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1.
alpha 2-Antiplasmin Enschede is a variant of alpha 2-antiplasmin which has lost its ability to inhibit plasmin irreversibly and which is associated with a haemorrhagic disorder [Kluft et al. (1987) J. Clin. Invest. 80, 1391-1400]. The abnormal protein was purified from the plasma of a homozygous patient and subjected to one-dimensional peptide mapping using papain for digestion. A slightly abnormally migrating polypeptide (Mr 17,000) was found which represented the C-terminal part of the molecule (the N-terminus of the polypeptide corresponded to Gly-338 in normal alpha 2-antiplasmin) and which contained the reactive centre. The interaction of plasmin with alpha 2-antiplasmin Enschede was studied by adding plasmin to plasma of the homozygous patient. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting showed that no complex persisted, but that the abnormal alpha 2-antiplasmin was cleaved into two fragments of Mr 56,000 and 14,000 respectively. The latter fragment co-migrated with the post-complex peptide, which is cleaved from normal alpha 2-antiplasmin during complex-formation with plasmin. In a purified system, catalytic amounts of plasmin rapidly cleaved alpha 2-antiplasmin Enschede into the aforementioned fragments. In kinetic studies alpha 2-antiplasmin Enschede reversibly and temporarily inhibited the plasmin-catalysed hydrolysis of D-valyl-L-leucyl-L-lysine p-nitroanilide ('S-2251') as a competitive inhibitor (Ki,app. 35 nM). It was concluded that alpha 2-antiplasmin Enschede apparently forms a normal complex with plasmin. The complex is, however, not stable, but disintegrates rapidly to a cleaved form of alpha 2-antiplasmin Enschede and active plasmin. The abnormal protein thus behaves like a substrate, instead of an inhibitor, of plasmin.  相似文献   

2.
Fresh plasma was seeded with trace amounts of highly purified biologically intact iodine-labelled plasminogen and the plasmin-inhibitor complexes formed after activation with streptokinase or urokinase separated by gel filtration. Two radioactive peaks were observed, the first one eluted in the void volume and the second one just before the 7-S globulin peak. In incompletely activated samples, the second peak was always predominant over the first one. Both components were purified with high yield by a combination of affinity chromatography on lysine-agarose and gel filtration, and investigated by dodecylsulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoresis. Neither component reacted with antisera against alpha1-antitrypsin, antithrombin III, C1-esterase inhibitor, inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor or alpha1-antichymotrypsin. The component of the first peak appeared to be a complex between plasmin and alpha2-macroglobulin which reacted with antisera against human plasminogen and against alpha2-macroglobulin. The component of the second peak had a molecular weight (Mr) of 120000-140000 by dodecyl-sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and lpon reduction displayed a doublet band with an Mr of 65000-70000 and a band with Mr 11000. It reacted with antisera against plasminogen and with antisera raised against this complex and absorbed with purified plasminogen. The latter antisera reacted with a single component in plasma which is different from the above-mentioned plasma protease inhibitors. Specific removal of this component from plasma by immuno-absorption resulted in disappearance of the fast-reacting antiplasmin activity whereas alpha2-macroglobulin was found to represent the slower-reacting plasmin-neutralizing activity. In the presence of normal plasma levels of these proteins, the specific removal or absence of alpha1-antitrypsin, antithrombin III or C1-esterase inhibitor did not alter the inactivation rate of plasmin when added to plasma in quimolar amounts to that of plasminogen. It is concluded that only two plasma proteins are important in the binding of plasmin generated by activation of the plasma plasminogen, namely a fast-reacting inhibitor which is different from the known plasma protease inhibitors and which we have provisionally named antiplasmin, and alpha2-macroglobulin, which reacts more slowly.  相似文献   

3.
The plasma clearance of neutrophil elastase, plasmin, and their complexes with human inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor (I alpha I) was examined in mice, and the distribution of the proteinases among the plasma proteinase inhibitors was quantified in mixtures of purified inhibitors, in human or murine plasma, and in murine plasma following injection of purified proteins. The results demonstrate that I alpha I acts as a shuttle by transferring proteinases to other plasma proteinase inhibitors for clearance, and that I alpha I modulates the distribution of proteinase among inhibitors. The clearance of I alpha I-elastase involved transfer of proteinase to alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor. The partition of elastase between these inhibitors was altered by I alpha I to favor formation of alpha 2-macroglobulin-elastase complexes. The clearance of I alpha I-plasmin involved transfer of plasmin to alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor. Results of distribution studies suggest that plasmin binds to endothelium in vivo and reacts with I alpha I before transfer to alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor. Evidence for this sequence of events includes observations that plasmin in complex with I alpha I cleared faster than free plasmin, that plasma obtained after injection of plasmin contained a complex identified as I alpha I-plasmin, and that a murine I alpha I-plasmin complex remained intact following injection into mice. Plasmin initially in complex with I alpha I more readily associated with alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor than did free plasmin.  相似文献   

4.
An inhibitor of the plasma proteinase plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7) was partially purified from washed and lysed human blood platelets by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and affinity chromatrography on Sepharose-linked purified plasminogen. The material contained none of the known plasma proteinase inhibitors when studied by crossed-immunoelectrophoresis and electroimmunoassay, but inhibited a clot-lysis-time assay and an esterolytic assay that used the synthetic substrate S-2251 (D-Val-Leu-Lys-p-nitroanilide). The inhibitory activity had the same mobility as the alpha 2-plasma proteins on preparative agarose-gel electrophoresis. Titration of the inhibitor preparation by active-site-titrated plasmin demonstrated a dissociation constant of approx. 0.1 nM. The inhibition was complete within 1 min. The inhibitor increased the mobility in agarose-gel electrophoresis of purified activator-free plasmin or 125I-labelled plasmin, as demonstrated by crossed-immunoelectrophoresis against specific immunoglobulins against plasminogen or by radioautography. The results strongly suggest the presence in platelets of a plasmin inhibitor different from the known plasma proteinase inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
A plasma kallikrein inhibitor in guinea pig plasma (KIP) was purified to homogeneity. KIP is a single chain protein and the apparent molecular weight is estimated to be 59,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In amino acid composition, KIP is similar to human and mouse alpha 1-proteinase inhibitors and mouse contrapsin. KIP forms an equimolar complex with plasma kallikrein in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. The association rate constants for the inhibition of guinea pig plasma kallikrein by KIP, alpha 2-macroglobulin, C1-inactivator and antithrombin III were 2.5 +/- 0.3.10(4), 2.4 +/- 0.4.10(4), 6.6 +/- 0.5.10(4) and 9.1 +/- 0.6.10(2), respectively. Comparison of the association rate constants and the normal plasma concentrations of the four inhibitors demonstrates that KIP is ten-times as effective as alpha 2-MG and other two inhibitors are marginally effective in the inhibition of kallikrein. KIP inhibits trypsin and elastase rapidly, and thrombin and plasmin slowly, but is inactive for chymotrypsin and gland kallikrein. These results suggest that KIP is the major kallikrein inhibitor in guinea pig plasma and the proteinase inhibitory spectrum is unique to KIP in spite of the molecular similarity to alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor.  相似文献   

6.
S L Gonias  S V Pizzo 《Biochemistry》1983,22(21):4933-4940
Human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) half-molecules were prepared by limited reduction and alkylation of the native protein. Reaction with plasmin resulted in nearly quantitative cleavage of the half-molecule Mr approximately 180000 subunits into Mr approximately 90000 fragments. Subunit cleavage was significantly less complete when plasmin was reacted with alpha 2M whole molecules. The plasmin and trypsin binding capacities of the two forms of alpha 2M were compared by using radioiodinated proteases. alpha 2M half-molecules bound an equivalent number of moles of plasmin or trypsin. Native unreduced alpha 2M bound only half as much plasmin as trypsin. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the two protease binding sites are adjacent in native alpha 2M. alpha 2M half-molecule-plasmin complexes reassociated less readily than half-molecule-trypsin complexes, supporting this interpretation. The frequency of covalent bond formation between plasmin and alpha 2M was considerably higher than that previously observed with other proteases. Approximately 80-90% of the plasmin that reacted with alpha 2M whole molecules or half-molecules became covalently bound. The reactivities of purified alpha 2M-plasmin complexes were compared with small and large substrates. Equivalent kcat/Km values were determined at 22 degrees C for the hydrolysis of H-D-Val-Leu-Lys-p-nitroanilide dihydrochloride by whole molecule-plasmin complex and half-molecule-plasmin complex (40 mM-1 s-1 and 39 mM-1 s-1, respectively, compared with 66 mM-1 s-1 determined for free plasmin).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
A procedure is presented for purifying a novel proteinase inhibitor in human plasma whose apparent unique biological property is to inhibit efficiently the lysis of fibrin clots induced by plasminogen activator. The final product is homogeneous as judged by disc gel electrophoresis, and immunoelectrophoresis. Its molecular weight estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis or sedimentation equilibrium is 67,000 and 63,000, respectively. The inhibitor is a glycoprotein consisting polypeptide chain containing 11.7% carbohyrate. It migrates in the alpha2-globulin region in immunoelectrophoresis. The inhibitor is chemically and immunologically different from all the other known inhibitors in plasma. Inhibition of plasmin by the inhibitor is almost instantaneous even at 0 degrees, in contrast to the slow inhibition of urokinase (plasminogen activator in urine). Plasminogen activation by urokinase-induced clot lysis is inhibited by the inhibitor mainly through a mechanism of instantaneous inhibition of plasmin formed and not through the inhibition of urokinase. The inhibitor also inhibits trypsin. Consequently, it is suggested that this newly identified inhibitor is named alpha2-plasmin inhibitor or alpha2-proteinase inhibitor. A specific antibody directed against the inhibitor neutralizes virtually all inhibitory activity of plasma to activator-induced clot lysis. Immunochemical quantitation of the inhibitor was specific antiserum to the inhibitor and the purified inhibitor as a standard indicates that the concentration of the inhibitory in the serum of a healthy man is in or near the range of 5 to 7 mg/100 ml, which is the lowest concentration among the concentration of the proteinase inhibitors in plasma. The inhibitor and plasmin, trypsin, or urokinase form a complex which cannot be dissociated with denaturing and reducing agents. The formation of the enzyme-inhibitor complex occurs on a 1:1 molar basis and is associated with the cleavage of a unique peptide bone, which is most clearly demonstrated in the interaction of the inhibitor and beta-trypsin. In the complex formation between the inhibitor and plasmin, the inhibitor is cross-linked with the light chain which contains the active site of plasmin. It is suggested that, in a fashion analogous to complex formation between alpha1-antitrypsin and trypsin, the cross-links are formed between the active site serine of the enzyme and the newly formed COOH-terminal residue of the inhibitor, with cleavage of a peptide bond.  相似文献   

9.
1. alpha 1-Thiol proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1 TPI) purified from outdated human plasma was a glycoprotein with Mr 83,000 and was composed of heavy and light chains held together with a disulfide bond. 2. The data on amino acid composition, amino terminal sequence of the light chain and carboxyl terminal sequences of the heavy and light chains indicate that alpha 1 TPI is identical with kinin- and fragment 1.2-free HMW kininogen. 3. Purified human plasmin generated a derivative having the same molecular weight (Mr 83,000), same subunit structure (heavy and light chains) and same inhibitory capacity as alpha 1 TPI from HMW kininogen and kinin-free HMW kininogen. This indicated the possibility that alpha 1 TPI is derived from HMW kininogen by plasmin.  相似文献   

10.
Urokinase-activated human plasma was studied by gel electrophoresis, gel filtration, crossed immunoelectrophoresis and electroimmunoassay with specific antibodies and by assay of esterase and protease activity of isolated fractions. Urokinase induced the formation of different components with plasminogen+plasmin antigenicity. At low concentrations of urokinase, a component with a K(D) value of 0.18 by gel filtration and post beta(1) mobility by gel electrophoresis was detected. The isolated component had no enzyme or plasminogen activity. In this plasma sample fibrinogen was not degraded for 10h, but when fibrin was formed, by addition of thrombin, fibrin was quickly lysed, and simultaneously a component with a K(D) value of 0 and alpha(2) mobility appeared, which was probably plasmin in a complex with alpha(2) macroglobulin. This complex showed both esterase and protease activity. After gel filtration with lysine buffer of the clotted and lysed plasma another two components were observed with about the same K(D) value by gel filtration as plasminogen (0.35), but beta(1) and gamma mobilities by gel electrophoresis. They appeared to be modified plasminogen molecules, and possibly plasmin with gamma mobility. Similar processes occurred without fibrin at higher urokinase concentrations. Here a relatively slow degradation of fibrinogen was correlated to the appearance of the plasmin-alpha(2) macroglobulin complex. The fibrin surface appeared to catalyse the ultimate production of active plasmin with a subsequent preferential degradation of fibrin and the formation of a plasmin-alpha(2) macroglobulin complex. The gel filtration and electrophoresis of the plasma protease inhibitors, alpha(1) antitrypsin, inter-alpha-inhibitor, antithrombin III, and C(1)-esterase inhibitor indicated that any complex between plasmin and these inhibitors was completely dissociated. The beta(1) and post beta(1) components appear to lack correlates among components occurring in purified preparations of plasminogen and plasmin.  相似文献   

11.
We have compared the reactions of trypsin with human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M), and three rat plasma protease inhibitors, alpha 1-macroglobulin (alpha 1M), alpha 1-inhibitor III (alpha 1I3), and alpha 2M. All four of these proteins appear to contain reactive thiol esters. The electrophoretic mobility in agarose gels of human and rat alpha 2M is increased by 1 mol of trypsin, while the mobility of alpha 1M and alpha 1I3 is decreased. Treatment with methylamine causes similar mobility changes, except in the case of rat alpha 2M. Titration of human and rat macroglobulins by repeated small additions of trypsin and by assay of liberated SH groups or enhanced ligand fluorescence revealed a stoichiometry of about 1 mol of trypsin/mol of inhibitor. In contrast, addition of macroglobulin to a fixed amount of trypsin and detection of residual amidase or protease activity revealed a stoichiometry of about 2 mol of trypsin for 1 mol of human alpha 2M, about 1.4 mol for rat alpha 1M, and about 1 mol for rat alpha 2M. One mol of trypsin reacted with 2 or more mol of alpha 1I3 by the criteria of SH groups liberated or protease inhibition. Methylamine-treated rat alpha 2M binds a significant amount of trypsin releasing about 2 mol of SH. Radioactive beta-trypsin was covalently bound to subunits of the purified plasma inhibitors. The Mr of the labeled products with rat and human alpha 2M had molecular weights which suggested trypsin was bound to intact as well as cleaved subunit chains and also to multiple chains via cross-linking. Rat alpha 1M also produced a product which may be an intact subunit alpha chain plus trypsin. Greater than 80% of the trypsin was bound covalently to these inhibitors at low molar ratios.  相似文献   

12.
Two trypsin inhibitors (TI-1, TI-2) were isolated from guinea pig plasma and purified to homogeneity. In amino-acid composition as well as molecular masses, TI-1 (Mr 58,000) and TI-2 (Mr 57,000) are similar to each other and to human and mouse alpha 1-proteinase inhibitors, and mouse con-trapsin. The two inhibitors form equimolar complexes with proteinases. The effectiveness of the inhibitors was characterized by association rate constants under second-order rate conditions. The inhibitory action of TI-1 was rapid for bovine trypsin, porcine pancreatic elastase and guinea pig plasma kallikrein, but slow for bovine thrombin and guinea pig plasmin and not detectable for bovine chymotrypsin and porcine pancreatic kallikrein. The inhibitory action of TI-2 was rapid for trypsin and chymotrypsin, but slow for guinea pig plasma kallikrein and not detectable for other proteinases. These results show that TI-1 and TI-2 are physicochemically similar but functionally distinct from each other and from human alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor that inhibits trypsin, chymotrypsin and elastase.  相似文献   

13.
Human plasma alpha-cysteine proteinase inhibitor (alpha CPI) was purified by a two-stage method: affinity chromatography on S-carboxymethyl-papain-Sepharose, and high-resolution anion-exchange chromatography. The protein was obtained as a form of Mr about 64 000 and material of higher Mr (about 100 000). In sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis with reduction, both forms showed a major component of Mr 64 000. An antiserum was raised against alpha CPI, and 'rocket' immunoassays showed the mean concentration in sera from 19 individuals to be 35.9 mg/dl. Both low-Mr and high-Mr forms of alpha CPI were confirmed to be sialoglycoproteins by the decrease in electrophoretic mobility after treatment with neuraminidase. alpha CPI was shown immunologically to be distinct from antithrombin III and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, two serine proteinase inhibitors from plasma with somewhat similar Mr values. alpha CPI was also distinct from cystatins A and B, the two intracellular low-Mr cysteine proteinase inhibitors from human liver. Complexes of alpha CPI with papain were detectable in immunoelectrophoresis, but dissociated to free enzyme and intact inhibitor in sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The stoichiometry of binding of papain was close to 1:1 for both low-Mr and high-Mr forms. alpha CPI was found to be a tight-binding inhibitor of papain and human cathepsins H and L (Ki 34 pM, 1.1 nM and 62 pM respectively). By contrast, inhibition of cathepsin B was much weaker, Ki being about 35 microM. Dipeptidyl peptidase I also was weakly inhibited. Digestion of alpha CPI with bromelain gave rise to an inhibitory fragment of Mr about 22 000, which was isolated.  相似文献   

14.
An alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M)-like proteinase inhibitor from plasma of the crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus was purified to apparent homogeneity by acid precipitation, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, affinity chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose and anion-exchange chromatography. The subunit Mr is about 190,000. Pore-size-limit electrophoresis proved the native protein to be a dimer. The purified protein resembled vertebrate alpha 2 Ms in that it protected trypsin from inhibition by soyabean trypsin inhibitor, and in its sensitivity to methylamine treatment. Methylamine also prevented the protein from being autolytically cleaved into Mr 60,000 and 140,000 fragments when subjected to heat treatment. The amino acid composition showed similarities with both human alpha 2 M and an alpha 2 M-like protein from the arthropod Limulus polyphemus. These data indicate that this Pacifastacus alpha 2M-like protein (P alpha 2M) may be a distantly related homologue of vertebrate alpha 2Ms.  相似文献   

15.
Miniplasmin reacted rapidly with purified human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M). More than 98% of the complexes were stabilized by at least one covalent bond. The second-order rate constant for the reaction of alpha 2M with miniplasmin at 4 degrees C was 5.1 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. This value was determined by measuring the formation of covalent alpha 2M-125I-miniplasmin complex; however, the rate constant most likely reflects the bait-region cleavage step in the reaction mechanism. Miniplasmin bound primarily to alpha 2M when incubated at 37 degrees C with various mixtures of alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2AP) and alpha 2M. A 2.4-fold molar excess of alpha 2AP was required to yield an equal distribution of proteinase between the two inhibitors. alpha 2M was the primary miniplasmin inhibitor in human and murine plasma (4 degrees C and 37 degrees C). The extent of covalent-bond formation with murine alpha 2M was approx. 96%. Intravenously injected miniplasmin cleared rapidly from the circulation of mice and was recovered principally in the liver. The catabolic pathway was distinctly different from that of miniplasminogen, which was sequestered mainly in the kidneys. The rate of miniplasmin clearance was much faster than that of purified alpha 2AP-miniplasmin complex, suggesting reaction with alpha 2M in vivo. This was confirmed in clearance competition experiments with alpha 2M-methylamine.  相似文献   

16.
Protein C inhibitor. Purification from human plasma and characterization   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Protein C inhibitor was isolated from human plasma using conventional chromatographic technique consisting of barium citrate adsorption, polyethylene glycol fractionation, DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation, dextran sulfate-agarose chromatography, gel filtration on ACA-44, and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. The purified protein C inhibitor is a single polypeptide chain with an apparent Mr = 57,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor is heterogeneous in pI: six pIs exist between pH 7.4 and 8.6. The inhibitor was shown to be different from the already known plasma protease inhibitors by chemical and immunological analyses. It migrates to the late alpha 1-globulin region on agarose gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor reduced the amidolytic activity of activated protein C noncompetitively by forming a 1:1 molar complex with the enzyme, determined by the use of a fluorogenic substrate toward activated protein C (Boc-Leu-Ser-Thr-Arg-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide). The inhibition constant (Ki) of the inhibitor against activated protein C was 5.8 x 10(-8) M. The inhibitor also blocked the prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time by activated protein C. The immunoglobulin which was produced by the inhibitor completely removed the inhibitory activity present in normal human plasma against activated protein C. This suggests that the inhibitor which we have isolated is the only inhibitor in plasma against activated protein C.  相似文献   

17.
Alpha 2 acute-phase macroglobulin was isolated from plasma of turpentine-injected rats. In the method conditions known to damage the biological activities of alpha 2 macroglobulin are avoided. The procedure successively involves: rivanol precipitation, concanavalin A-Sepharose chromatography and ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. Proteolytic activities were minimized throughout the purification. Thus alpha 2 macroglobulin was obtained in a 20% yield and was pure by biochemical and immunological criteria. Its molecular weight appeared to be 760 000 and it consisted of four subunits (Mr 190 000). The protein has an A1cm 1% = 8.8 and an isoelectric point = 4.8. The amino acid and carbohydrate compositions were determined. Our preparations bound 1 molecule of trypsin or 1 molecule of plasmin/molecule of alpha 2 macroglobulin. Kinetic parameters for alpha 2 macroglobulin-bound trypsin and plasmin were determined and compared with those of free trypsin and plasmin using butoxycarbonyl-L-valylglycyl-L-arginine-2-naphthylamide and benzoyl-L-arginine ethylester as substrates.  相似文献   

18.
A L Cronlund  P N Walsh 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1685-1694
A low molecular weight platelet inhibitor of factor XIa (PIXI) has been purified 250-fold from releasates of washed and stimulated human platelets. Molecular weight estimates of 8400 and 8500 were determined by gel filtration and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, respectively, although a second band of Mr 5000 was present upon electrophoresis. The inhibitor does not appear to be one of the platelet-specific, heparin-binding proteins, since it neither bound to nor was affected by heparin. An amount of PIXI which inhibited by 50% factor XIa cleavage of the chromogenic substrate S2366 (Pyr-Glu-Pro-Arg-pNA-2H2O) only slightly inhibited (5-9%) factor XIIa, plasma kallikrein, plasmin, and activated protein C and did not inhibit factor Xa, thrombin, tPA, or trypsin, suggesting specificity for factor XIa. Kinetic analyses of the effect of PIXI on factor XIa activity demonstrated mixed-type, noncompetitive inhibition of S2366 cleavage and of factor IX activation with Ki's of 7 x 10(-8) and 3.8 x 10(-9) M, respectively. Immunoblot analysis showed that PIXI is not the inhibitory domain of protease nexin II, a potent inhibitor of factor XIa also secreted from platelets. Amino acid analysis showed that PIXI has no cysteine residues and, therefore, is not a Kunitz-type inhibitor. PIXI can prevent stable complex formation between alpha 1-protease inhibitor and factor XIa light chain as demonstrated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibition by PIXI of factor XIa-catalyzed activation of factor IX and its capacity to prevent factor XIa inactivation by alpha 1-protease inhibitor, combined with the specificity of PIXI for factor XIa among serine proteases found in blood, suggest a role for PIXI in the regulation of intrinsic coagulation.  相似文献   

19.
P A Roche  S V Pizzo 《Biochemistry》1987,26(2):486-491
When human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) binds proteinases, it undergoes subunit cleavage. Binding of small proteinases such as trypsin results in proteolysis of each of the four subunits of the inhibitor. By contrast, previous studies suggest that reaction of plasmin with alpha 2M results in cleavage of only two or three of the inhibitor subunits. In this paper, we demonstrate that the extent of subunit cleavage of alpha 2M is a function of plasmin concentration. When alpha 2M was incubated with a 2.5-fold excess of plasmin, half of the subunits were cleaved; however, at a 20-fold enzyme to inhibitor ratio, greater than 90% of the subunits were cleaved with no additional plasmin binding. This increased cleavage was catalyzed by free rather than bound plasmin. It is concluded that this "nonproductive" subunit cleavage is dependent upon the molar ratio of proteinase to inhibitor. The consequence of complete subunit cleavage on receptor recognition of alpha 2M-plasmin (alpha 2M-Pm) complexes was studied. Preparations of alpha 2M-Pm with only two cleaved subunits bound to the murine macrophage receptor with a Kd of 0.4 nM and 60 fmol of bound complex/mg of cell protein. When preparations of alpha 2-M-Pm with four cleaved subunits were studied, the Kd was unaltered but ligand binding increased to 140 fmol/mg of cell protein. The receptor binding behavior of the latter preparation is equivalent to that observed when alpha 2M is treated with small proteinases such as trypsin. This study suggests that receptor recognition site exposure is not complete in the alpha 2M-Pm complex with half of the subunits cleaved. Proteolytic cleavage of the remaining subunits of the inhibitor results in a further conformational change exposing the remaining receptor recognition sites.  相似文献   

20.
Serum-free culture medium collected from primary monolayer cultures of human articular chondrocytes was found to inhibit human urokinase [EC 3.4.21.31] activity. Although chondrocyte culture medium contained a small amount of endothelial-type plasminogen activator inhibitor which could be demonstrated by reverse fibrin autography, most of the urokinase inhibitory activity of chondrocyte culture medium was shown to be due to a different molecule from endothelial-type inhibitor, since it did not react with a specific antibody to this type of inhibitor. The dominant urokinase inhibitor in chondrocyte culture medium was partially purified by concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The partially purified inhibitor inhibited high-Mr urokinase more effectively than low-Mr urokinase, but no obvious inhibition was detected against tissue-type plasminogen activator, plasmin, trypsin, and thrombin. The inhibitor had an apparent Mr of 43,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and it was unstable to sodium dodecyl sulfate, acid, and heat treatments. Inhibition of urokinase by the inhibitor was accompanied with the formation of a sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable high-Mr complex between them. Inhibition and complex formation required the active site of urokinase. The partially purified inhibitor was thought to be immunologically different from the known classes of plasminogen activator inhibitors, including endothelial-type inhibitor, macrophage/monocyte inhibitor, and protease nexin, since it did not react with specific antibodies to these inhibitors.  相似文献   

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