 91% +/- 3 and 54% +/- 8 (mean +/- SEM, n = 5), respectively, whereas either the elastase or cathepsin G inhibitor alone was much less effective. These studies demonstrate that neutrophil-mediated cartilage matrix degradation is produced primarily by elastase and cathepsin G. Furthermore, these results support the hypothesis that inflammatory neutrophils form zones of close contact with substratum that exclude serum antiproteases and that this subjacent degradation of cartilage matrix by stimulated neutrophils can be blocked by a combination of synthetic elastase and cathepsin G inhibitors.  相似文献   

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