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1.
Bacterial plasminogen activators differ from each other in their mechanism of plasminogen activation besides their host specificity. Three‐domain streptokinase (SK) and two‐domain PauA generate nonproteolytic active site center in their cognate partner plasminogen but their binary activator complexes are resistant to α2‐antiplasmin (a2AP) inhibition causing nonspecific plasminogen activation in plasma. In contrast, single‐domain plasminogen activator, staphylokinase (SAK), requires proteolytic cleavage of human plasminogen into plasmin for the active site generation, and this activator complex is inhibited by a2AP. The single‐domain plasminogen activator, PadA, from Streptococcus dysgalatiae, having close sequence and possible structure homology with SAK, was recently reported to activate bovine Pg in a nonproteolytic manner similar to SK. We report hereby that the binary activator complex of PadA with bovine plasminogen is inhibited by a2AP and PadA is recycled from this complex to catalyze the activation of plasminogen in the clot environment, where it is completely protected from a2AP inhibition. Catalytic efficiency of the activator complex formed by PadA and bovine plasminogen is amplified several folds in the presence of cyanogen bromide digested fibrinogen but not by intact fibrinogen indicating that PadA may be highly efficient at the fibrin surface. The present study, thus, demonstrates that PadA is a unique single‐domain plasminogen activator that activates bovine plasminogen in a fibrin‐targeted manner like SAK. The sequence optimization by PadA for acquiring the characteristics of both SK and SAK may be exploited for the development of efficient and fibrin‐specific plasminogen activators for thrombolytic therapy.  相似文献   

2.
Streptokinase (SK) binds to plasminogen (Pg) to form a complex that converts substrate Pg to plasmin. Residues 1-59 of SK regulate its capacity to induce an active site in bound Pg by a nonproteolytic mechanism and to activate substrate Pg in a fibrin-independent manner. We analyzed 24 SK mutants to better define the functional properties of SK-(1-59). Mutations within the alphabeta1 strand (residues 17-26) of SK completely prevented nonproteolytic active site induction in bound Pg and rendered SK incapable of protecting plasmin from inhibition by alpha2-antiplasmin. However, when fibrin-bound, the activities of alphabeta1 strand mutants were similar to that of wild-type (WT) SK and resistant to alpha2-antiplasmin. Mutation of Ile1 of SK also prevented nonproteolytic active site induction in bound Pg. However, unlike alphabeta1 strand mutants, the functional defect of Ile1 mutants was not relieved by fibrin, and complexes of Ile1 mutants and plasmin were resistant to alpha2-antiplasmin. Plasmin enhanced the activities of alphabeta1 strand and Ile1 mutants, suggesting that SK-plasmin complexes activated mutant SK.Pg complexes by hydrolyzing the Pg Arg561-Val562 bond. Mutational analysis of Glu39 of SK suggested that a salt bridge between Glu39 and Arg719 of Pg is important, but not essential, for nonproteolytic active site induction in Pg. Deleting residues 1-59 rendered SK dependent on plasmin and fibrin to generate plasminogen activator (PA) activity. However, the PA activity of SK-(60-414) in the presence of fibrin was markedly reduced compared with WT SK. Despite its reduced PA activity, the fibrinolytic potency of SK-(60-414) was greater than that of WT SK at higher (but not lower) SK concentrations due to its capacity to deplete plasma Pg. These studies define mechanisms by which the SK alpha domain regulates rapid active site induction in bound Pg, contributes to the resistance of the SK-plasmin complex to alpha2-antiplasmin, and controls fibrin-independent Pg activation.  相似文献   

3.
alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) exerts its inhibitory effect on fibrinolysis by rapidly inhibiting the plasmin evolved; in addition, it has been suggested that interference with the binding of plasminogen to fibrin, a function shared with histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRGP), may also be significant in inhibition of fibrinolysis. To elucidate if plasminogen binding by these two alpha 2-globulins may decrease the generation of plasmin by tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) at the surface of fibrin, a system mimicking the fibrin/plasma interface was used. Attempts were made to differentiate the plasminogen binding from the plasmin inhibitory function of alpha 2-AP. The activation of human Glu-plasminogen (native plasminogen with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) by fibrin-bound t-PA was performed in a plasma environment using either normal plasma, alpha 2-AP- or HRGP-depleted plasmas supplemented with increasing amounts of the lacking protein, or in a reconstituted system with purified plasminogen and various concentrations of alpha 2-AP and HRGP. The activation of Glu-plasminogen in alpha 2-AP-depleted plasma containing a normal concentration of HRGP produced a time-dependent increase in the generation of plasmin. The addition of 1 microM-alpha 2-AP to this plasma prevented the formation of Lys-derivatives and produced a marked decrease (42%) in the number of plasminogen-binding sites. In contrast, the addition of 1.5 microM-HRGP to HRGP-depleted plasma containing a normal amount of alpha 2-AP produced only a modest (17%) decrease in the amount of plasmin(ogen) bound. Moreover, in a purified system the amount of plasminogen-binding sites and thereby of plasmin generated at the surface of fibrin in the presence of both alpha-2 globulins was similar to the amount generated in the presence of alpha 2-AP alone. These results indicate clearly that the formation of reversible complexes between plasminogen and alpha 2-AP does not interfere with the binding and activation of plasminogen at the fibrin surface. In contrast, the inhibition of plasmin by alpha 2-AP decreases importantly the number of plasminogen-binding sites (carboxyl-terminal lysines) and inhibits thereby the accelerated phase of fibrinolysis. It can be concluded that interference of the binding of plasminogen to fibrin by alpha 2-AP during plasminogen activation, does not play a significant role in inhibition of fibrinolysis, and that the plasminogen-binding effect of HRGP, if any, is obscured by the important inhibitory effect of alpha 2-AP.  相似文献   

4.
Activation of plasminogen by pro-urokinase. I. Mechanism   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The mechanism of the activation of plasminogen by recombinant pro-urokinase (Rec-pro-UK), obtained by expression of the human pro-urokinase gene in Escherichia coli, was investigated in purified systems. In mixtures of Rec-pro-UK and plasminogen, both active urokinase and plasmin are quickly generated. Addition of plasmin inhibitors (aprotinin or alpha 2-antiplasmin) abolishes the conversion of Rec-pro-UK to urokinase but not the activation of plasminogen to plasmin, suggesting that Rec-pro-UK activates plasminogen directly. Human plasma competitively inhibits the activation of plasminogen by pro-urokinase with a Ki of 0.2% (v/v). This explains the relative stability of Rec-pro-UK in plasma and the lack of activation of the plasma fibrinolytic system in the absence of fibrin. The competitive inhibition by plasma is abolished by the addition of CNBr-digested fibrinogen although Rec-pro-UK has no specific affinity for fibrin. These findings suggest that the fibrin specificity of the activation of plasminogen by pro-urokinase is due to neutralization by fibrin of the competitive inhibition exerted by plasma and not to fibrin-enhanced activation of plasminogen.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of activation of human Glu-plasminogen by fibrin-bound tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in a plasma environment or in a reconstituted system was characterized. A heterogeneous system was used, allowing the setting of experimental conditions as close as possible to the physiological fibrin/plasma interphase, and permitting the separate analysis of the products present in each of the phases as a function of time. The generation of plasmin was monitored both by spectrophotometric analysis and by radioisotopic analysis with a plasmin-selective chromogenic substrate and radiolabelled Glu-plasminogen respectively. Plasmin(ogen)-derived products were identified by SDS/PAGE followed by autoradiography and/or immunoblotting. When the activation was performed in a plasma environment, the products identified on the fibrin surface were Glu-plasmin (90%) and Glu-plasminogen (10%), whereas in the soluble phase only complexes between Glu-plasmin and its fast-acting inhibitor were detected. Identical results were obtained with a reconstituted system comprising solid-phase fibrin, t-PA, Glu-plasminogen and and alpha 2-antiplasmin. In contrast, when alpha 2-antiplasmin was omitted from the solution, Lys-plasmin was progressively generated on to the fibrin surface (30%) and released to the soluble phase. In the presence of alpha 2-antiplasmin or in plasma, the amount of active plasmin generated on the fibrin surface was lower than in the absence of the inhibitor: in a representative experiment the initial velocity of plasmin generation was 2.8 x 10(-3), 2.0 x 10(-3) and 1.8 x 10(-3) (delta A405/min) for 200 nM-plasminogen, 200 nM-plasminogen plus 100 nM-alpha 2-antiplasmin and native plasma respectively. Our results indicate that in plasma or in a reconstituted purified system containing plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin at a ratio similar to that found in plasma (1) the activation pathway of native Glu-plasminogen proceeds directly to the formation of Glu-plasmin, (2) Lys-plasminogen is not an intermediate of the reaction and therefore (3) Lys-plasmin is not the final active product. However, in the absence of the inhibitor, Lys-plasmin and probably Lys-plasminogen, which is more readily activated to plasmin than is Glu-plasminogen, are generated as well.  相似文献   

6.
Streptokinase (SK) is a potent clot dissolver but lacks fibrin clot specificity as it activates human plasminogen (HPG) into human plasmin (HPN) throughout the system leading to increased risk of bleeding. Another major drawback associated with all thrombolytics, including tissue plasminogen activator, is the generation of transient thrombin and release of clot-bound thrombin that promotes reformation of clots. In order to obtain anti-thrombotic as well as clot-specificity properties in SK, cDNAs encoding the EGF 4,5,6 domains of human thrombomodulin were fused with that of streptokinase, either at its N- or C-termini, and expressed these in Pichia pastoris followed by purification and structural-functional characterization, including plasminogen activation, thrombin inhibition, and Protein C activation characteristics. Interestingly, the N-terminal EGF fusion construct (EGF-SK) showed plasmin-mediated plasminogen activation, whereas the C-terminal (SK-EGF) fusion construct exhibited ‘spontaneous’ plasminogen activation which is quite similar to SK i.e. direct activation of systemic HPG in absence of free HPN. Since HPN is normally absent in free circulation due to rapid serpin-based inactivation (such as alpha-2-antiplasmin and alpha-2-Macroglobin), but selectively present in clots, a plasmin-dependent mode of HPG activation is expected to lead to a desirable fibrin clot-specific response by the thrombolytic. Both the N- and C-terminal fusion constructs showed strong thrombin inhibition and Protein C activation properties as well, and significantly prevented re-occlusion in a specially designed assay. The EGF-SK construct exhibited fibrin clot dissolution properties with much-lowered levels of fibrinogenolysis, suggesting unmistakable promise in clot dissolver therapy with reduced hemorrhage and re-occlusion risks.  相似文献   

7.
The fibrinolytic system comprises a proenzyme, plasminogen, which can be converted to the active enzyme, plasmin, which degrades fibrin. Plasminogen activation is mediated by plasminogen activators, which are classified as either tissue-type plasminogen activators (t-PA) or urokinase-type plasminogen activators (u-PA). Inhibition of the fibrinolytic system may occur at the level of the activators or at the level of generated plasmin. Plasmin has a low substrate specificity, and when circulating freely in the blood it degrades several proteins including fibrinogen, factor V, and factor VIII. Plasma does, however, contain a fast-acting plasmin inhibitor, alpha 2-antiplasmin, which inhibits free plasmin extremely rapidly but which reacts much slower with plasmin bound to fibrin. A "systemic fibrinolytic state" may, however, occur by extensive activation of plasminogen and depletion of alpha 2-antiplasmin. Clot-specific thrombolysis therefore requires plasminogen activation restricted to the vicinity of the fibrin. Two physiological plasminogen activators, t-PA and single-chain u-PA (scu-PA) induce clot-specific thrombolysis, via entirely different mechanisms, however. t-PA is relatively inactive in the absence of fibrin, but fibrin strikingly enhances the activation rate of plasminogen by t-PA. This is explained by an increased affinity of fibrin-bound t-PA for plasminogen and not by alteration of the catalytic rate constant of the enzyme. The high affinity of t-PA for plasminogen in the presence of fibrin thus allows efficient activation on the fibrin clot, while no significant plasminogen activation by t-PA occurs in plasma. scu-PA has a high affinity for plasminogen (Km = 0.3 microM) but a low catalytic rate constant (kcat = 0.02 sec-1). However, scu-PA does not activate plasminogen in plasma in the absence of a fibrin clot, owing to the presence of (a) competitive inhibitor(s). Fibrin-specific thrombolysis appears to be due to the fact that fibrin reverses the competitive inhibition. The thrombolytic efficacy and fibrin specificity of natural and recombinant t-PA has been demonstrated in animal models of pulmonary embolism, venous thrombosis, and coronary artery thrombosis. In all these studies intravenous infusion of t-PA at sufficiently high rates caused efficient thrombolysis in the absence of systemic fibrinolytic activation. The efficacy and relative fibrinogen-sparing effect of t-PA was recently confirmed in three multicenter clinical trials in patients with acute myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
On the mechanism of fibrin-specific plasminogen activation by staphylokinase   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The mechanism of plasminogen activation by recombinant staphylokinase was studied both in the absence and in the presence of fibrin, in purified systems, and in human plasma. Staphylokinase, like streptokinase, forms a stoichiometric complex with plasminogen that activates plasminogen following Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km = 7.0 microM and k2 = 1.5 s-1. In purified systems, alpha 2-antiplasmin inhibits the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex with k1(app) = 2.7 +/- 0.30 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D., n = 12), but not the plasminogen-streptokinase complex. Addition of 6-aminohexanoic acid induces a concentration-dependent reduction of k1(app) to 2.0 +/- 0.17 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D., n = 5) at concentrations greater than or equal to 30 mM, with a 50% reduction at a 6-aminohexanoic acid concentration of 60 microM. Staphylokinase does not bind to fibrin, and fibrin stimulates the initial rate of plasminogen activation by staphylokinase only 4-fold. Staphylokinase induces a dose-dependent lysis of a 0.12-ml 125I-fibrin-labeled human plasma clot submersed in 0.5 ml of citrated human plasma; 50% lysis in 2 h is obtained with 17 nM staphylokinase and is associated with only 5% plasma fibrinogen degradation. Corresponding values for streptokinase are 68 nM and more than 90% fibrinogen degradation. In the absence of a fibrin clot, 50% fibrinogen degradation in human plasma in 2 h requires 790 nM staphylokinase, but only 4.4 nM streptokinase. These results suggest the following mechanism for relatively fibrin-specific clot lysis with staphylokinase in a plasma milieu. In plasma in the absence of fibrin, the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex is rapidly neutralized by alpha 2-antiplasmin, thus preventing systemic plasminogen activation. In the presence of fibrin, the lysine-binding sites of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex are occupied and inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin is retarded, thus allowing preferential plasminogen activation at the fibrin surface.  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated the interaction of alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) with the serine proteinase urokinase, an activator of plasminogen. Urokinase formed sodium dodecyl sulfate stable complexes with purified alpha 2M and with alpha 2M in plasma. These complexes could be visualized after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis by protein blots using 125I-labeled anti-urokinase antibody or by fibrin autography, a measure of fibrinolytic activity. According to gel electrophoretic analyses under reducing conditions, urokinase cleaved alpha 2M subunits and formed apparently covalent complexes with alpha 2M. Urokinase cleaved only about 60% of the alpha 2M subunits maximally at a mole ratio of 2:1 (urokinase: alpha 2M). Binding of urokinase to alpha 2M protected the urokinase active site from inhibition by antithrombin III-heparin and inhibited, to a significant extent, plasminogen activation by urokinase. Reaction of urokinase with alpha 2M caused an increase in intrinsic protein fluorescence and, thus, induced the conformational change in alpha 2M that is characteristic of its interactions with active proteinases. Our results indicate that both in plasma and in a purified system the alpha 2M-urokinase reaction is functionally significant.  相似文献   

10.
Plasma levels of alpha 1-PI(T) and alpha 1-PI(E), two closely related murine alpha 1-protease inhibitors, having affinities for trypsin and elastase, respectively, were compared to changes in specific liver mRNA levels after induction of the acute-phase reaction by subcutaneous injection of turpentine. In earlier, qualitative experiments an increase in plasma levels of alpha 1-PI(E), but not alpha 1-PI(T), during the acute-phase reaction had been shown. It is now shown that stimulation of plasma alpha 1-PI(E) levels reaches a maximum of 35-50% above baseline 12 h after induction of the acute-phase response using either a functional or immunological assay to measure protease inhibitor activity. Consistent with earlier observations, little or no change in plasma levels of alpha 1-PI(T) is seen. Determination of mRNA levels in the mouse liver specific for alpha 1-PI(E) and alpha 1-PI(T) was accomplished using a cell-free translation system followed by immunoprecipitation of the 35S-labeled protease inhibitors. The apparent Mr's of alpha 1-PI(E) and alpha 1-PI(T) synthesized in vitro are 42K and 46K, respectively. Apparent Mr's of the native proteins in plasma are 55K and 65K. Unexpectedly, mRNA levels for both alpha 1-PI(E) and alpha 1-PI(T) were found to increase after induction of the acute-phase reaction. Maximal stimulation for both mRNAs was approximately 300% and occurred 9 h after turpentine administration. Under these conditions, levels of translatable albumin mRNA in the mouse liver decreased to 40% of baseline in 6-9 h.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of antiplasmin on the interaction between fibrin and plasminogen was studied in plasma and in a purified system. The amount of plasminogen bound to fibrin was quantitated using trace amounts of 125I-labeled Glu-plasminogen (plasminogen with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) or 125I-labeled Lys-plasminogen (NH2-terminal lysine).When whole plasma was clotted, 5.2% of Glu-plasminogen was associated with the fibrin clot. In plasma clotted in the presence of 20 mM 6-amino-hexanoic acid only 1.4% of the plasminogen was bound to fibrin, indicating that about 4% of the plasma plasminogen specifically binds to fibrin. With Lys-plasminogen these values were approximately twice as high.When antiplasmin-depleted plasma was used, only slightly higher amounts of both types of plasminogen were associated with the fibrin. The adsorbed plasminogen was not significantly eluted with plasma or with purified antiplasmin at physiological concentrations.These findings indicate that antiplasmin does not play a significant role in the inhibition of the binding of plasminogen to fibrin or the dissociation of the plasminogen · fibrin complex.These observations in conjunction with previous findings on the kinetics of the plasmin-antiplasmin reaction suggest that the lysine-binding site of plasminogen, which is responsible both for its interaction with fibrin and its interaction with antiplasmin, plays an important role in the very fast neutralization of plasmin formed in circulating blood and serves to attach plasminogen to fibrin and thereby sequestrate plasmin formed in loco from circulating antiplasmin.  相似文献   

12.
Dahiya M  Rajamohan G  Dikshit KL 《FEBS letters》2005,579(7):1565-1572
Presence of isolated beta or betagamma domains of streptokinase (SK) increased the catalytic activity of staphylokinase (SAK)-plasmin (Pm) complex up to 60%. In contrast, fusion of SK beta or betagamma domains with the C-terminal end of SAK drastically reduced the catalytic activity of the activator complex. The enhancement effect mediated by beta or betagamma domain on Pg activator activity of SAK-Pm complex was reduced greatly (45%) in the presence of isolated kringles of Pg, whereas, kringles did not change cofactor activity of SAK fusion proteins (carrying beta or betagamma domains) significantly. When catalytic activity of SAK-microPm (catalytic domain of Pm lacking kringle domains) complex was examined in the presence of isolated beta and betagamma domains, no enhancement effect on Pg activation was observed, whereas, enzyme complex formed between microplasmin and SAK fusion proteins (SAKbeta and SAKbetagamma) displayed 50-70% reduction in their catalytic activity. The present study, thus, suggests that the exogenously present beta and betagamma interact with Pg/Pm via kringle domains and elevate catalytic activity of SAK-Pm activator complex resulting in enhanced substrate Pg activation. Fusion of beta or betagamma domains with SAK might alter these intermolecular interactions resulting in attenuated functional activity of SAK.  相似文献   

13.
Interaction of plasminogen and fibrin in plasminogen activation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Glu1-, Lys77-, miniplasminogens, kringle 1-3, kringle 1-5A, and kringle 1-5R were able to bind with fibrin, while microplasminogen and kringle 4 did not bind significantly. Kringle 1-5A, but not kringle 1-3, effectively inhibited the binding of Glu1-, Lys77-, and miniplasminogens with fibrin. Miniplasminogen also inhibited the binding of Glu1-plasminogen with fibrin. The binding of kringle 1-3 with fibrin was blocked by mini- or Glu1-plasminogen. It is therefore evident that there are two fibrin-binding domains in plasminogen and that the one in kringle 5 is of higher affinity than that in kringle 1-3. CNBr cleavage products of fibrinogen effectively enhanced the activation of Glu1-, Lys77-, or miniplasminogens, but not microplasminogen, by tissue-type plasminogen activator. Kringle 1-5, but not kringle 1-3, dose-dependently inhibited the enhancement by fibrinogen degradation products of Glu1-plasminogen activation by the activator. Lysine and epsilon-aminocaproic acid could inhibit the binding of plasminogens and plasminogen derivatives with fibrin and block the enhancement effect of fibrinogen degradation products on plasminogen activation. The data clearly illustrate that the binding of plasminogen with fibrin, mainly determined by kringle 5, is essential for effective activation by tissue-type plasminogen activator. However, the presence of kringle 1-4 in the plasminogen molecule is required for the full enhancing effect since the kcat/Km of miniplasminogen activation in the presence of fibrinogen degradation products was 8.2 microM-1 min-1 which is significantly less than 52.0 microM-1 min-1 of Glu1-plasminogen.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetics of fibrinolysis by plasmin and plasmin streptokinase complex have been studied using fibrin gels formed from purified fibrin and human blood plasma. The gels were placed into buffer or blood plasma. The contributions of plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin present or absent in both phases to the kinetics of fibrinolysis were quantitatively estimated. In the complex catalyzed fibrinolysis, plasminogen activation reaction dominated whereas in plasmin-catalyzed fibrinolysis, the inhibitor involved reaction, suppressing the process, prevailed.  相似文献   

15.
The molecular interactions between the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex, alpha 2-antiplasmin and fibrin were studied by measuring the effect of CNBr-digested fibrinogen on the inhibition rate of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex by alpha 2-antiplasmin. The second-order rate constant for the inhibition of plasminogen-staphylokinase by alpha 2-antiplasmin was 2.7 +/- 0.3.10(6) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D.; n = 7). Addition of CNBr-digested fibrinogen, but not of fibrinogen, resulted in a concentration-dependent reduction of the apparent inhibition rate constant, with a 50 percent reduction at a concentration of 5 nM CNBr-digested fibrinogen. The second-order rate constant for the inhibition of the low-Mr plasminogen-staphylokinase complex (plasminogen lacking the kringle structures comprising the lysine-binding sites) by alpha 2-antiplasmin was about 30-fold lower (9.3 +/- 0.7.10(4) M-1 s-1, mean +/- S.D.; n = 4) than that of plasminogen-staphylokinase and was not affected by addition of CNBr-digested fibrinogen. Inhibition of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex by the chloromethylketone D-Val-Phe-Lys-Ch2Cl is 9-fold less efficient than that of plasmin (k2/Ki of 700 M-1 s-1 versus 6300 M-1 s-1). Our results confirm and establish that rapid inhibition of plasminogen-staphylokinase by alpha 2-antiplasmin requires the availability of the lysine-binding sites in the plasminogen moiety of the complex. Fibrin, but not fibrinogen, reduces the inhibition rate by alpha 2-antiplasmin by competition for interaction with the lysine-binding site. Protection of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex bound to fibrin from rapid inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin thus appears to contribute to the fibrin-specificity of clot lysis with staphylokinase in a plasma milieu, by allowing preferential plasminogen activation at the fibrin surface, while the free complex is rapidly inhibited in plasma.  相似文献   

16.
Streptokinase (SK) and staphylokinase form cofactor-enzyme complexes that promote the degradation of fibrin thrombi by activating human plasminogen. The unique abilities of streptokinase to nonproteolytically activate plasminogen or to alter the interactions of plasmin with substrates and inhibitors may be the result of high affinity binding mediated by the streptokinase beta-domain. To examine this hypothesis, a chimeric streptokinase, SKbetaswap, was created by swapping the SK beta-domain with the homologous beta-domain of Streptococcus uberis Pg activator (SUPA or PauA, SK uberis), a streptokinase that cannot activate human plasminogen. SKbetaswap formed a tight complex with microplasminogen with an affinity comparable with streptokinase. The SKbetaswap-plasmin complex also activated human plasminogen with catalytic efficiencies (k(cat)/K(m) = 16.8 versus 15.2 microm(-1) min(-1)) comparable with streptokinase. However, SKbetaswap was incapable of nonproteolytic active site generation and activated plasminogen by a staphylokinase mechanism. When compared with streptokinase complexes, SKbetaswap-plasmin and SKbetaswap-microplasmin complexes had altered affinities for low molecular weight substrates. The SKbetaswap-plasmin complex also was less resistant than the streptokinase-plasmin complex to inhibition by alpha(2)-antiplasmin and was readily inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor. Thus, in addition to mediating high affinity binding to plasmin(ogen), the streptokinase beta-domain is required for nonproteolytic active site generation and specifically modulates the interactions of the complex with substrates and inhibitors.  相似文献   

17.
Streptokinase (SK) interacts with human plasminogen (Pg) or plasmin (Pm) with formation of Pg-SK or Pm-SK complex. Pm-SK complex manifests a fibrinolytic, amidolytic and Pg activator activity. SK in complex with Pm isn't stable and so capable to be hydrolysed rapidly. We investigated a correlation between molecular form of SK and catalytic properties of equimolar Pm-SK complex during preincubation at 20 degrees C. It was found out that amidolytic activity of Pm-SK complex was not changing for 5 hours and decreased to the initial Pm value after 24 hours. During this time alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) has any effect on amidolytic activity of the complex. Fibrinolytic activity of Pm-SK complex makes up 20% of the initial Pm value and wasn't changing within the investigated period. Pg activator activity was decreasing rapidly to 30-40% of the initial one within few minutes from the moment of Pm-SK complex formation. It was 10-20% of that initial after 24 hours. The decrease in Pg activator activity of Pm-SK complex correlated with the initial very rapid conversion of 47 kDa SK to 36 kDa SK within few minutes and following more slow conversion of SK in 31, 25 and 15 kDa fragments after 5 hours. alpha 2-AP didn't influence on the Pg activator activity of Pm-SK complex but eliminated its fibrinolytic activity completely. It was supposed that alpha 2-AP inhibited fibrinolytic activity of Pm-SK complex similarly to 6-aminohexanoic acid by preventing Pm-SK complex binding to fibrin polymer.  相似文献   

18.
Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and its substrate plasminogen (Plg) are key components in the fibrinolytic system. We have recently demonstrated, that truncated human recombinant soluble melanotransferrin (sMTf) could stimulate the activation of Plg by urokinase plasminogen activator and inhibit angiogenesis. Since various angiogenesis inhibitors were shown to stimulate tPA-mediated plasminogen activation, we examined the effects of sMTf on tPA-dependent fibrinolysis. This study demonstrated that sMTf enhanced tPA-activation of Plg by 6-fold. sMTf also increased the release of [125I]-fibrin fragments by tPA-activated plasmin. Moreover, we observed that the interaction of sMTf with Plg provoked a change in the fibrin clot structure by cleaving the fibrin alpha and beta chains. Overall, the present study shows that sMTf modulates tPA-dependent fibrinolysis by modifying the clot structure. These results also suggest that sMTf properties could involve enhanced dissolution of the provisional extracellular fibrin matrix.  相似文献   

19.
Two murine monoclonal antibodies (MA-2G6 and MA-1C8), secreted by hybridomas obtained by fusion of myeloma cells with spleen cells from mice immunized with human tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), inhibited the activity of t-PA on fibrin plates. MA-2G6 inhibited the amidolytic activity of t-PA and did not react with t-PA in which the active-site serine was blocked with diisopropylfluorophosphate nor with t-PA in which the active-site histidine was alkylated by reaction with D-Ile-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl. This indicated that MA-2G6 is directed against an epitope covering the active site of t-PA. MA-1C8 did not inhibit the amidolytic activity of t-PA, but abolished both the binding of t-PA to fibrin and the stimulatory effect of fibrin on the activation of plasminogen by t-PA. Thus MA-1C8 is directed against an epitope which covers the fibrin-binding site of t-PA. The A and B chains of partially reduced two-chain t-PA were separated by immunoadsorption on immobilized MA-1C8 and MA-2G6. The purified B chain reacted with MA-2G6 but not with MA-1C8 and activated plasminogen following Michaelis-Menten kinetics with kinetic constants similar to those of intact t-PA (Km = 100 microM and kcat = 0.02 s-1). However, fibrin or CNBr-digested fibrinogen did not stimulate the activation of plasminogen by the B chain. The purified A chain reacted with MA-1C8 but not with MA-2G6. It bound to fibrin with an affinity similar to that of intact t-PA but did not activate plasminogen. It is concluded that the active center of t-PA is located in the B chain and the fibrin-binding site in the A-chain. Both functional domains are required for the regulation by fibrin of the t-PA-mediated activation of plasminogen.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse plasma contains two major protease inhibitors, alpha 1-protease inhibitor (alpha 1-PI) and contrapsin, which have high affinity for bovine trypsin. Systemic injury, such as turpentine-induced inflammation, did not change the plasma concentration of alpha 1-PI, but increased that of contrapsin by 50%. The concentration of hepatic alpha 1-PI mRNA was determined by Northern blot hybridization and was not significantly affected by the acute phase reaction. J.M. Frazer, S.A. Nathoo, J. Katz, T.L. Genetta, and T.H. Finley [1985) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 239, 112-119) have reported a threefold increase of mRNA for the elastase specific alpha 1-PI but this increase was not demonstrated by the present study. The mRNAs for known mouse acute phase plasma proteins were, however, stimulated severalfold by the same treatment. These results indicate that in the mouse, as opposed to human, alpha 1-PI is not an acute phase reactant.  相似文献   

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