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1.
In order to design selective, high-affinity ligands to a target protein, it is advantageous to understand the structural determinants for protein-ligand complex formation at the atomic level. In a model system, we have successively mapped the factor Xa binding site onto trypsin, showing that certain mutations influence both protein structure and inhibitor specificity. Our previous studies have shown that introduction of the 172SSFI175 sequence of factor Xa into rat or bovine trypsin results in the destabilisation of the intermediate helix with burial of Phe174 (the down conformation). Surface exposure of the latter residue (the up conformation) is critical for the correct formation of the aromatic box found in factor Xa-ligand complexes. In the present study, we investigate the influence of aromatic residues in position 174. Replacement with the bulky tryptophan (SSWI) shows reduced affinity for benzamidine-based inhibitors (1) and (4), whereas removal of the side-chain (alanine, SSAI) or exchange with a hydrophilic residue (arginine, SSRI) leads to a significant loss in affinity for all inhibitors studied. The variants could be crystallised in the presence of different inhibitors in multiple crystal forms. Structural characterisation of the variants revealed three different conformations of the intermediate helix and 175 loop in SSAI (down, up and super-up), as well as a complete disorder of this region in one crystal form of SSRI, suggesting that the compromised affinity of these variants is related to conformational flexibility. The influence of Glu217, peripheral to the ligand-binding site in factor Xa, was investigated. Introduction of Glu217 into trypsin variants containing the SSFI sequence exhibited enhanced affinity for the factor Xa ligands (2) and (3). The crystal structures of these variants also exhibited the down and super-up conformations, the latter of which could be converted to up upon soaking and binding of inhibitor (2). The improved affinity of the Glu217-containing variants appears to be due to a shift towards the up conformation. Thus, the reduction in affinity caused by conformational variability of the protein target can be partially or wholly offset by compensatory binding to the up conformation. The insights provided by these studies will be helpful in improving our understanding of ligand binding for the drug design process.  相似文献   

2.
In order to investigate issues of selectivity and specificity in protein-ligand interactions, we have undertaken the reconstruction of the binding pocket of human factor Xa in the structurally related rat trypsin by site-directed mutagenesis. Three sequential regions (the "99"-, the "175"- and the "190"- loops) were selected as representing the major structural differences between the ligand binding sites of the two enzymes. Wild-type rat trypsin and variants X99rT and X(99/175/190)rT were expressed in yeast, and analysed for their interaction with factor Xa and trypsin inhibitors. For most of the inhibitors studied, progressive loop replacement at the trypsin surface resulted in inhibitory profiles akin to factor Xa. Crystals of the variants were obtained in the presence of benzamidine (3), and could be soaked with the highly specific factor Xa inhibitor (1). Binding of the latter to X99rT results in a series of structural adaptations to the ligand, including the establishment of an "aromatic box" characteristic of factor Xa. In X(99/175/190)rT, introduction of the 175-loop results in a surprising re-orientation of the "intermediate helix", otherwise common to trypsin and factor Xa. The re-orientation is accompanied by an isomerisation of the Cys168-Cys182 disulphide bond, and burial of the critical Phe174 side-chain. In the presence of (1), a major re-organisation of the binding site takes place to yield a geometry identical to that of factor Xa. In all, binding of (1) to trypsin and its variants results in significant structural rearrangements, inducing a binding surface strongly reminiscent of factor Xa, against which the inhibitor was optimised. The structural data reveal a plasticity of the intermediate helix, which has been implicated in the functional cofactor dependency of many trypsin-like serine proteinases. This approach of grafting loops onto scaffolds of known related structures may serve to bridge the gap between structural genomics and drug design.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: A major current focus of pharmaceutical research is the development of selective inhibitors of the blood coagulation enzymes thrombin or factor Xa to be used as orally bioavailable anticoagulant drugs in thromboembolic disorders and in the prevention of venous and arterial thrombosis. Simultaneous direct inhibition of thrombin and factor Xa by synthetic proteinase inhibitors as a novel approach to antithrombotic therapy could result in potent anticoagulants with improved pharmacological properties. RESULTS: The binding mode of such dual specific inhibitors of thrombin and factor Xa was determined for the first time by comparative crystallography using human alpha-thrombin, human des-Gla (1--44) factor Xa and bovine trypsin as the ligand receptors. The benzamidine-based inhibitors utilize two different conformations for the interaction with thrombin and factor Xa/trypsin, which are evoked by the steric requirements of the topologically different S2 subsites of the enzymes. Compared to the unliganded forms of the proteinases, ligand binding induces conformational adjustments of thrombin and factor Xa active site residues indicative of a pronounced induced fit mechanism. CONCLUSION: The structural data reveal the molecular basis for a desired unselective inhibition of the two key components of the blood coagulation cascade. The 4-(1-methyl-benzimidazole-2-yl)-methylamino-benzamidine moieties of the inhibitors are able to fill both the small solvent accessible as well as the larger hydrophobic S2 pockets of factor Xa and thrombin, respectively. Distal fragments of the inhibitors are identified which fit into both the cation hole/aromatic box of factor Xa and the hydrophobic aryl binding site of thrombin. Thus, binding constants in the medium-to-low nanomolar range are obtained against both enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of pH and temperature on the apparent association equilibrium constant (Ka) for the binding of the bovine basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI, Kunitz inhibitor) to human and bovine factor Xa (Stuart-Prower factor; EC 3.4.21.6) has been investigated. Under all the experimental conditions, values of Ka for BPTI binding to human and bovine factor Xa are identical. On lowering the pH from 9.5 to 4.5, values of Ka (at 21.0 degrees C) for BPTI binding to human and bovine factor Xa decrease, thus reflecting the acidic pK shift of the His57 catalytic residue from 7.1, in the free enzyme, to 5.2, in the proteinase-inhibitor complex. At pH 8.0, values of the apparent thermodynamic parameters for BPTI binding to human and bovine factor Xa are: Ka = 2.1 x 10(5)M-1 (at 21.0 degrees C), delta G degree = -29.7 kJ/mol (at 21.0 degrees C), delta S degree = +161 entropy units (at 21.0 degrees C), and delta H degree = +17.6 kJ/mol (temperature-independent over the explored range, from 5.0 degrees C to 45.0 degrees C). Thermodynamics of BPTI binding to human and bovine factor Xa have been analysed in parallel with those of related serine (pro)enzyme/Kazal- and /Kunitz-type inhibitor systems. Considering the known molecular models, the observed binding behaviour of BPTI to human and bovine factor Xa was related to the inferred stereochemistry of the proteinase/inhibitor contact region.  相似文献   

5.
Selectivity of drug targeting is necessary in order to forestall undesired side-effects. Here, we examine the structural grounds for the configuration-dependent selectivity of 2,7-bis(4-amidinobenzylidene)-cycloheptan-1-one (1) for factor Xa and trypsin: Previous studies showed that factor Xa is preferentially inhibited by the (Z,Z) configuration isomer of (1), whilst trypsin binds equally well to both (E,Z) and (Z,Z) forms. Using engineered trypsin variants, we find similar overall binding modes for the (E,Z) and (Z,Z) isomers. Minor changes in van der Waals' contacts to Tyr99 (Leu in trypsin) explain the differential inhibition of factor Xa. We note differences in the experimental electron densities observed from co-crystallisation and soaking experiments: while the co-crystallisation of (1) with variants containing Tyr99 (Leu99) reveal the exclusive presence of the (Z,Z) ((E,Z)) configurations respectively, soaking experiments with either variant result in mixtures of (E,Z), (Z,Z) and (E,E). This discrepancy arises presumably from differences in the spatial (packing considerations) or chemical (crystallisation conditions) microenvironments. The results presented here represent an extreme example of the problems that face structure-based drug design, in particular the dangers inherent in relying on a single crystal structure for interpreting protein-ligand interactions.  相似文献   

6.
The field of proteinomimetics utilizes peptide-based molecules to mimic native protein functions. We describe a novel general method for mimicking proteins by small cyclic peptides for the purpose of drug design, and demonstrate its applicability on bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). These unique cyclic peptides, which both embody discontinuous residues of proteins in their bio-active conformation and ensure an induced fit, may overcome some of the pharmacological drawbacks attributed to proteins and peptides. This method, which we call the backbone cyclic (BC) proteinomimetic approach, combines backbone cyclization of peptides with a suitable selection method, cycloscan. Following this procedure, we have prepared a bicyclic nonapeptide, which mimics the binding region of BPTI. The X-ray crystal structure of the complex trypsin:mimetic, as well as kinetic studies, show that the BPTI mimetic binds to the specificity pocket of trypsin in a similar manner to BPTI. Inhibition measurements of various constructs revealed that backbone cyclization imposed the conformation crucial to binding.  相似文献   

7.
Human thrombin (EC 3.4.21.5) binds tightly to p-chlorobenzylamido-epsilon-aminocaproyl agarose, and is not eluted by 2 M NaCl at pH 8. Its zymogen, human prothrombin, does not bind to the same absorbent. 2 M NaCl partially elutes DFP-treated thrombin. For native human and bovine thrombins, protein and activity are quantitatively eluted by 25% dioxane, and upon rechromatography the active human enzyme exhibits the same binding properties. Equally tight binding of human thrombin occurs with derivatives of the m- and p-chlorobenzylamines. With the o-chloro derivative or benzylamine itself insolubilized to epsilon-aminocaproyl agarose, thrombin is eluted by high ionic strength. Bovine trypsin and bovine factor Xa bind less tightly than thrombin to p-chlorobenzylamido-epsilon-aminocaproyl agarose, being eluted by high ionic strength. It is proposed that the specific thrombin adsorption is related to a secondary binding site of high affinity and with hydrophobic properties. This site is not available in the zymogen. Furthermore, the less specific protease, trypsin, and the more specific protease, factor Xa, lack this binding site.  相似文献   

8.
R Laura  D J Robison  D H Bing 《Biochemistry》1980,19(21):4859-4864
p-(Amidinophenyl)methanesulfonyl fluoride (p-APMSF) has been synthesized and shown to be a specific, irreversible inhibitor of the class of plasma serine proteases which demonstrate substrate specificity for the positively charged side chains of the amino acid lysine or arginine. In equimolar concentration, this compound causes immediate and complete irreversible inhibition of bovine trypsin and human thrombin. A 5-10-fold molar excess of reagent over enzyme is required to achieve complete irreversible inhibition of bovine Factor Xa, human plasmin, human C1-r, and human C1-s. the Ki of p-APMSF for all of the above-mentioned proteases is between 1 and 2 microM. In contrast, p-APMSF in large molar excess does not inactivate chymotrypsin or acetylcholinesterase. The unique reactivity of p-APMSF has been further shown in comparison with the related compound p-nitrophenyl (p-amidinophenyl)methanesulfonate which is an active-site titrant for thrombin but reacts poorly with Factor Xa, C1-r, and C1-s and is not hydrolyzed by bovine trypsin or human plasmin. Similarly, (p-amidinophenyl)methanesulfonate has a Ki of 30 microM for thrombin but is a poor inhibitor of trypsin, Factor Xa, C1-r, C1-s, and plasmin. Studies with bovine trypsin have demonstrated that the inhibitory activity of p-APMSF is the result of its interaction with the diisopropyl fluorophosphate reactive site. The unique reactivity of this inhibitor classifies it as one of the most effective active site directed reagents for this class of serine proteases. Collectively, these results suggest that the primary substrate binding site of these enzymes, which share a high degree of structural homology, do in fact significantly differ from each other in their ability to interact with low molecular weight inhibitors and synthetic substrates.  相似文献   

9.
C M Smith  D J Hanahan 《Biochemistry》1976,15(9):1830-1838
Bovine plasma factor V has been isolated by a preparative procedure involving barium sulfate adsorption, QAEC extraction, poly(ethylene glycol) precipitation, and finally chromatography on a desulfated Sepharose 6B column. Factor V was recovered as a single peak in yields of 35-40% with a specific activity of 50-70 representing a purification of 1000-2000-fold relative to the starting plasma. The apparent molecular weight of the purified factor V was 439,000 +/- 5000. On sodium dodecyl sulfate gel and analytical gel electrophoresis, this factor V preparation showed multiple bands, but results are inconclusive with regard to a possible subunit structure for this factor. The purified factor V was stable for at least 1-2 weeks when stored at 4 degrees C in 0.2 M Tris-acetate, 50 mM CaCl2, 10% glycerol, pH 7.5. When stored at -20 degrees C in 50% glycerol, this preparation was stable for several months. Treatment of the purified factor V with bovine factor Xa, RVV-V, thrombin, or chymotrypsin (but not trypsin) led to a seven- to ten-fold increase in clotting activity and a concomitant decrease in apparent molecular weight. The latter was comparable for each activation system yielding the following average molecular weight values: factor VaSa, 246,000-, factor Va RVV-V, 251,500; Factor Vathr, 239,000; alpha-chymotrypsin, but not trypsin, can activate plasma factor V yielding a product similar to that observed with the above activators. The molar quantities of each of the activators required varied considerably with thrombin having the highest specific activity and factor Xa the lowest. Activation by factor Xa was greatly facilitated by the addition of phospholipid. In the presence of a mixture of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (1:1, w/w), the activation of factor V by factor Xa plus Ca2+ required one-third the amount of factor Xa protein as that required in the absence of phospholipid. Even though each of these activators appears to act in an enzymatic manner, the chemical nature of the conversion is unknown at this time.  相似文献   

10.
The proteolytic action of human and bovine Factor Xa, bovine thrombin and bovine pancreatic trypsin Factor II at pH 7.5 and 25°C was monitored by sodium dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis and thrombin assays. Purified human and bovine Factor Xa, and trypsin, were found to activate Factor II to thrombin. The conversion of Factor II to thrombin by either Factor Xa or trypsin was found to proceed through two thrombogenic intermediates. The reaction pathway appears to be sequential in that the Factor II (75 000 daltons) is first cleaved to a 55 000-dalton thrombogenic product (Intermediate 1) and a 25 000-dalton non-thrombogenic product (Fragment 1). Intermediate 1 is subsequently converted to an inactive 37 000-dalton thrombogenic protein (Intermediate 2) and a 16 000-dalton protein (Fragment 2). Intermediate 2 is finally converted to an active 37 000-dalton thrombin (α-thrombin). Purified bovine thrombin readily converted Factor II to Intermediate 1 and Fragment 1, but possessed little capacity to catalyze subsequent cleavages to produce active thrombin. The ability of thrombin to cleave Factor II was entirely obviated in the presence of hirudin. Under the conditions of the incubation, the maximum thrombin yield obtainable by Factor Xa or trypsin activation was 50% when compared to the two-stage potential thrombin.  相似文献   

11.
Coagulation factor Va is a cofactor which combines with the serine protease factor Xa on a phospholipid surface to form the prothrombinase complex. The phospholipid-binding domain of bovine factor Va has been reported to be located on the light chain of the molecule and more precisely on a fragment of Mr = 30,000 which is obtained after digestion of factor Va light chain by factor Xa. This proteolytic fragment is located in the NH2-terminal part of factor Va light chain (residues 1564-1765). In order to further characterize the lipid-binding domain of bovine factor Va, isolated bovine light chain was preincubated with synthetic phospholipid vesicles (75% phosphatidylcholine, 25% phosphatidylserine) and digested with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase. Two peptide regions protected from proteolytic cleavage were identified and characterized from each proteolytic digestion. A comparison of the NH2-terminal sequence and amino acid composition of the two tryptic peptides with the deduced sequence of human factor V indicates a match with residues 1657-1791 of the light chain of human factor V for one peptide and residues 1546-1656 for the other peptide. When chymotrypsin or elastase were used for digestion, the NH2-terminal sequence of one peptide showed a match with residues 1667-1797 of the light chain, while the other peptide presented an NH2-terminal sequence identical with the previously described for the bovine factor Va light chain. When these peptides were assayed for direct binding to phospholipid vesicles, only the tryptic and the chymotryptic peptides covering the middle region of the A3 domain of the bovine factor Va light chain demonstrated an ability to interact with phospholipid vesicles. Thus, knowing that the factor Xa cleavage site on the factor Va light chain is located between residues 1765 and 1766 of the light chain this lipid-binding region of the bovine factor Va is further localized to amino acid residues 1667-1765.  相似文献   

12.
A low molecular weight serine protease inhibitor, named trypstatin, was purified from rat peritoneal mast cells. It is a single polypeptide with 61 amino acid residues and an Mr of 6610. Trypstatin markedly inhibits blood coagulation factor Xa (Ki = 1.2 x 10(-10) M) and tryptase (Ki = 3.6 x 10(-10) M) from rat mast cells, which have activities that convert prothrombin to thrombin. It also inhibits porcine pancreatic trypsin (Ki = 1.4 x 10(-8) M) and chymase (Ki = 2.4 x 10(-8) M) from rat mast cells, but not papain, alpha-thrombin, or porcine pancreatic elastase. Trypstatin forms a complex in a molar ratio of 1:1 with trypsin and one subunit of tryptase. The complete amino acid sequence of this inhibitor was determined and compared with those of Kunitz-type inhibitors. Trypstatin has a high degree of sequence homology with human and bovine inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitors, A4(751) Alzheimer's disease amyloid protein precursor, and basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. However, unlike other known Kunitz-type protease inhibitors, it inhibits factor Xa most strongly.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of recombinant nematode anticoagulant protein c2 (NAPc2) to either factor X or Xa is a requisite step in the pathway for the potent inhibition of VIIa tissue factor. We have used NAPc2 as a tight binding probe of human Xa to investigate protein substrate recognition by the human prothrombinase complex. NAPc2 binds with high affinity (K(d) approximately 1 nm) to both X and Xa in a way that does not require or occlude the active site of the enzyme. In contrast, NAPc2 is a tight binding, competitive inhibitor of protein substrate cleavage by human Xa incorporated into prothrombinase with saturating concentrations of membranes and Va. By fluorescence binding studies we show that NAPc2 does not interfere with the assembly of human prothrombinase. These are properties expected of an inhibitor that blocks protein substrate recognition by targeting extended macromolecular recognition sites (exosites) on the enzyme complex. A weaker interaction (K(d) = 260-500 nm) observed between NAPc2 and bovine X was restored to a high affinity one in a recombinant chimeric bovine X derivative containing 25 residues from the COOH terminus of the proteinase domain of human X. This region implicated in binding NAPc2 is spatially adjacent to a site previously identified as a potential exosite. Despite the weaker interaction with bovine Xa, NAPc2 was a tight binding competitive inhibitor of protein substrate cleavage by bovine prothrombinase as well. Extended enzymic surfaces elucidated with exosite-directed probes, such as NAPc2, may define a unique region of factor Xa that is modulated following its assembly into prothrombinase and in turn determines the binding specificity of the enzyme complex for its protein substrate.  相似文献   

14.
The published activation site sequences of bovine factors IX and X have been utilized to synthesize a number of peptides specifically designed respectively as substrates for bovine factors XIa and IXa beta. The substrates contain a fluorophore (2-aminobenzoyl group, Abz) and a quenching group (4-nitrobenzylamide, Nba) that are separated upon enzymatic hydrolysis with a resultant increase in fluorescence that was utilized to measure hydrolysis rates. Factor XIa cleaved all of the peptides bearing factor IX activation site sequences with Abz-Glu-Phe-Ser-Arg-Val-Val-Gly-Nba having the highest kcat/KM value. The kinetic behavior of factor XIa toward the synthetic peptide substrate indicates that it has a minimal extended substrate recognition site at least five residues long spanning S4 to S1' and has favorable interactions over seven subsites. The hexapeptide Abz-Glu-Phe-Ser-Arg-Val-Val-Nba was the most specific factor XIa substrate and was not hydrolyzed by factors IXa beta or Xa beta or thrombin. Factor IXa beta failed to hydrolyze any of the synthetic peptides bearing the activation site sequence of factor X. This enzyme slowly cleaved four hexa- and heptapeptide substrates with factor IX activation site sequences extending from P4 or P3 to P3'. Factor Xa beta poorly hydrolyzed all but one of the factor XIa substrates and failed to cleave any of the factor IXa beta substrates. Thrombin failed to hydrolyze any of the peptides examined while trypsin, as expected, was highly reactive and not very specific. Phospholipids had no effect on the reactivity of either factors IXa beta or Xa beta toward synthetic substrates. Both factor IXa beta and Xa beta cleaved the peptide substrates at similar rates to their natural substrates under comparable conditions. However the rates were substantially lower than optimum activation rates observed in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipids, and protein cofactors. In the future, it may be useful to investigate synthetic substrates that can bind to phospholipid vesicles in the same manner as the natural substrates for factors IXa beta and Xa beta.  相似文献   

15.
A series of benzoxazinone derivatives was designed and synthesized as factor Xa inhibitors. We demonstrated that the naphthyl moiety in the aniline-based compounds 1 and 2 can be replaced with benzene-fused heterobicycles and biaryls to give factor Xa inhibitors with improved trypsin selectivity. The P4 modifications lead to monoamidines which are moderately active. The benzoxazinones 41-45 are potent against factor Xa, retain the improved trypsin selectivity of the corresponding aniline-based compounds, and show strong antithrombotic effect dose responsively.  相似文献   

16.
Y Hojima  J V Pierce  J J Pisano 《Biochemistry》1982,21(16):3741-3746
A strong inhibitor of human Hageman factor fragment (HFf, beta-factor XIIa) and bovine trypsin was isolated from pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima) seed extracts by acetone fractionation, by chromatography on columns of diethyl-aminoethylcellulose and carboxylmethyl-Sephadex C-25, and by Sephadex G-50 gel filtration. Pumpkin seed Hageman factor inhibitor (PHFI) is unusual in its lack of inhibition of several other serine proteinases tested--human plasma, human urinary, and porcine pancreatic kallikreins, human alpha-thrombin, and bovine alpha-chymotrypsin. Human plasmin and bovine factor Xa are only weakly inhibited. PHFI also inhibits the HFf-dependent activation of plasma prekallikrein and clotting of plasma. Other properties of PHFI are a pI of 8.3, 29 amino acid residues, amino-terminal arginine, carboxyl-terminal glycine, 3 cystine residues, undetectable sulfhydryl groups and carbohydrate, and arginine at the reactive site. The minimum molecular weight of PHFI is 3268 by amino acid analysis. PHFI may be the smallest protein inhibitor of trypsin known.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Bauhinia ungulata factor Xa inhibitor (BuXI) inactivates factor Xa and LOPAP, a prothrombin activator proteinase isolated from the venom of Lonomia obliqua caterpillar bristles. The reactive site of the enzyme-inhibitor interaction was explored to design specific substrates for both enzymes. Methionine is crucial for LOPAP and factor Xa substrate interaction, since the change of both Met residues in the substrates abolished the hydrolysis. Synthetic substrates containing the sequence around the reactive site of BbKI, a plasma kallikrein inhibitor, were shown to be specific for trypsin hydrolysis. Therefore, these substrates may be an alternative in studies aiming at a characterization of trypsin-like enzyme activities, especially non-mammalian enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Sulfated low molecular weight lignins (LMWLs), designed as oligomeric mimetics of low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs), have been found to bind in exosite II of thrombin. To assess whether sulfated LMWLs recognize other heparin-binding proteins, we studied their effect on serine proteases of the coagulation, inflammatory and digestive systems. Using chromogenic substrate hydrolysis assay, sulfated LMWLs were found to potently inhibit coagulation factor XIa and human leukocyte elastase, moderately inhibit cathepsin G and not inhibit coagulation factors VIIa, IXa, and XIIa, plasma kallikrein, activated protein C, trypsin, and chymotrypsin. Competition studies show that UFH competes with sulfated LMWLs for binding to factors Xa and XIa. These results further advance the concept of sulfated LMWLs as heparin mimics and will aid the design of anticoagulants based on their novel scaffold.  相似文献   

20.
C M Kam  K Fujikawa  J C Powers 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2547-2557
Trypsin, porcine pancreatic kallikrein, and several blood coagulation enzymes, including bovine thrombin, bovine factor Xa, human factor Xa, human plasma factor XIa, human plasma factor XIIa, and human plasma kallikrein, were inactivated by a number of substituted isocoumarins containing basic functional groups (aminoalkoxy, guanidino, and isothiureidoalkoxy). 3-Alkoxy-4-chloro-7-guanidinoisocoumarins were found to be the most potent inhibitors for the coagulation enzymes tested with kobsd/[I] values in the range of 10(3)-10(5) M-1 s-1. 4-Chloro-3-isothiureidoalkoxyisocoumarins show high inhibitory potency toward porcine pancreatic kallikrein, human plasma kallikrein, human factor XIa, human factor XIIa, and trypsin with kobsd/[I] values of the order of 10(4)-10(5) M-1 s-1. The inhibition of these serine proteases by the substituted isocoumarins are time dependent, and the inactivation of trypsin by 3-alkoxy-4-chloro-7-guanidinoisocoumarins and 7-amino-4-chloro-3-(3-isothiureidopropoxy)isocoumarin occured concurrently with the loss of the isocoumarin absorbance. The complex formed from inactivation of trypsin by these two types of inhibitors was very stable and regained less than 4% activity in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid buffer (pH 7.5) after 1 day at 25 degrees C and regained 8-45% activity upon addition of buffered 0.29 M hydroxylamine. Trypsin inactivated by other inhibitors regained full activity upon standing or addition of hydroxylamine. Thrombin inactivated by 3-alkoxy-4-chloro-7-guanidinoisocoumarins was also quite stable and only regained 9-15% activity under similar conditions. These results are consistent with a proposed mechanism, where serine proteases inactivated by aminoalkoxyisocoumarins or isothiureidoalkoxyisocoumarins form acyl enzymes that will deacylate upon standing or addition of hydroxylamine. However, the acyl enzymes formed from 3-alkoxy-4-chloro-7-guanidinoisocoumarins or 7-amino-4-chloro-3-(3-isothiureidopropoxy)-isocoumarin will decompose further, probably through a quinone imine methide, to give an irreversibly inactivated enzyme by reaction with an active-site nucleophile such as His-57. The quinone imine methide intermediate may also react with a solvent nucleophile to give an acyl enzyme that can be reactivated by hydroxylamine. The inhibitors 4-chloro-7-guanidino-3-methoxyisocoumarin and 4-chloro-3-ethoxy-7-guanidinoisocoumarin have been tested as anticoagulants in human plasma and were effective at prolonging the prothrombin time. However, they are unstable in plasma (t1/2 = 4-8 min), and their in vivo utility may be limited.  相似文献   

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