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1.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), the primary physiological inhibitor of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in plasma, is a serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin) that forms a 1:1 stoichiometric complex with its target proteinase leading to the formation of a stable inactive complex. The active, inhibitory form of PAI-1 spontaneously converts to a latent form that can be reactivated by protein denaturants. In the present study we have isolated another molecular form of intact PAI-1 that, in contrast with active PAI-1, does not form stable complexes with t-PA but is cleaved at the P1-P1' bond (Arg346-Met347). Other serine proteinases, e.g. urokinase-type plasminogen activator and thrombin, also cleaved this "substrate" form of PAI-1. Fluorescence spectroscopy revealed conformational differences between the latent, active, and substrate forms of PAI-1. This observation confirms our hypothesis that the three functionally different forms of PAI-1 are the consequence of conformational transitions. Thus PAI-1 may occur in three interconvertible conformations: latent, inhibitor, and substrate PAI-1. The identification of two distinct conformations of PAI-1 which interact with their target protease either as an inhibitor or as a substrate is a previously unrecognized phenomenon among the serpins. Conversion of substrate PAI-1 to its inactive degradation product may constitute a pathway for the physiological regulation of PAI-1 activity.  相似文献   

2.
In this report, we demonstrate an interaction between subtilisin NAT (formerly designated BSP, or nattokinase), a profibrinolytic serine proteinase from Bacillus subtilis, and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1). Subtilisin NAT was purified to homogeneity (molecular mass, 27.7 kDa) from a saline extract of B. subtilis (natto). Subtilisin NAT appeared to cleave active recombinant prokaryotic PAI-1 (rpPAI-1) into low molecular weight fragments. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization in combination with time-of-flight mass spectroscopy and peptide sequence analysis revealed that rpPAI-1 was cleaved at its reactive site (P1-P1': Arg(346)-Met(347)). rpPAI-1 lost its specific activity after subtilisin NAT treatment in a dose-dependent manner (0.02-1.0 nm; half-maximal effect at approximately 0.1 nm). Subtilisin NAT dose dependently (0.06-1 nm) enhanced tissue-type plasminogen activator-induced fibrin clot lysis both in the absence of rpPAI-1 (48 +/- 1.4% at 1 nm) and especially in the presence of rpPAI-1 (78 +/- 2.0% at 1 nm). The enhancement observed in the absence of PAI-1 seems to be induced through direct fibrin dissolution by subtilisin NAT. The stronger enhancement by subtilisin NAT of rpPAI-1-enriched fibrin clot lysis seems to involve the cleavage and inactivation of active rpPAI-1. This mechanism is suggested to be important for subtilisin NAT to potentiate fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Type-1 inhibitor of plasminogen activators (PAI-1) occurs in purified preparations in a latent form that can be activated with denaturants; in vivo, latency is prevented by binding to vitronectin. We have compared latent, denaturant-activated and reactive centre-cleaved human PAI-1 with respect to thermal stability and affinity to monoclonal antibodies. By both criteria, latent and cleaved PAI-1 are very similar or indistinguishable, and clearly different from active PAI-1. Our findings suggest that the conformations of latent and reactive centre-cleaved PAI-1 are similar and resemble the so-called relaxed (R) serpin conformation, while that of active PAI-1 is different and resembles the stressed (S) serpin conformation.  相似文献   

4.
Wild-type plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) rapidly converts to the inactive latent state under conditions of physiological pH and temperature. For in vivo studies of active PAI-1 in cell culture and in vivo model systems, the 14-1B PAI-1 mutant (N150H-K154T-Q319L-M354I), with its stabilized active conformation, has thus become the PAI-1 of choice. As a consequence of the increased stability, the only two forms likely to be encountered are the active or the cleaved form, the latter either free or complexed with target proteinase. We hereby report the first structure of the stable 14-1B PAI-1 variant in its reactive center cleaved form, to a resolution of 2.0 A. The >99% complete structure represents the highest resolved structure of free cleaved PAI-1. This high-resolution structure should be of great use for drug target development and for modeling protein-protein interactions such as those of PAI-1 with vitronectin.  相似文献   

5.
The structural events taking place during the reaction between PAI-1 (plasminogen-activator inhibitor 1) and the plasminogen activators sc-tPA (single-chain tissue plasminogen activator) and tc-tPA (two-chain tissue plasminogen activator) were studied. Complexes were formed by mixing sc-tPA or tc-tPA with PAI-1 in slight excess (on an activity basis). The complexes were purified from excess PAI-1 by affinity chromatography on fibrin-Sepharose. Examination of the purified complexes by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis (SDS/PAGE) and N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis demonstrated that a stoichiometric 1:1 complex is formed between PAI-1 and both forms of tPA. Data obtained from both complexes revealed the amino acid sequences of the parent molecules and, in addition, a new sequence: Met-Ala-Pro-Glu-Glu-. This sequence is found in the C-terminal portion of the intact PAI-1 molecule and thus locates the reactive centre of PAI-1 to Arg346-Met347. The proteolytic activity of sc-tPA is demonstrated by its capacity to cleave the 'bait' peptide bond in PAI-1. The complexes were inactive and dissociated slowly at physiological pH and ionic strength, but rapidly in aq. NH3 (0.1 mol/l). Amidolytic tPA activity was generated on dissociation of the complexes, corresponding to 0.4 mol of tPA/mol of complex. SDS/PAGE of the dissociated complexes indicated a small decrease in the molecular mass of PAI-1, in agreement with proteolytic cleavage of the 'bait' peptide bond during complex-formation.  相似文献   

6.
The serpin plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) slowly converts to an inactive latent form by inserting a major part of its reactive center loop (RCL) into its beta-sheet A. A murine monoclonal antibody (MA-33B8), raised against the human plasminogen activator (tPA).PAI-1 complex, rapidly inactivates PAI-1. Results presented here indicate that MA-33B8 induces acceleration of the active-to-latent conversion. The antibody-induced inactivation of PAI-1 labeled with the fluorescent probe N, N'-dimethyl-N-(acetyl)-N'-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl) ethylene diamine (NBD) at P9 in the RCL caused a fluorescence enhancement and shift identical to those accompanying the spontaneous conversion of the P9.NBD PAI-1 to the latent form. Like latent PAI-1, antibody-inactivated PAI-1 was protected from cleavage by elastase. The rate constants for MA-33B8 binding, measured by NBD fluorescence or inactivation, were similar (1.3-1.8 x 10(4) M-1 s-1), resulting in a 4000-fold faster inactivation at 4.2 microM antibody binding sites. The apparent antibody binding rate constant, at least 1000 times slower than one limited by diffusion, indicates that exposure of its epitope depends on an unfavorable equilibrium of PAI-1. Our observations are consistent with this idea and suggest that the equilibrium involves partial insertion of the RCL into sheet A: latent, RCL-cleaved, and tPA-complexed PAI-1, which are inactive loop-inserted forms, bound much faster than active PAI-1 to MA-33B8, whereas two loop-extracted forms of PAI-1, modified to prevent loop insertion, did not bind or bound much more weakly to the antibody.  相似文献   

7.
The plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) synthesized and released by cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells is present in conditioned medium in a latent form that can be activated by guanidine hydrochloride [Hekman, C. M., & Loskutoff, D. J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11581-11587]. The purified, guanidine-activated PAI-1 was shown to inhibit both plasmin and trypsin in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Second-order rate constants for these interactions were calculated to be 6.6 X 10(5) and 7.0 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 for plasmin and trypsin, respectively. Experiments were conducted to compare the inherently active and the guanidine-activated forms of PAI-1. The two active forms had similar kinetic parameters for interaction with urokinase (Kd, 0.3 pM; kassoc, 1.5 X 10(8) M-1 s-1) and were both inactivated upon treatment with acid or base and by incubation at 37 degrees C. The latent form was relatively stable when incubated under similar conditions. The decrease in PAI-1 activity upon incubation at 37 degrees C was partially restored by a second treatment with guanidine hydrochloride. However, the degree of recovery decreased as a function of incubation time at 37 degrees C. These data suggest that active and guanidine-activated PAI-1 represent a single form of PAI-1. Incubation of this form at 37 degrees C yields two distinct populations of inactive PAI-1, one capable of reactivation and another that appears to be irreversibly inactivated.  相似文献   

8.
Expression of human recombinant plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) in Escherichia coli has led to crystallization of ‘latent’ PAI-1. Cleavage with restriction endonucleases of a cDNA clone encoding PAI-1 yielded an 1127 base pair fragment encoding residues 2–376 of the 379 amino acid serpin. Synthetic DNA linkers were ligated to the 5′ and 3′ ends of the subclone to add an initiation codon and restore the full coding sequence, and the resulting semisynthetic gene was incorporated into an expression plasmid, pPAIST-7, under the control of the E. coli trp promoter. Transformation of E. coli GE81 with pPAIST-7 led to expression of unglycosylated PAI-1. Lysates of expression cultures contained PAI-1 activity and PAI-1 protein with the predicted Mr. Unglycosylated PAI-1 from E. coli exhibited characteristic properties of authentic PAI-1: (1) it was recovered in both active and inactive (latent) forms; (2) its activity declined during incubation at 37°C; (3) latent PAI-1 was activated by treatment with 4 M guanidine hydrochloride; (4) reactivated PAI-1 formed a detergent-stable complex with tissue plasminogen activator. Latent PAI-1 accounted for more than 85% of PAI-1 in cell lysates and was purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation, anion-exchange chromatography and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The purified latent PAI-1 was crystallized.  相似文献   

9.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) acts as the major inhibitor of fibrinolysis by inhibiting tissue-type and urokinase-type plasminogen activators. Although it shares a common tertiary structure with other serine protease inhibitors, PAI-1 is unique in its conformational lability, which allows conversion of the active form to the latent conformation under physiological conditions. Therefore, recombinant PAI-1 expressed in eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells almost always contains its inactive, latent form, with very low specific activity. In this study, we developed a simple and efficient method for purifying the active form of recombinant PAI-1 rather than the latent conformation from PAI-1 overexpressing Escherichia coli cells. The overall level of expression and the amount of PAI-1 found in inclusion bodies were found to increase with culture temperature and with time after induction. Refolding of unfolded PAI-1 from inclusion bodies and ion-exchange column chromatography were sufficient to purify PAI-1. The purified protein yielded a single, 43kDa protein band upon SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and it efficiently inhibited tissue-type and urokinase-type plasminogen activators similar to PAI-1 from natural sources. Activity measurements showed that PAI-1 purified from inclusion bodies exhibited a specific activity near the theoretical maximum, unlike PAI-1 prepared from cytosolic fractions. Conformational analysis by urea gel electrophoresis also indicated that the PAI-1 protein purified from inclusion bodies was indeed in its active conformation.  相似文献   

10.
Human plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) was purified from the conditioned medium of endotoxin-stimulated umbilical vein endothelial cell cultures by combinations of zinc-chelate-Sepharose chromatography, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 and immunoadsorption on an insolubilized murine monoclonal antibody (MA-7D4). The final product was obtained with a recovery of approximately 20% from conditioned medium containing about 3 micrograms/ml PAI-1. The yield of PAI-1 was 15-100 micrograms/umbilical cord, depending on the culture and harvest conditions. SDS gel electrophoresis revealed a main band with Mr = 46,000 both under reducing and non-reducing conditions. On gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300, however, the material was separated in two fractions, one eluting at the void volume, which contains active PAI-1, and one with Mr = 46,000 containing inactive material that could be reactivated with 12 M urea. SDS gel electrophoresis of the isolated high-Mr fraction revealed several bands including a main 46,000-Mr component, which reacted with anti-(PAI-1) antibodies on immunoblotting and neutralized tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). The active high-Mr fraction and the reactivated low-Mr fraction of PAI-1 inhibited t-PA very rapidly with an apparent second-order rate constant of (1.5-4) x 10(7) M-1 s-1. The cDNA of endothelial cell PAI-1 was cloned and expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The translation product, purified from conditioned medium of transfected cells, also revealed a high-Mr and a low-Mr fraction on gel filtration, which were indistinguishable from the natural proteins by physicochemical, immunochemical and functional analysis. On reduced SDS gel electrophoresis, the high-Mr fraction was separated into the Mr-46,000 low-Mr PAI-1 and two other components with Mr 65,000 and one barely entering the gel. When reactivated low-Mr PAI-1 was added to plasma, PAI activity and PAI-1 antigen eluted with an apparent Mr greater than or equal to 300,000 on gel filtration, indicating that active PAI-1 complexes with one or more binding proteins in plasma.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) is a serpin that has a key role in the control of fibrinolysis through proteinase inhibition. PAI-1 also has a role in regulating cell adhesion processes relevant to tissue remodeling and metastasis; this role is mediated by its binding to the adhesive glycoprotein vitronectin rather than by proteinase inhibition. Active PAI-1 is metastable and spontaneously transforms to an inactive latent conformation. Previous attempts to crystallize the active conformation of PAI-1 have failed. RESULTS: The crystal structure of a stable quadruple mutant of PAI-1(Asn150-->His, Lys154-->Thr, Gln319-->Leu, Met354-->Ile) in its active conformation has been solved at a nominal 3 A resolution. In two of four independent molecules within the crystal, the flexible reactive center loop is unconstrained by crystal-packing contacts and is disordered. In the other two molecules, the reactive center loop forms intimate loop-sheet interactions with neighboring molecules, generating an infinite chain within the crystal. The overall conformation resembles that seen for other active inhibitory serpins. CONCLUSIONS: The structure clarifies the molecular basis of the stabilizing mutations and the reduced affinity of PAI-1, on cleavage or in the latent form, for vitronectin. The infinite chain of linked molecules also suggests a new mechanism for the serpin polymerization associated with certain diseases. The results support the concept that the reactive center loop of an active serpin is flexible and has no defined conformation in the absence of intermolecular contacts. The determination of the structure of the active form constitutes an essential step for the rational design of PAI-1 inhibitors.  相似文献   

12.
The inhibitors that belong to the serpin family are suicide inhibitors that control the major proteolytic cascades in eucaryotes. Recent data suggest that serpin inhibition involves reactive centre cleavage followed by loop insertion, whereby the covalently linked protease is translocated away from the initial docking site. However under certain circumstances, serpins can also be cleaved like a substrate by target proteases. In this report we have studied the conformation of the reactive centre of plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) mutants with inhibitory and substrate properties. The polarized steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropies were determined for BODIPY(R) probes attached to the P1' and P3 positions of the substrate and active forms of PAI-1. The fluorescence data suggest an extended orientational freedom of the probe in the reactive centre of the substrate form as compared to the active form, revealing that the conformation of the reactive centres differ. The intramolecular distance between the P1' and P3 residues in reactive centre cleaved inhibitory and substrate mutants of PAI-1, were determined by using the donor-donor energy migration (DDEM) method. The distances found were 57+/-4 A and 63+/-3 A, respectively, which is comparable to the distance obtained between the same residues when PAI-1 is in complex with urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). Following reactive centre cleavage, our data suggest that the core of the inhibitory and substrate forms possesses an inherited ability of fully inserting the reactive centre loop into beta-sheet A. In the inhibitory forms of PAI-1 forming serpin-protease complexes, this ability leads to a translocation of the cognate protease from one pole of the inhibitor to the opposite one.  相似文献   

13.
A plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) was purified from bovine endothelial cell conditioned medium by a simple procedure in the absence of protein denaturant. The yield was 2.2 mg from 1.61 conditioned medium in a typical experiment. The purified inhibitor showed a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and reverse fibrin autography with an apparent molecular mass of 45 kDa. The amino-terminal 40-amino-acid sequence was determined and found to be 70% similar to the reported corresponding sequence of human PAI-1. The amino acid composition also revealed a close relationship between bovine PAI and human PAI-1. The purified PAI was substantially inactive (570 U/mg) but it could be activated by treatment with protein denaturants such as 1% SDS (1.8 X 10(5) U/mg) and 4 M guanidine-HCl (1.5 X 10(5) U/mg). A more effective activation of this latent PAI was achieved by heat treatment at 100 degrees C for 2.5 min, generating the specific activity of 1.0 X 10(6) U/mg. The heat-activated PAI lost its activity during incubation at 56 degrees C for 30 min, but repeated heat at 100 degrees C for 2.5 min could regenerate about 70% of the initial activity. Treatment at 37 degrees C, 56 degrees C and 80 degrees C, however, failed to activate the latent PAI at all. These findings suggest that the buried reactive site of the latent PAI is exposed as a result of a heat-induced, specific conformational change, but tends to be masked again during renaturation under mild conditions, i.e. the PAI protein takes on preferentially a latent form.  相似文献   

14.
Human Hep G2 hepatoma and HT 1080 fibrosarcoma cells were cultured in large scale under conditions which allowed enhanced secretion of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1). A modified urokinase was obtained by reacting urokinase with phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride followed by alkali treatment. The resulting product, called anhydrourokinase, was found to reversibly bind the PAI-1 when immobilized on cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose 4B beads. Using this affinity absorbent, we have purified PAI-1 from the cell-conditioned media. A number of differences have been observed during Hep G2 and HT 1080 PAI purification. 1) The PAI activity in Hep G2 medium concentrate is more stable, and the concentrate depleted of active PAI-1 showed spontaneous regeneration of PAI-1 activity. In contrast, the PAI activity in HT 1080 medium concentrate declines rapidly on standing. 2) Hep G2 PAI-1 invariably copurified with an adhesive protein, vitronectin or its NH2-terminal fragment, while pure HT 1080 PAI-1 alone was obtained by affinity purification on anhydrourokinase-Sepharose 4B. 3) Based on specific activity measurement and complex formation analysis using a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis technique, the purified Hep G2 PAI-1 appears completely active while the HT 1080 PAI-1 is only one-fourth as active. SDS was found to exert dual effects on purified PAI-1s. SDS treatment partially inactivated a fully active Hep G2 PAI-1 and a moderately active HT 1080 PAI-1 but partially activated an HT 1080 PAI-1 whose activity had previously been allowed to decay to a very low level. Purified vitronectin was found to enhance and stabilize the PAI-1 activity of the partially active HT 1080 PAI-1. It is concluded that fully active PAI-1 in association with vitronectin can be isolated by anhydrourokinase-Sepharose 4B chromatography and that vitronectin is a binding protein for PAI-1 which activates and stabilizes PAI-1.  相似文献   

15.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) inhibits both tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and, therefore, is an important regulator of plasminogen activation. We have developed eucaryotic and procaryotic expression systems for PAI-1 and characterized the recombinant glycosylated and non-glycosylated products, together with a non-recombinant natural control, produced in the histosarcoma cell line HT 1080. For eucaryotic expression, the PAI-1 cDNA was stably transfected into chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO cells), while procaryotic expression in Escherichia coli was examined after inserting the DNA sequence encoding the mature PAI-1 protein into an inducible expression vector. Recombinant PAI-1 from CHO cells was purified approximately 50-fold in two steps and was indistinguishable from natural PAI-1. Between 3% and 4% of total cellular protein in the procaryotic expression system consisted of PAI-1, from which it was purified approximately 30-fold, with yields of between 15% and 20%. This PAI-1 formed 1:1 complexes with uPA and also with the single- and two-chain forms of tPA. Kinetic analysis demonstrated that the procaryote-produced PAI-1 had an inhibitory activity towards all three forms of PA that resembled that of natural PAI-1 with association rate constants of approximately 10(7) M-1 s-1. In contrast to PAI-1 from eucaryotic cells, the PAI-1 from E. coli had an inherent activity equal to that of guanidine/HCl-activated natural PAI-1. The activity could not be increased by treatment with denaturants suggesting that the latent form of PAI-1 was absent. However, at 37 degrees C the procaryote-produced PAI-1 lost activity at the same rate as natural PAI-1, with approximately 50% of the activity remaining after 3 h. This activity could be partially restored by treatment with 4 M guanidine/HCl. E. coli-derived PAI-1, added to human plasma and fractionated by Sephacryl S-200 chromatography, eluted in two peaks that were similar to those obtained with guanidine-activated PAI-1 from eucaryotic cells, suggesting that it bound to the PAI-1-binding protein (vitronectin).  相似文献   

16.
The activity of the serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin) plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) is controlled by the intramolecular incorporation of the reactive loop into beta-sheet A with the generation of an inactive latent species. Other members of the serpin superfamily can be pathologically inactivated by intermolecular linkage between the reactive loop of one molecule and beta-sheet A of a second to form chains of polymers associated with diverse diseases. It has long been believed that PAI-1 is unique among active serpins in that it does not form polymers. We show here that recombinant native and latent PAI-1 spontaneously form polymers in vitro at low pH although with distinctly different electrophoretic patterns of polymerization. The polymers of both the native and latent species differ from the typical loop-A-sheet polymers of other serpins in that they readily dissociate back to their original monomeric form. The findings with PAI-1 are compatible with different mechanisms of linkage, each involving beta-strand addition of the reactive loop to s7A in native PAI-1 and to s1C in latent PAI-1. Glycosylated native and latent PAI-1 can also form polymers under similar conditions, which may be of in vivo importance in the low pH environment of the platelet.  相似文献   

17.
Functionally active PAI-1 is bound to a discrete binding or carrier protein in plasma, which was recently identified as vitronectin. In the present study, the interaction between PAI-1 and vitronectin has been studied in purified systems and in plasma by agarose gel electrophoresis using non-denaturing conditions and by crossed immunoelectrophoresis using an antiserum produced towards purified PAI-1/vitronectin complex. Both methods revealed a clearly distinguishable complex with electrophoretic mobility in between the parent molecules. Virtually all of the purified vitronectin, which did not contain any appreciable amounts of polymerized material, and almost all of the vitronectin in plasma, had the capacity to form a complex with PAI-1. The results suggested a stoichiometry of 1:1 as the most likely ratio between the two molecules in the complex. In contrast to functionally active PAI-1, latent or chloramine T-inactivated PAI-1 did not form such a complex with vitronectin.  相似文献   

18.
Complexes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and its rapidly acting inhibitor plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) are bound, internalized, and degraded by HepG2 cells. The mechanism involves endocytosis mediated by a specific high-affinity receptor. However, the particular domains of the complex that are recognized by the receptor have not been elucidated. To identify the determinants involved in ligand binding to the receptor, several variants of t-PA were assessed for their ability to form complexes with PAI-1 and thereby to inhibit specific cellular binding of complexes between structurally unmodified 125I-t-PA and PAI-1. Catalytically active variants lacking selected structural domains form complexes with PAI-1 and inhibit 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 binding to HepG2 cells. In addition, several forms of the plasminogen activator urokinase (u-PA), which shares partial structural homology with t-PA, were evaluated as competitors of cellular binding. The catalytically active two-chain forms of u-PA, but not the inactive proenzyme single-chain form, complex with PAI-1 and inhibit specific binding of 125I-t-PA.PAI-1, suggesting that the serine protease domain, rather than other domains, may confer the determinants required for cellular binding. However, a mutant t-PA with markedly reduced catalytic activity, resulting from replacement of the active site serine with threonine, not only forms complexes with PAI-1 but also inhibits specific cellular binding of unmodified 125I-t-PA.PAI-1. These data indicate that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 to HepG2 cells does not require a serine-containing catalytic site in the protease domain. To determine whether binding of the complex is mediated through other components of t-PA or through structural elements of PAI-1, both t-PA and PAI-1 were examined separately for capacity to bind directly to HepG2 cells. To exclude potential interactions with components of the extracellular matrix which contains binding sites for PAI-1, ligand binding to HepG2 cells in suspension was assessed. Although neither t-PA nor PAI-1 alone binds specifically to HepG2 cells, the preformed t-PA.PAI-1 complexes do. These findings suggest that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 requires elements of the PAI-1 moiety and/or parts of the protease domain of t-PA.  相似文献   

19.
Matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3 or stromelysin-1) specifically hydrolyzes the Ser(337)-Ser(338) (P10-P9) and Val(341)-Ile(342) (P6-P5) peptide bonds in human plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1). Cleavage is completely abolished in the presence of the metal chelators EDTA or 1,10-phenanthroline. A stabilized active PAI-1 variant was also cleaved by MMP-3. At an enzyme/substrate ratio of 1/10 at 37 degrees C, PAI-1 protein cleavage occurred with half-lives of 27 or 14 min for active or stable PAI-1 and was associated with rapid loss of inhibitory activity toward tissue-type plasminogen activator with half-lives of 15 or 13 min, respectively. A substrate-like variant of PAI-1, lacking inhibitory activity but with exposed reactive site loop, was cleaved with a half-life of 23 min, whereas latent PAI-1 in which a major part of the reactive site loop is inserted into the molecule, was resistant to cleavage. Biospecific interaction analysis indicated comparable binding of active, stable, and substrate PAI-1 to both proMMP-3 and MMP-3 (K(A) of 12-22 x 10(6) m(-1)), whereas binding of latent PAI-1 occurred with lower affinity (1.7-2.3 x 10(6) m(-1)). Stable PAI-1 bound to vitronectin was cleaved and inactivated by MMP-3 in a manner comparable with that of free PAI-1; however, the cleaved protein did not bind to vitronectin. Cleavage and inactivation of PAI-1 by MMP-3 may thus constitute a mechanism decreasing the antiproteolytic activity of PAI-1 and impairing the potential inhibitory effect of vitronectin-bound PAI-1 on cell adhesion and/or migration.  相似文献   

20.
Catalytic activity of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in plasma is regulated in part by formation of complexes with specific inhibitors as well as by hepatic clearance. Potential interaction of these two regulatory mechanisms was examined in the human hepatoma cell line Hep G2. These cells secrete plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) and initiate catabolism of exogenous t-PA by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Specific binding of 125I-t-PA to cells at 4 degrees C results in dose-dependent formation of a 95-kDa species recognized by monospecific anti-PAI-1 and anti-t-PA antibodies and stable in the presence of low (0.2%) concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Specific binding of 125I-t-PA and formation of the 95-kDa SDS-stable species are inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner following preincubation of cells with anti-PAI-1 antibodies. High and low molecular weight forms of urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) capable of forming specific complexes with PAI-1 complete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. However, the proenzyme form of u-PA (scu-PA), incapable of forming complexes with PAI-1, does not compete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. The role of the serine protease active site of t-PA in mediating both interaction with PAI-1 and specific binding was examined using 125I-t-PA that had been functionally inactivated with D-phenylalanyl-L-propyl-L-arginyl-chloromethyl ketone (PPACK). 125I-t-PA-PPACK, despite a 6-fold lower affinity than active 125I-t-PA, exhibited specific binding to cells without detectable formation of SDS-stable complexes with PAI-1. Both surface-bound 125I-t-PA and 125I-t-PA-PPACK are internalized and degraded by cells at 37 degrees C. 125I-t-PA is internalized as a stable complex with PAI-1, whereas 125I-t-PA-PPACK is internalized with similar kinetics but without the presence of an SDS-stable complex. Thus, PAI-1 appears capable of modulating t-PA catabolism in the human hepatocyte.  相似文献   

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