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1.
2.
Amino-acid sequence of human alpha 2-antiplasmin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The amino-acid sequence of human alpha 2-antiplasmin was determined by Edman degradation of peptides purified from CNBr, tryptic and chymotryptic digests. Of the total sequence of 452 amino acids of mature alpha 2-antiplasmin, as deduced from the cDNA sequence [Holmes et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1659-1664], 444 residues were identified by amino-acid sequencing. Two differences were found between the peptide and cDNA analyses (Gly instead of Leu at position 10 and Gly instead of Ser at position 369). alpha 2-Antiplasmin contains two disulfide bridges (Cys64-Cys104 and Cys31-Cys113) and four glucosamine-based carbohydrate chains attached to Asn87, Asn256, Asn270 and Asn277. alpha 2-Antiplasmin is homologous with 12 other proteins belonging to the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) superfamily.  相似文献   
3.
Urokinase-related proteins in human urine occur mainly as a 1:1 complex of urokinase with an inhibitor (Stump, D. C., Thienpont, M., and Collen, D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1267-1273). BALB/c mice were immunized with this urokinase-urokinase inhibitor complex and spleen cells fused with mouse myeloma cells, resulting in hybridomas producing monoclonal antibodies. Three antibodies reacting with the complex but not with urokinase were utilized to develop a sensitive (0.5 ng/ml) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the urokinase inhibitor, which was used for monitoring its purification by chromatography on zinc chelate-Sepharose, concanavalin A-Sepharose, SP-Sephadex C-50, and Sephadex G-100. A homogenous glycoprotein of apparent Mr 50,000 was obtained with a yield of 40 micrograms/liter urine and a purification factor of 320. One mg of the purified protein inhibited 35,000 IU of urokinase within 30 min at 37 degrees C. This protein was immunologically related to both the purified urokinase-urokinase inhibitor complex and to the inhibitor portion dissociated from it by nucleophilic dissociation. It was immunologically distinct from all known protease inhibitors, including the endothelial cell-derived fast-acting inhibitor of tissue-type plasminogen activator, the placental inhibitor of urokinase and protease nexin. In electrophoresis the protein migrated with beta-mobility. Inhibition of urokinase occurred with a second order rate constant (k) of 8 X 10(3) M-1 s-1 in the absence and of 9 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 in the presence of 50 IU of heparin/ml. The urokinase inhibitor was inactive towards single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator and plasmin, but it inhibited two-chain tissue-type plasminogen activator with a k below 10(3) M-1 s-1 and thrombin with a k of 4 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 in the absence and 2 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 in the presence of heparin. The concentration of this urokinase inhibitor in plasma from normal subjects determined by immunoassay was 2 +/- 0.7 micrograms/ml (mean +/- S.D., n = 25). The protein purified from plasma by immunoabsorption had the same Mr, amino acid composition, and immunoreactivity as the urinary protein. Furthermore, when urokinase was added to plasma, time-dependent urokinase-urokinase inhibitor complex formation was observed at a rate similar to that observed for the inhibition of urokinase by the purified inhibitor from urine. This urokinase inhibitor, purified from human urine, most probably represents a new plasma protease inhibitor.  相似文献   
4.
Activation of plasminogen by pro-urokinase. II. Kinetics   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The kinetics of the activation of plasminogen by recombinant pro-urokinase obtained by expression of human urokinase cDNA in Escherichia coli was studied. The conversion of pro-urokinase (U) and plasminogen (P) to urokinase (u) and plasmin (p) is represented by a sequence of three reactions which each obey Michaelis-Menten kinetics, i.e. (Formula: see text). In this model, pro-urokinase formally behaves as an enzyme in Reaction I and as a substrate in reaction II. The experimentally measured overall rates of formation of urokinase and plasmin are in good agreement with those calculated from the kinetic parameters and the initial concentrations of pro-urokinase and plasminogen, confirming the validity of the model. It appears that recombinant pro-urokinase is an equally potent activator of plasminogen (k2/Km = 0.05 microM-1 s-1), as in urokinase (k"2/K"m = 0.02 microM-1 s-1). This is due to the fact that the proenzyme, which is virtually inactive toward low Mr substrates for urokinase, forms an intermediate of the Michaelis-Menten type with plasminogen, with a much higher affinity than that of the active enzyme with its substrate. This is an exceptional phenomenon among the serine proteases.  相似文献   
5.
Activation of human Glu-plasminogen, Lys-plasminogen and low-Mr plasminogen (lacking lysine-binding sites) by pro-urokinase (pro-UK), obtained from a human lung adenocarcinoma cell line (Calu-3, ATCC), obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Activation occurs with a comparable affinity (Km 0.40-0.77 microM), while the catalytic rate constant (kcat) is comparable for Glu-plasminogen (0.0022s-1) and low-Mr plasminogen (0.0034 s-1), but is somewhat higher for Lys-plasminogen (0.0106 s-1). The rate of activation of plasminogen by pro-UK is not significantly influenced by the presence of 6-aminohexanoic acid, purified fragments LBS I or LBS II or histidine-rich glycoprotein, indicating that the high affinity of pro-UK for plasminogen is not mediated via the high-affinity lysine-binding site of plasminogen located in kringles 1-3 (LBS I) nor via the low-affinity lysine-binding site comprised within kringle 4 (LBS II). The site(s) in plasminogen involved in the high-affinity interaction with pro-UK thus appear to be located within the low-Mr plasminogen moiety.  相似文献   
6.
The mechanism of the heparin-promoted reaction of thrombin with antithrombin III was investigated by using covalent complexes of antithrombin III with either high-affinity heparin (Mr = 15,000) or heparin fragments having an average of 16 and 12 monosaccharide units (Mr = 4,300 and 3,200). The complexes inhibit thrombin in the manner of active site-directed, irreversible inhibitors: (Formula: see text) That is, the inhibition rate of the enzyme is saturable with respect to concentration of complexes. The values determined for Ki = (k-1 + k2)/k1 are 7 nM, 100 nM, and 6 microM when the Mr of the heparin moieties are 15,000, 4,300, 3,200, respectively, whereas k2 (2 S-1) is independent of the heparin chain length. The bimolecular rate constant k2/Ki for intact heparin is 3 X 10(8) M-1 S-1 and the corresponding second order rate constant k1 is 6.7 X 10(8) M-1 S-1, a value greater than that expected for a diffusion-controlled bimolecular reaction. The bimolecular rate constants for the complexes with heparin of Mr = 4,300 and 3,200 are, respectively, 2 X 10(7) M-1 S-1 and 3 X 10(5) M-1 S-1. Active site-blocked thrombin is an antagonist of covalent antithrombin III-heparin complexes: the effect is monophasic and half-maximum at 4 nM of antagonist against the complex with intact heparin, whereas the effect is weaker against complexes with heparin fragments and not monophasic. We conclude that virtually all of the activity of high affinity, high molecular weight heparin depends on binding both thrombin and antithrombin III to heparin, and that the exceptionally high activity of heparin results in part from the capacity of thrombin bound nonspecifically to heparin to diffuse in the dimension of the heparin chain towards bound antithrombin III. Increasing the chain length of heparin results in an increased reaction rate because of a higher probability of interaction between thrombin and heparin in solution.  相似文献   
7.
The inhibition of plasmin, (EC 3.4.21.7), thrombin (EC 3.4.21.5), trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) and chymotrypsin (EC 3.4.21.1) by antiplasmin, the recently described fast-reacting plasmin inhibitor of human plasma, was studied. To determine the quantitative importance of antiplasmin relative to the other plasma protease inhibitors, enzyme inhibition assays were performed on whole plasma and on plasma specifically depleted in antiplasmin, after addition of excess enzyme. Plasmin was the only enzyme for which the inhibitory capacity of antiplasmin-depleted plasma was lower than that of normal plasma. To determine the affinity of the enzymes for antiplasmin, as compared to the other inhibitors, various amounts of enzymes were added to normal plasma and the formation of enzyme-antiplasmin complexes studied by crossed immunoelectrophoresis using specific antisera against antiplasmin. Plasmin and trypsin, but not thrombin or chymotrypsin formed complexes with antiplasmin. It is concluded that antiplasmin is the only fast-reacting plasmin inhibitor of human plasma. It is also a fast-reacting inhibitor of trypsin but only accounts for a very small part of the fast-reacting trypsin-inhibitory activity of plasma. This can be explained by the low concentration of antiplasmin (1 muM) in normal plasma, compared to the other inhibitors (e.g. alpha1-antitrypsin: 40-80 muM).  相似文献   
8.
In dispersed acini from rat pancreas, cholera toxin caused a significant increase in cellular cyclic AMP but little or no change in amylase secretion. The presence of a secretagogue that causes mobilization of cellular calcium (e.g., cholecystokinin, carbamylcholine, bombesin or ionophore A23187) caused a substantial increase in the effect of cholera toxin on enzyme secretion. Cholera toxin did not alter calcium transport or the changes in calcium transport caused by other secretagogues, and secretagogues that mobilize cellular calcium did not alter cellular cyclic AMP or the increase in cyclic AMP caused by cholera toxin. These results indicate that in dispersed acini from rat pancreas there is post-receptor modulation of the action of cholera toxin by secretagogues that mobilize cellular calcium and that this modulation is a major determinant of the effect of the toxin on enzyme secretion.  相似文献   
9.
Fibrin-directed monoclonal antibodies may be clinically useful for in vitro thrombus imaging and for the targeting of fibrinolytic agents to blood clots. One such murine monoclonal antibody, (mAb-15C5), raised against the fragment-D dimer epitope of cross-linked human fibrin, was previously characterized [Holvoet, P., Stassen, J. M., Hashimoto, Y., Spriggs, D., Devos, P. & Collen, D. (1989) Thromb. Haemostasis 61, 307-313] has recently been cloned and expressed [Vandamme, A.-M., Bulens, F., Bernar, H., Nelles, L., Lijnen, H. R. & Collen, D. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 192, 767-775]. In order to reduce the immunogenicity of the murine mAb-15C5 in man, we have now constructed a murine--human chimera of mAb-15C5, by substituting the cDNA sequences encoding the constant regions of the murine kappa light chain and gamma 1 heavy chain by the corresponding human genomic sequences. Both chimeric murine--human Ig chains were cloned into two separately selectable expression vectors, which were contransfected into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Murine--human chimeric mAb-15C5 (mAb-15C5Hu) was purified from the conditioned medium of selected cell lines by chromatography on Zn-chelating Sepharose, protein-A-Sepharose and on insolubilized antigen (fragment-D dimer), with a final yield of 29 micrograms/l and a recovery of 33%. SDS/PAGE without reduction revealed a homogeneous band with a mobility similar to that of natural mAb-15C5, whereas after reduction, both the heavy and the light chains had slightly slower mobilities than their natural counterparts. Expression in the presence of tunicamycin suggested that the differences in gamma 1-chain mobility were due to different N-glycosylation patterns. Immunoblotting of proteins from SDS gels showed immunological reactivity of recombinant mAb-15C5Hu with goat anti-(human IgG) IgG and of recombinant and natural murine mAb-15C5 with goat anti-(mouse IgG) IgG. Competitive binding revealed a comparable affinity of recombinant murine mAb-15C5, recombinant mAb-15C5Hu and natural mAb-15C5, for fragment-D dimer, indicating that recombinant mAb-15C5Hu was obtained in a functionally intact form. Thus, mAb-15C5Hu may constitute a useful alternative to mAb-15C5 for in vivo use in man.  相似文献   
10.
The formation and release of covalent complexes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) limits the application of equilibrium radioligand binding analysis to characterize the interaction between t-PA and human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayers. To avoid this difficulty, we used a recombinant mutant of t-PA, S478A rt-PA, in which alanine has been substituted for the active-site serine. Although the mutant is incapable of covalently reacting with PAI-1, 125I-labeled S478A rt-PA binding to HUVEC monolayers is specific and reversible and is characterized by a high affinity (Kd of 1.5 nM) and a large number of sites (1.5 x 10(6)/cell). This binding was shown to occur through noncovalent interaction with PAI-1 in the HUVEC monolayer by the fact that a monoclonal anti-PAI-1 antibody (MA-7D4) completely blocked S478A rt-PA binding. Two solution-phase assays with recombinant PAI-1 (rPAI-1) confirmed this noncovalent interaction: complexes between 125I-S478A rt-PA and rPAI-1 could be isolated by immunoprecipitation with anti-PAI-1 antibodies, and S478A rt-PA competed with rt-PA for inactivation by rPAI-1. In contrast diisopropylphosphate rt-PA (in which the active site serine is chemically modified) showed minimal binding to HUVEC monolayers, as a result of impaired interaction with PAI-1, in the two assays. Thus, both wild-type rt-PA and S478A rt-PA interact with the HUVEC monolayer through PAI-1. With rt-PA this results in the formation of covalent rt-PA.PAI-1 complexes that are released from the monolayer into the supernatant. With S478A rt-PA this results in the formation of noncovalent complexes that remain associated with the HUVEC monolayer, thereby identifying a large pool of reactive PAI-1 molecules in the monolayer.  相似文献   
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