首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Native Glu-human plasminogen (Mr approximately 92,000 with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) is able to combine directly with streptokinase in an equivalent molar ratio, to yield a stoichiometric complex. The plasminogen moiety in the complex then undergoes streptokinase-induced conformational changes. As a result of such, an active center develops in the plasminogen moiety of the complex. This proteolytically active complex then activates plasminogen in the complex to plasmin and at least two peptide bonds are cleaved in the process. The data presented in this paper reveal that initially an internal peptide bond of plasminogen (in the complex) is cleaved to yield a two-chain, disulfide-linked plasmin molecule. The heavy chain (Mr approximately 67,000 with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) of this plasmin molecule has an identical NH2-terminal amico acid as the native plasminogen. The light chain (Mr approximately 25,000 with NH2-terminal valine) of plasmin is known to be derived from the COOH-terminal portion of the parent plasminogen molecule. A second peptide is then cleaved from the NH2-terminal end of the heavy chain of plasmin producing a proteolytically modified heavy chain (Mr =60.000 with NH2-terminal lysine). This cleavage of the NH2-terminal peptide from the heavy chain of plasmin is shown to be mediated by the dissociated free plasmin present in the activation mixture. Plasmin in the streptokinase-plasmin complex is unable to cleave this NH2-terminal peptide. This same NH2-terminal peptide can also be cleaved from native Glu-plasminogen or from the Glu-plasminogen-streptokinase complex by free plasmin and not by a complex of streptokinase-plasmin. From these studies we conclude (a) in the streptokinase-plasminogen complex, the NH2-terminal peptide need not be released prior to the cleavage of the essential Arg-Val peptide bond which leads to the formation of a two chain plasmin molecule and (b) that this peptide is cleaved from the native plasminogen or from the heavy chain of the initially formed plasmin in the streptokinase complex by free plasmin and not by the plasmin associated with streptokinase. In agreement with this, plasmin associated with streptokinase was unable to cleave the NH2-terminal peptide from the isolated native heavy chain possessing glutamic acid as the NH2-terminal amino acid; whereas free plasmin readily cleaved this peptide from the same isolated Glu-heavy chain.  相似文献   

2.
Streptokinase is an extracellular protein produced by several strains of streptococci. It functions in the species-specific conversion of plasminogen to plasmin. In this paper we describe the purification of streptokinase by affinity chromatography on human plasminogen acylated with p'-nitrophenyl p-guanidinobenzoate. The acylated and non-acylated plasminogen and plasmin were coupled to cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose 4B and evaluated for streptokinase purification. These results show that a homogeneous preparation of streptokinase with high specific activity and high yield can be obtained using acylated plasminogen. This method permits the binding of one milligram of streptokinase per milliliter of swollen gel.  相似文献   

3.
Group A streptococci are common human pathogens that cause a variety of infections. They express M proteins which are important cell wall-bound type-specific virulence factors. We have found that a set of strains, associated primarily with skin infections, express M proteins that bind plasminogen and plasmin with high affinity. The binding is mediated by a 13-amino-acid internal repeated sequence located in the N-terminal surface-exposed portion of these M proteins. This sequence binds to kringle 2 in plasminogen, a domain that is not involved in the interaction with streptokinase, a potent group A streptococcal activator of plasminogen. It could be demonstrated that plasminogen, absorbed from plasma by growing group A streptococci expressing the plasminogen-binding M proteins, could be activated by exogenous and endogenous streptokinase, thereby providing the bacteria with a surface-associated enzyme that could act on the tissue barriers in the infected host.  相似文献   

4.
Invasive bacterial pathogens intervene at various stages and by various mechanisms with the mammalian plasminogen/plasmin system. A vast number of pathogens express plasmin(ogen) receptors that immobilize plasmin(ogen) on the bacterial surface, an event that enhances activation of plasminogen by mammalian plasminogen activators. Bacteria also influence secretion of plasminogen activators and their inhibitors from mammalian cells. The prokaryotic plasminogen activators streptokinase and staphylokinase form a complex with plasmin(ogen) and thus enhance plasminogen activation. The Pla surface protease of Yersinia pestis resembles mammalian activators in function and converts plasminogen to plasmin by limited proteolysis. In essence, plasminogen receptors and activators turn bacteria into proteolytic organisms using a host-derived system. In Gram-negative bacteria, the filamentous surface appendages fimbriae and flagella form a major group of plasminogen receptors. In Gram-positive bacteria, surface-bound enzyme molecules as well as M-protein-related structures have been identified as plasminogen receptors, the former receptor type also occurs on mammalian cells. Plasmin is a broad-spectrum serine protease that degrades fibrin and noncollagenous proteins of extracellular matrices and activates latent procollagenases. Consequently, plasmin generated on or activated by Haemophilus influenzae, Salmonella typhimurium, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Y. pestis, and Borrelia burgdorferi has been shown to degrade mammalian extracellular matrices. In a few instances plasminogen activation has been shown to enhance bacterial metastasis in vitro through reconstituted basement membrane or epithelial cell monolayers. In vivo evidence for a role of plasminogen activation in pathogenesis is limited to Y. pestis, Borrelia, and group A streptococci. Bacterial proteases may also directly activate latent procollagenases or inactivate protease inhibitors of human plasma, and thus contribute to tissue damage and bacterial spread across tissue barriers.  相似文献   

5.
A direct solid phase chromogenic assay has been developed for the detection of plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7), generated by the interaction of a nitrocellulose-bound plasminogen activator, using the plasmin specific tripeptide substrate, H-D-valyl-leucyl-lysine - p-nitroaniline. para-Nitroaniline released by the cleavage of the lysine - p-nitroaniline bound by plasmin was derivatized to its diazonium salt and subsequently coupled to N-1-napthylethylenediamine in situ to form a diazoamino of an intense red color at the site of the plasminogen activator. This method was used to assay for the streptococcal plasminogen activator, streptokinase, not only in crude bacterial supernatants, but also to detect streptokinase secreted by individual bacterial colonies. In addition, this solid phase assay was used to identify monoclonal antibodies specific for streptokinase which could inhibit the activation of human plasminogen by streptokinase. This method also permitted simultaneous immunological and biochemical identification of the plasminogen activator, thus permitting unequivocal comparative observations. This assay is quantitative and sensitive to nanogram amounts of activator comparable to those obtained with soluble assays. This method may also be applicable for the detection of other plasminogen activators, such as tissue plasminogen activator, urokinase, and staphylokinase, and also for the detection of immobilized proteases which can cleave other substrates derivatized with p-nitroaniline. The reagents used in this assay are inexpensive and easy to prepare.  相似文献   

6.
A plasminogen activator secreted from human kidney cells was highly purified by affinity chromatography on an anti-urokinase IgG-Sepharose column. The purified plasminogen activator was inactive and had a single-chain structure and a Mr of 50,000. It not only did not incorporate diisopropyl fluorophosphate, which reacts with active site serine residue in urokinase, but also did not bind to p-aminobenzamidine-immobilized CH-Sepharose, to which urokinase bind via its side-chain binding pocket present in active center. The plasminogen activator was converted to the active two-chain form with the same Mr by catalytic amounts of plasmin. Its potential enzymatic activity was quenched completely by anti-urokinase IgG, but not by anti-tissue plasminogen activator Ig. These results indicate that the plasminogen activator is an inactive proenzyme form of human urokinase. Therefore, the plasminogen activator was termed single-chain pro-urokinase. The cleavage of single-chain pro-urokinase by plasmin induced conformational change which followed the generation of reactive serine residue at active site, the increase enzyme activity and the reduction of its high affinity for fibrin. These findings suggest that conformational change occurs in both regions responsible for enzyme activity and affinity for fibrin upon activation of single-chain pro-urokinase.  相似文献   

7.
A functionally active human plasmin light (B) chain derivative, stabilized by the streptomyces plasmin inhibitor leupeptin, was isolated from a partially reduced and alkylated enzyme preparation by an affinity chromatography method with a L-lysine-substituted Sepharose column. This light (B) chain derivative was found to be relatively homogeneous by electrophoretic analysis in both an acrylamide gel/dodecyl sulfate system and on cellulose acetate. It possessed approximately 3% of the proteolytic activity (casein substrate) of the original enzyme, and it incorporated 0.09 mol of [3H]diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate per mol of protein. It contained 3.1 +/- 0.3 carboxymethylated cysteines per mol of protein and can be designated as a CmCys5-light (B) chain (CmCys)3. When this isolated light (B) chain derivative was mixed in equal molar amounts with streptokinase, the mixture developed both human and bovine plasminogen activator activities; the bovine activator activity was approximately 66% of the bovine activator activity of the equimolar human plasmin-streptokinase complex. Although this complex now incorporated 0.50 mol of [3H]diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate per mol of protein, its proteolytic activity, on a molar basis, was the same as the proteolytic activity of the isolated light (B) chain derivative. It was shown by electrophoretic analysis in both an acrylamide gel/epsilon-aminocaproic acid system and on cellulose acetate that the light (B) chain derivative and streptokinase forms an equimolar light (B) chain-streptokinase complex, indicating that the binding site for streptokinase is located on the light (B) chain of the enzyme. A functionally active equimolar light (B) chain-streptokinase complex was also isolated from a partially reduced and alkylated equimolar human plasmin-streptokinase complex by the affinity chromatography method. The plasminogen activator activities (human and bovine) of this light (B) chain-streptokinase complex were similar to those of the plasmin-streptokinase complex from which it was derived. Although this complex incorporated 0.70 mol of [3H]diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate per mol of protein, its proteolytic activity, on a molar basis, was only 14% of proteolytic activity of the plasmin-streptokinase complex.  相似文献   

8.
A series of methods for analyzing the interaction of group A streptococci with the human plasminogen system are described. Examples of group A streptococcal isolates capable of assembling surface plasminogen activator activity when grown in human plasma are presented and the key requirements for this process are evaluated. The stabilities of cell-associated plasmin and plasminogen activator complexes are compared and a model for the interaction of group A streptococci with the plasminogen system in an infected host is presented.  相似文献   

9.
The iodinated Mr approximately equal to 15,000 amino-terminal fragment (ATF) of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) molecule bound specifically to the cell surface of all of seven cultured human tumor cell lines studied. Cross-linking of iodinated ATF to the cell surface using a bifunctional amino-reactive reagent followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography revealed with the four cell lines studied the occurrence of a single band migrating with an Mr of 70,000-75,000, indicating complex formation with an Mr of 55,000-60,000 u-PA receptor protein (u-PA-R). In the human monocyte cell line U937 cultivated in the presence of phorbol ester, the amount of complex was strongly increased, and a fraction of the complex had a slower electrophoretic mobility. Comparison between autoradiograms of reduced and unreduced samples suggests that u-PA-R consists of one polypeptide chain. Two forms of u-PA-R, which differed with respect to affinity to concanavalin A, were identified. u-PA-R retained its ability to bind to ATF after cell lysis, and it was purified approximately 2,200-fold from biosynthetically labeled U937 cells by affinity chromatography with proenzyme u-PA coupled to Sepharose. The purified Mr 55,000-60,000 protein was specifically bound and cross-linked to u-PA, proenzyme u-PA, and ATF, but not to tissue-type plasminogen activator or other unrelated proteins.  相似文献   

10.
The secretion of plasminogen activators has been implicated in the controlled extracellular proteolysis that accompanies cell migration and tissue remodeling. We found that the human plasminogen activator urokinase (Uk) (Mr 55,000 form) binds rapidly, specifically, and with high affinity to fresh human blood monocytes and to cells of the monocyte line U937. Upon binding Mr 55,000 Uk was observed to confer high plasminogen activator activity to the cells. Binding of the enzyme did not require a functional catalytic site (located on the B chain of the protein) but did require the noncatalytic A chain of Mr 55,000 Uk, since Mr 33,000 Uk did not bind. These results demonstrate the presence of a membrane receptor for Uk on monocytes and show a hitherto unknown function for the A chain of Uk: binding of secreted enzyme to its receptor results in Uk acting as a membrane protease. This localizes plasminogen activation near the cell surface, an optimal site to facilitate cell migration.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of purified soluble fibrin and of fibrinogen fragments (fibrin mimic) on the activation of Lys-plasminogen (i.e. plasminogen residues 77-790) to plasmin by streptokinase.plasminogen activator complex and by tissue-type plasminogen activator were studied. Dissociation constants of both activators were estimated to lie in the range 90-160 nM (fibrin) and 16-60 nM (CNBr-cleavage fragments of fibrinogen). The kinetic mechanism for both types of activator comprised non-essential enzyme activation via a Rapid Equilibrium Ordered Bireactant sequence. In order to relate the fibrin affinity of plasminogen activators to their fibrinolytic potency, the rate of lysis of supported human plasma clots formed in the presence of unmodified or active-centre-acylated precursors of plasminogen activators was studied as a function of the concentration of enzyme derivative. The concentrations of unmodified enzyme giving 50% lysis/h in this assay were 0.9, 2.0 and 11.0 nM for tissue-type plasminogen activator, streptokinase.plasmin(ogen) and urokinase respectively. However, the potencies of active-centre-acylated derivatives of these enzymes suggested that acylated-tissue plasminogen activator and streptokinase.plasminogen complexes of comparable hydrolytic stability were of comparable potency. Both types of acyl-enzyme were significantly more potent than acyl-urokinases.  相似文献   

12.
Thrombospondin is a multifunctional glycoprotein of platelet alpha-granules and a variety of growing cells. We demonstrate that thrombospondin is a slow tight-binding inhibitor of plasmin as determined by loss of amidolytic activity, loss of ability to cleave fibrinogen, and decreased lysis zones in fibrin plate assays. Stoichiometric titrations indicate that approximately 1 mol of plasmin interacts with 1 mol of thrombospondin, an unexpected result considering the trimeric nature of thrombospondin. Plasmin in a complex with streptokinase or bound to epsilon-aminocaproic acid is protected from inhibition by thrombospondin, thereby implicating the lysine-binding kringle domains of plasmin in the inhibition process. Thrombospondin also inhibits urokinase plasminogen activator, but more slowly than plasmin, stimulates the amidolytic activity of tissue plasminogen activator, and has no effect on the amidolytic activity of alpha-thrombin or factor Xa. These results, therefore, identify thrombospondin as a new type of serine proteinase inhibitor and potentially important regulator of fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

13.
Streptokinase (SK) and staphylokinase form cofactor-enzyme complexes that promote the degradation of fibrin thrombi by activating human plasminogen. The unique abilities of streptokinase to nonproteolytically activate plasminogen or to alter the interactions of plasmin with substrates and inhibitors may be the result of high affinity binding mediated by the streptokinase beta-domain. To examine this hypothesis, a chimeric streptokinase, SKbetaswap, was created by swapping the SK beta-domain with the homologous beta-domain of Streptococcus uberis Pg activator (SUPA or PauA, SK uberis), a streptokinase that cannot activate human plasminogen. SKbetaswap formed a tight complex with microplasminogen with an affinity comparable with streptokinase. The SKbetaswap-plasmin complex also activated human plasminogen with catalytic efficiencies (k(cat)/K(m) = 16.8 versus 15.2 microm(-1) min(-1)) comparable with streptokinase. However, SKbetaswap was incapable of nonproteolytic active site generation and activated plasminogen by a staphylokinase mechanism. When compared with streptokinase complexes, SKbetaswap-plasmin and SKbetaswap-microplasmin complexes had altered affinities for low molecular weight substrates. The SKbetaswap-plasmin complex also was less resistant than the streptokinase-plasmin complex to inhibition by alpha(2)-antiplasmin and was readily inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor. Thus, in addition to mediating high affinity binding to plasmin(ogen), the streptokinase beta-domain is required for nonproteolytic active site generation and specifically modulates the interactions of the complex with substrates and inhibitors.  相似文献   

14.
A functionally active human microplasminogen without kringle structures was produced by incubation of plasminogen with urokinase-free plasmin at an alkaline pH. The microplasminogen was purified by affinity chromatography on lysine- and soybean trypsin inhibitor-Sepharose and by chromofocusing. Human plasminogen is specifically cleaved at Arg529-Lys530 by plasmin to form microplasminogen, which consists of a single polypeptide of 261 residues from the COOH-terminal portion of native plasminogen. It has an Mr of 28,617, calculated from the sequence, which is consistent with the molecular weight determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. Microplasminogen is a slightly basic protein and is eluted from a chromofocusing column at pH 8.3. It can be activated by urokinase and streptokinase to a catalytically active microplasmin. The specific amidolytic activity of microplasmin is about three times higher than Lys77-plasmin on a weight basis and is about the same on a molar basis. The activation of microplasminogen by streptokinase is slower than that of either Glu-plasminogen or Lys77-plasminogen. On the other hand, the activation of microplasminogen by urokinase is faster than that of either of the latter. The Arg560-Val561 bond is cleaved during activation of both microplasminogen and native plasminogen.  相似文献   

15.
D P Kosow 《Biochemistry》1975,14(20):4459-4465
A method of determining the initial rate of plasminogen activation has been developed. The method has been used to investigate the mechanism of activation of human plasminogen by streptokinase. Plasmin formation follows saturation kinetics. Inhibition of plasmin formation by epsilon-aminocaproic acid is uncompetitive with a Ki of 0.6 mM. A model consistent with the data is that streptokinase induces a conformational change in the plasminogen molecule, producing an active center which cleaves an internal peptide bond to produce plasmin. Thus, streptokinase functions as a catalytic allosteric effector.  相似文献   

16.
The therapeutic properties of plasminogen activators are dictated by their mechanism of action. Unlike staphylokinase, a single domain protein, streptokinase, a 3-domain (alpha, beta, and gamma) molecule, nonproteolytically activates human (h)-plasminogen and protects plasmin from inactivation by alpha(2)-antiplasmin. Because a streptokinase-like mechanism was hypothesized to require the streptokinase gamma-domain, we examined the mechanism of action of a novel two-domain (alpha,beta) Streptococcus uberis plasminogen activator (SUPA). Under conditions that quench trace plasmin, SUPA nonproteolytically generated an active site in bovine (b)-plasminogen. SUPA also competitively inhibited the inactivation of plasmin by alpha(2)-antiplasmin. Still, the lag phase in active site generation and plasminogen activation by SUPA was at least 5-fold longer than that of streptokinase. Recombinant streptokinase gamma-domain bound to the b-plasminogen.SUPA complex and significantly reduced these lag phases. The SUPA-b.plasmin complex activated b-plasminogen with kinetic parameters comparable to those of streptokinase for h-plasminogen. The SUPA-b.plasmin complex also activated h-plasminogen but with a lower k(cat) (25-fold) and k(cat)/K(m) (7.9-fold) than SK. We conclude that a gamma-domain is not required for a streptokinase-like activation of b-plasminogen. However, the streptokinase gamma-domain enhances the rates of active site formation in b-plasminogen and this enhancing effect may be required for efficient activation of plasminogen from other species.  相似文献   

17.
The bacterial pathogen Group A Streptococcus (GAS) colonizes epithelial and mucosal surfaces and can cause a broad spectrum of human disease. Through the secreted plasminogen activator streptokinase (Ska), GAS activates human plasminogen into plasmin and binds it to the bacterial surface. The resulting surface plasmin protease activity has been proposed to play a role in disrupting tissue barriers, promoting invasive spread of the bacterium. We investigated whether this surface protease activity could aid the immune evasion role through degradation of the key innate antimicrobial peptide LL-37, the human cathelicidin. Cleavage products of plasmin-degraded LL-37 were analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry. Ska-deficient GAS strains were generated by targeted allelic exchange mutagenesis and confirmed to lack surface plasmin activity after growth in human plasma or media supplemented with plasminogen and fibrinogen. Loss of surface plasmin activity left GAS unable to efficiently degrade LL-37 and increased bacterial susceptibility to killing by the antimicrobial peptide. When mice infected with GAS were simultaneously treated with the plasmin inhibitor aprotinin, a significant reduction in the size of necrotic skin lesions was observed. Together these data reveal a novel immune evasion strategy of the human pathogen: co-opting the activity of a host protease to evade peptide-based innate host defenses.  相似文献   

18.
The single-chain form of human urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) is the major form of the enzyme found in cells, tissues, and extracellular fluids. The protein, called pro-uPA, has high (Kd = 0.5 nM) affinity for the specific uPA receptor of U937 human monocyte-like cells. Its conversion to two-chain uPA by plasmin does not appreciably change the binding parameters. In addition, conversion of pro-uPA to uPA occurs with receptor-bound pro-uPA and does not lead to dissociation from the membrane. These data show that secreted pro-uPA can find its way to the specific surface receptor without previous conversion to the two-chain form and that, once bound, can be activated by plasmin.  相似文献   

19.
Single-chain Mr 54,000 u-PA (scu-PA) was isolated, in the presence of aprotinin, from 3-liter batches of 60-h serum-free conditioned media obtained from subcultured (4-6th passage) human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs, approximately 1.8 x 10(9) cells). In the presence of heparin and endothelial cell growth factor, subcultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells produced u-PA proteins consisting of about 85-90% Mr 54,000 scu-PA and 10-15% two-chain Mr 54,000. The major scu-PA form was purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography on CM-Sephadex C-50, immunoadsorption on purified anti-u-PA IgG-Sepharose and affinity chromatography on p-amino-benzamidine-Agarose. Typically, about 8-10 micrograms of purified scu-PA protein (antigen/protein ratio = 1) was isolated from 3-liter batches of heparin-containing serum-free conditioned media with a yield of about 41% of the total starting u-PA antigen. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of this purified u-PA protein showed a single Ag-stained band (nonreduced and reduced), with an estimated molecular weight of about 54,000, which exhibited very low fibrinolytic activity. Purified HUVEC-derived scu-PA did not incorporate 3H-labeled diisopropyl fluorophosphate. This protein did, however, exhibit very low amidolytic activity (approximately 5,000 IU/mg) on the u-PA-specific synthetic substrate pyroglu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide, very low plasminogen-dependent fibrinolytic activity on 125I-labeled fibrin coated plates, and directly activated 125I-labeled plasminogen following Michaelis-Menten kinetics with high affinity, Km = 0.72 microM and low turnover number, kcat = 0.0005 s-1. Treatment with plasmin rapidly converted the HUVEC-derived scu-PA to the active two-chain Mr 54,000 u-PA form (approximately 90,000 IU/mg). Binding to fibrin clots, using antigen quantitation, indicated about 20, 10, and 90% binding for equimolar amounts of HUVEC-derived scu-PA, two-chain u-PA, and tissue plasminogen activator standards, respectively. These results indicate that subcultured HUVECs synthesize and secrete their u-PA protein as a single-chain molecule with low intrinsic amidolytic and fibrinolytic activity, high affinity for plasminogen and no specific affinity for fibrin. The role of scu-PA in endothelial cell-mediated vascular function has yet to be clearly defined.  相似文献   

20.
Several pathogenic bacteria secrete plasminogen activator proteins. Streptokinase (SKe) produced by Streptococcus equisimilis and staphylokinase secreted from Staphylococcus aureus are human plasminogen activators and streptokinase (SKu), produced by Streptococcus uberis, is a bovine plasminogen activator. Thus, the fusion proteins among these activators can explain the function of each domain of SKe. Replacement of the SKalpha domain with staphylokinase donated the staphylokinase-like activation activity to SKe, and the SKbetagamma domain played a role of nonproteolytic activation of plasminogen. Recombinant SKu also activated human plasminogen by staphylokinase-like activation mode. Because SKu has homology with SKe, the bovine plasminogen activation activities of SKe fragments were checked. SKebetagamma among them had activation activity with bovine plasminogen. This means that the C-terminal domain (gamma-domain) of streptokinase determines plasminogen species necessary for activation and converses the ability of substrate recognition to human species.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号