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 15 毫秒
1.
The alpha-2-antiplasmin influence on the Glu-plasminogen activation by tissue activator both on fibrin and fibrin(ogen) fragments was investigated. The kinetics of activation was studied and velocity of this process in the absence and presence of the inhibitor was calculated. It was established that alpha-2-antiplasmin decreased the velocity of Glu-plasminogen activation on desAABBfibrin, DDE-complex and DD-dimer and did no influence upon proenzyme activation on fibrinogen fragment--Ho1-DSK. In the presence of fibrin plasminogen activation linear related to the amount added tissue activator in limit concentration from 5 before 50 units/ml. It was shown that alpha-2-antiplasmin reduced the activation velocity with used concentration of tissue activator. Fibrin hydrolysis by plasmin, forming on its surface during the plasminogen activation by tissue activator, was also inhibited with alpha-2-antiplasmin. The obtained results are explained by the influence of the inhibitor on formation of the triple complex between plasminogen, tissue activator and fibrin, and competition of the alpha-2-antiplasmin for lysine-binding sites of tissue activator kringle 2 or for binding sites of the activator on fibrin.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction of tissue plasminogen activator with alpha-2-antiplasmin and its influence on tissue activator binding to fibrin was studied. Alpha-2-Antiplasmin decreases the binding of tissue activator to fibrin by 20%. The inhibitor formed a complex with tissue plasminogen activator (Kd 78.2 nM) and had no effect on amidolytic activity of the activator. The tissue activator binding to alpha-2-antiplasmin decreases by 20-35% in the presence of 6-aminohexanoic acid. It indicates that not only kringle 2 of the tissue activator molecule takes part in complex formation with alpha-2-antiplasmin, but also other activator domains. Two models were proposed to explain the alpha-2-antiplasmin effect on the Glu-plasminogen activation by tissue activator on fibrin. In the first place, the inhibitor binds to fibrin in the site where the activator complex is localized. It can create steric hindrances for the proenzyme interaction with its activator on fibrin. In the second place, alpha-2-antiplasmin in a complex with tissue plasminogen activator can bring to a change in the activator conformation and a decrease of its functional activity.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism of activation of human Glu-plasminogen by fibrin-bound tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in a plasma environment or in a reconstituted system was characterized. A heterogeneous system was used, allowing the setting of experimental conditions as close as possible to the physiological fibrin/plasma interphase, and permitting the separate analysis of the products present in each of the phases as a function of time. The generation of plasmin was monitored both by spectrophotometric analysis and by radioisotopic analysis with a plasmin-selective chromogenic substrate and radiolabelled Glu-plasminogen respectively. Plasmin(ogen)-derived products were identified by SDS/PAGE followed by autoradiography and/or immunoblotting. When the activation was performed in a plasma environment, the products identified on the fibrin surface were Glu-plasmin (90%) and Glu-plasminogen (10%), whereas in the soluble phase only complexes between Glu-plasmin and its fast-acting inhibitor were detected. Identical results were obtained with a reconstituted system comprising solid-phase fibrin, t-PA, Glu-plasminogen and and alpha 2-antiplasmin. In contrast, when alpha 2-antiplasmin was omitted from the solution, Lys-plasmin was progressively generated on to the fibrin surface (30%) and released to the soluble phase. In the presence of alpha 2-antiplasmin or in plasma, the amount of active plasmin generated on the fibrin surface was lower than in the absence of the inhibitor: in a representative experiment the initial velocity of plasmin generation was 2.8 x 10(-3), 2.0 x 10(-3) and 1.8 x 10(-3) (delta A405/min) for 200 nM-plasminogen, 200 nM-plasminogen plus 100 nM-alpha 2-antiplasmin and native plasma respectively. Our results indicate that in plasma or in a reconstituted purified system containing plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin at a ratio similar to that found in plasma (1) the activation pathway of native Glu-plasminogen proceeds directly to the formation of Glu-plasmin, (2) Lys-plasminogen is not an intermediate of the reaction and therefore (3) Lys-plasmin is not the final active product. However, in the absence of the inhibitor, Lys-plasmin and probably Lys-plasminogen, which is more readily activated to plasmin than is Glu-plasminogen, are generated as well.  相似文献   

4.
The vampire bat salivary plasminogen activator (BatPA) is virtually inactive toward Glu-plasminogen in the absence of a fibrin-like cofactor, unlike human tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) (the kcat/Km values were 4 and 470 M-1 s-1, respectively). In the presence of fibrin II, tPA and BatPA activated Glu-plasminogen with comparable catalytic efficiencies (158,000 and 174,000 M-1 s-1, respectively). BatPA's cofactor requirement was partially satisfied by polymeric fibrin I (54,000 M-1 s-1), but monomeric fibrin I was virtually ineffective (970 M-1 s-1). By comparison, a variety of monomeric and polymeric fibrin-like species markedly enhanced tPA-mediated activation of Glu-plasminogen. Fragment X polymer was 2-fold better but 9-fold worse as cofactor for tPA and BatPA, respectively, relative to fibrin II. Fibrinogen, devoid of plasminogen, was a 10-fold better cofactor for tPA than fibrinogen rigorously depleted of plasminogen, Factor XIII, and fibronectin; the enhanced stimulatory effect of the less-purified fibrinogen was apparently due to the presence of Factor XIII. By contrast, the two fibrinogen preparations were equally poor cofactors of BatPA-mediated activation of Glu-plasminogen. BatPA possessed only 23 and 4% of the catalytic efficiencies of tPA and two-chain tPA, respectively, in hydrolyzing the chromogenic substrate Spectrozyme tPA. However in the presence of fibrin II, BatPA and tPA exhibited similar kcat/Km values for the hydrolysis of Spectrozyme tPA. Our data revealed that BatPA, unlike tPA, displayed a strict and fastidious requirement for polymeric fibrin I or II. Consequently, BatPA may preferentially promote plasmin generation during a narrow temporal window of fibrin formation and dissolution.  相似文献   

5.
The ability of the native form of plasminogen (Glu-plasminogen) to form complexes with fibrinogen and its fragments immobilized on CNBr-agarose was studied. It was found that unlike Lys-plasminogen, the native form of the proenzyme does not bind to fibrinogen agarose. Limited proteolysis of fibrinogen by plasmin involving alpha C-domains results in the appearance of Glu-plasminogen binding sites at fibrinogen surface. The X2 fragment of fibrinogen binds to about 0.5 moles of Glu-plasminogen at an equimolar ratio of the interacting proteins. Under these conditions, the amount of bound Glu-plasminogen does not increase as a result of subsequent hydrolysis of fibrinogen down to end products, fragments E and D. It was found that Glu-plasminogen interacts with both E- and D-fragments of fibrinogen. Similar to Lys-plasminogen, Glu-plasminogen exhibits a high affinity for the E-fragment. The maximal quantity of the bound protein under the given experimental conditions is 2 moles per mole of the immobilized E-fragment. The interaction of Glu-plasminogen with the E-fragment is mediated by the lysine-binding sites of the proenzyme with a high and low affinity [Kd = 1.8.10(-6) and 7.5.10(-5) M, respectively]. Glu-plasminogen, unlike Lys-plasminogen, shows a low affinity for the D-fragment (Kd = 2.10(-5) M). Glu-plasminogen cannot be adsorbed by arginine-binding sites at the DH fragment-agarose.  相似文献   

6.
An elastase-dependent pathway of plasminogen activation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R Machovich  W G Owen 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4517-4522
In reaction mixtures containing Glu-plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin, and tissue plasminogen activator or urokinase, either pancreatic or leukocyte elastase enhances the rate of plasminogen activation by 2 or more orders of magnitude. This effect is the consequence of several reactions. (a) In concentrations on the order of 100 nM, elastase degrades plasminogen within 10 min to yield des-kringle1-4-plasminogen (mini-plasminogen), which is 10-fold more efficient than Glu-plasminogen as a substrate for plasminogen activators. Des-kringle1-4-plasminogen is insensitive to cofactor activities of fibrin(ogen) fragments or an endothelial cell cofactor. (b) Des-kringle1-4-plasmin is one-tenth as sensitive as plasmin to inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin: k" = 10(6) M-1 s-1 versus 10(7) M-1 s-1. (c) alpha 2-Antiplasmin is disabled efficiently by elastase, with a k" of 20,000 M-1 s-1. The elastase-dependent reactions are not influenced by 6-aminohexanoate. In diluted (10-fold) blood plasma, the capacity of endogenous inhibitors to block plasmin expression is suppressed by 30 microM elastase. It is proposed that elastases provide an alternative pathway for Glu-plasminogen activation and a mechanism for controlling initiation of fibrinolysis by urokinase-type plasminogen activators.  相似文献   

7.
Plasminogen and plasminogen derivatives which contain lysine-binding sites were found to decrease the reaction rate between plasmin and alpha2-antiplasmin by competing with plasmin for the complementary site(s) in alpha2-antiplasmin. The dissocwation constant Kd for the interaction between intact plasminogen (Glu-plasminogen) and alpha2-antiplasmin is 4.0 microM but those for Lys-plasminogen or TLCK-plasmin are about 10-fold lower indicating a stronger interaction. The lysine-binding site(s) which is situated in triple-loops 1--3 in the plasmin A-chain is mainly responsible for the interaction with alpha2-antiplasmin. The interaction between Glu-plasminogen and alpha2-antiplasmin furthermore enhances the activation of Glu-plasminogen by urokinase to a comparable extent as 6-aminohexanoic acid, suggesting that similar conformational changes occur in the proenzyme after complex formation. Fibrinogen, fibrinogen digested with plasmin, purified fragment E and purified fragment D interfere with the reaction between plasmin and alpha2-antiplasmin by competing with alpha2-antiplasmin for the lysine-binding site(s) in the plasmin A-chain. The Kd obtained for these interactions varied between 0.2 microM and 1.4 microM; fragment E being the most effective. Thus the fibrinogen molecule contains several complementary sites to the lysine-binding sites located both in its NH2-terminal and COOH-terminal regions; these sites are to a large extent.  相似文献   

8.
On the mechanism of fibrin-specific plasminogen activation by staphylokinase   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The mechanism of plasminogen activation by recombinant staphylokinase was studied both in the absence and in the presence of fibrin, in purified systems, and in human plasma. Staphylokinase, like streptokinase, forms a stoichiometric complex with plasminogen that activates plasminogen following Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km = 7.0 microM and k2 = 1.5 s-1. In purified systems, alpha 2-antiplasmin inhibits the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex with k1(app) = 2.7 +/- 0.30 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D., n = 12), but not the plasminogen-streptokinase complex. Addition of 6-aminohexanoic acid induces a concentration-dependent reduction of k1(app) to 2.0 +/- 0.17 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D., n = 5) at concentrations greater than or equal to 30 mM, with a 50% reduction at a 6-aminohexanoic acid concentration of 60 microM. Staphylokinase does not bind to fibrin, and fibrin stimulates the initial rate of plasminogen activation by staphylokinase only 4-fold. Staphylokinase induces a dose-dependent lysis of a 0.12-ml 125I-fibrin-labeled human plasma clot submersed in 0.5 ml of citrated human plasma; 50% lysis in 2 h is obtained with 17 nM staphylokinase and is associated with only 5% plasma fibrinogen degradation. Corresponding values for streptokinase are 68 nM and more than 90% fibrinogen degradation. In the absence of a fibrin clot, 50% fibrinogen degradation in human plasma in 2 h requires 790 nM staphylokinase, but only 4.4 nM streptokinase. These results suggest the following mechanism for relatively fibrin-specific clot lysis with staphylokinase in a plasma milieu. In plasma in the absence of fibrin, the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex is rapidly neutralized by alpha 2-antiplasmin, thus preventing systemic plasminogen activation. In the presence of fibrin, the lysine-binding sites of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex are occupied and inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin is retarded, thus allowing preferential plasminogen activation at the fibrin surface.  相似文献   

9.
The molecular interactions between the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex, alpha 2-antiplasmin and fibrin were studied by measuring the effect of CNBr-digested fibrinogen on the inhibition rate of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex by alpha 2-antiplasmin. The second-order rate constant for the inhibition of plasminogen-staphylokinase by alpha 2-antiplasmin was 2.7 +/- 0.3.10(6) M-1 s-1 (mean +/- S.D.; n = 7). Addition of CNBr-digested fibrinogen, but not of fibrinogen, resulted in a concentration-dependent reduction of the apparent inhibition rate constant, with a 50 percent reduction at a concentration of 5 nM CNBr-digested fibrinogen. The second-order rate constant for the inhibition of the low-Mr plasminogen-staphylokinase complex (plasminogen lacking the kringle structures comprising the lysine-binding sites) by alpha 2-antiplasmin was about 30-fold lower (9.3 +/- 0.7.10(4) M-1 s-1, mean +/- S.D.; n = 4) than that of plasminogen-staphylokinase and was not affected by addition of CNBr-digested fibrinogen. Inhibition of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex by the chloromethylketone D-Val-Phe-Lys-Ch2Cl is 9-fold less efficient than that of plasmin (k2/Ki of 700 M-1 s-1 versus 6300 M-1 s-1). Our results confirm and establish that rapid inhibition of plasminogen-staphylokinase by alpha 2-antiplasmin requires the availability of the lysine-binding sites in the plasminogen moiety of the complex. Fibrin, but not fibrinogen, reduces the inhibition rate by alpha 2-antiplasmin by competition for interaction with the lysine-binding site. Protection of the plasminogen-staphylokinase complex bound to fibrin from rapid inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin thus appears to contribute to the fibrin-specificity of clot lysis with staphylokinase in a plasma milieu, by allowing preferential plasminogen activation at the fibrin surface, while the free complex is rapidly inhibited in plasma.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of inhibition of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) by the fast-acting plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) was investigated in homogeneous (plasma) and heterogeneous (solid-phase fibrin) systems by using radioisotopic and spectrophotometric analysis. It is demonstrated that fibrin-bound t-PA is protected from inhibition by PAI-1, whereas t-PA in soluble phase is rapidly inhibited (K1 = 10(7) M-1.s-1) even in the presence of 2 microM-plasminogen. The inhibitor interferes with the binding of t-PA to fibrin in a competitive manner. As a consequence the Kd of t-PA for fibrin (1.2 +/- 0.4 nM) increases and the maximal velocity of plasminogen activation by fibrin-bound t-PA is not modified. From the plot of the apparent Kd versus the concentration of PAI-1 a Ki value of 1.3 +/- 0.3 nM was calculated. The quasi-similar values for the dissociation constants between fibrin and t-PA (Kd) and between PAI-1 and t-PA (Ki), as well as the competitive type of inhibition observed, indicate that the fibrinolytic activity of human plasma may be the result of an equilibrium distribution of t-PA between both the amount of fibrin generated and the concentration of circulating inhibitor.  相似文献   

11.
The present study represents detailed investigations into the nature of interactions between an intracellular "tissue" transglutaminase and a plasma protein, fibrinogen. We demonstrate a specific, saturable, and reversible binding of transglutaminase to fibrin(ogen). The binding was time- and temperature-dependent, was independent of divalent metal ions, did not require the release of either fibrinopeptide A or B, and was partially inhibited by the presence of sodium chloride or plasma proteins, properties similar to Factor XIII binding to fibrin(ogen). Both Factor XIII and liver transglutaminase also shared similar binding sites on fibrinogen, the A alpha- and the B beta-chains. The binding characteristics of liver transglutaminase were thus similar to Factor XIII binding to fibrin, but there were also important differences. Scatchard analyses of the binding data indicated that the affinity of liver transglutaminase (Kd = 4.17 x 10(-7) M) was at least 40-fold weaker compared with the affinity of Factor XIII to fibrinogen. Consequently, a 20-fold molar excess of Factor XIII a-chains specifically and completely inhibited the binding of liver transglutaminase to des-A-fibrinogen. The association between liver transglutaminase and fibrin(ogen) was also critically controlled by the conformational states of the two proteins. Substances capable of altering the conformation of either transglutaminase (such as guanosine 5'-triphosphate) or of fibrinogen (such as the tetrapeptide Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro and Fragment D) disrupted binding. Excess CaCl2 was able to counteract the effects of guanosine 5'-triphosphate on transglutaminase binding to fibrin. In contrast, Factor XIII binding to fibrin was unaffected by either guanosine 5'-triphosphate, CaCl2, or Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro, suggesting a more stable association between the two proteins. The physiologic implications of transglutaminase-fibrin(ogen) interactions are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Human plasminogen, a glycoprotein with NH2-terminal Glu, is rapidly converted by traces of plasmin to proteolytic derivatives with NH2-terminal Met 68, Lys 77, or Val 78 ("Lys-plasminogen"), which are much more readily activated to plasmin than is Glu-plasminogen. It has, therefore, been proposed that physiological activation of Glu-plasminogen occurs mainly via Lys-plasminogen intermediates (Wiman, B., and Wallén, P. (1973) Eur. J. Biochem. 36, 25-31). In the present study we have characterized a murine monoclonal antibody (LPm1) directed against an epitope exposed in Lys-plasminogen but not in Glu-plasminogen. The antibody was secreted by a hybridoma obtained by fusion of mouse myeloma cells (P3X63-Ag8-6.5.3) with spleen cells of a mouse immunized with purified Lys-plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex. Coupling of the alpha-amino groups of Lys-plasminogen with phenylisothiocyanate resulted in complete loss of immunoreactivity for LPm1, which was, however, fully restored by cleavage of the derivatized NH2-terminal amino acid. After a second cycle, immunoreactivity was not restored, indicating that the LPm1 antibody-binding site depends on the presence of Lys 77 and/or Val 78 as NH2-terminal amino acids. The immunoreactivity of Lys-plasminogen with LPm1 is abolished by reduction of the protein, suggesting that conversion of Glu-plasminogen to Lys-plasminogen is associated with a conformational alteration exposing the epitope for the LPm1 monoclonal antibody. In order to investigate the pathways of plasminogen activation in vivo, total plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin and Lys-plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complexes were measured with sandwich-type micro enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Therefore, microtiter plates were coated with monoclonal antibodies against alpha 2-antiplasmin, and bound antigen was quantitated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated LPm1 or a monoclonal antibody reacting equally well with Glu-plasmin as with Lys-plasmin. In 25 healthy subjects the plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin levels in plasma were undetectable (less than 0.1 nM). Infusion of tissue-type plasminogen activator in patients with thromboembolic disease resulted in generation of high concentrations of Glu-plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex (620 +/- 150 nM, n = 7) whereas neither Lys-plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex nor Lys-plasminogen were consistently detected. It is, therefore, concluded that activation of the fibrinolytic system in vivo occurs by direct cleavage of the Arg 560-Val 561 bond in Glu-plasminogen and not via formation of the Lys-plasminogen intermediates.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetic and thermodynamic studies are presented showing that the cofactor activity of fibrin I (polymerized des-A fibrinogen) in the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed proteolysis of activation peptide (AP) from plasma factor XIII can be attributed to formation of a fibrin I-plasma factor XIII complex (Kd = 65 nM), which is processed by alpha-thrombin more efficiently (kcat/Km = 1.2 x 10(7) M-1 s-1) than free, uncomplexed plasma factor XIII (kcat/Km = 1.4 x 10(5) M-1 s-1). The increase in the specificity constant (kcat/Km) is shown to be largely due to an increase in the apparent affinity of alpha-thrombin for the complex of plasma factor XIII and fibrin I, as reflected by the 30-fold decrease in the Michaelis constant observed for fibrin I bound plasma factor XIII relative to that for uncomplexed plasma factor XIII. Analysis of the initial rates of alpha-thrombin-catalyzed hydrolysis of fibrinopeptide B (FPB) from fibrin I polymer in the presence of plasma factor XIII indicated that alpha-thrombin bound to fibrin I in the ternary complex of alpha-thrombin, plasma factor XIII, and fibrin I polymer is competent to catalyze cleavage of both FPB from fibrin I and AP from plasma factor XIII. This observation is consistent with the view that alpha-thrombin within the ternary complex is anchored to fibrin I polymer through a binding site distinct from the active site (an exosite) and that the active site is alternatively complexed with the AP moiety of plasma factor XIII or the FPB moiety of fibrin I. This conclusion is supported by the observation that a 12-residue peptide, which binds to an exosite of alpha-thrombin and blocks the interaction of alpha-thrombin with fibrinogen and fibrin, competitively inhibits alpha-thrombin-catalyzed release of both FPB and AP from the fibrin I-plasma factor XIII complex.  相似文献   

14.
Factor XIII zymogen activation is a complex series of events that involve fibrinogen acting in several different roles. This report focuses on the role of fibrinogen as a cofactor in factor XIII activation by thrombin. We demonstrate that fibrinogen has two distinct activities that lead to an increased rate of factor XIII activation. First, the thrombin proteolytic activity is increased by fibrin. The cleavage rates of both a small chromogenic substrate and the factor XIII activation peptide are increased in the presence of either the major fibrin isoform, gammaA/gammaA fibrin, or a minor variant form, gammaA/gamma' fibrin. This enhancement of thrombin activity by fibrin is independent of fibrin polymerization and requires only cleavage of the fibrinopeptides. Subsequently, gammaA/gamma' fibrinogen accelerates plasma factor XIII activation by a non-proteolytic mechanism. This increased rate of activation results in a slightly more rapid cross-linking of fibrin gammaA and gamma' chains and a significantly more rapid cross-linking of fibrin alpha chain multimers. Together, these results show that although both forms of fibrin increase the rate of activation peptide cleavage by thrombin, gammaA/gamma' fibrinogen also increases the rate of factor XIII activation in a non-proteolytic manner. A revised model of factor XIII activation is presented below.  相似文献   

15.
Using a modified procedure for measuring the time of fibrin clot lysis, the kinetics of Glu- and Lys-plasminogen activation by the tissue activator was studied. Within the plasminogen concentration range of 0.4-100 nM the rate of activation of both protein forms obeys the Michaelis-Menten kinetics. At Lys-plasminogen concentration equimolar to that of fibrin, the rate of activation of the former decreases down to that of Glu-plasminogen activation. The kinetic constants for Glu- and Lys-plasminogen activation (Km) are equal to 0.055 and 0.013 microM; k = 0.19 and 0.21 s-1, respectively. The Km values for fibrin-bound Glu- and Lys-plasminogen are equal to 0.25 nM and 8 nM, respectively (k = 0.08 and 0.26 s-1, respectively). It is assumed that the tissue activator exhibits a higher affinity for the Glu-plasminogen--fibrin complex than for the Lys-plasminogen-fibrin complex.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of plasmin-derived fibrin(ogen) degradation products on alpha-thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII was studied to identify the fibrin polymer structure that promotes Factor XIIIa formation. Fibrin polymers derived from fibrinogen and Fragment X enhanced the rate of thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII in plasma or buffered solutions. The concentrations of fibrinogen and Fragment X that promoted half-maximal rates of Factor XIIIa formation were 5 and 40 micrograms/ml, respectively. Fragments Y, D, E, D-dimer, and photooxidized fibrinogen did not enhance thrombin cleavage of Factor XIII. Although purified Fragment D1 inhibited fibrin gelation, the soluble protofibrils promoted thrombin activation of Factor XIII. Noncrosslinked fibrin fibers failed to enhance thrombin cleavage of Factor XIII. In conclusion, soluble fibrin oligomers function to promote thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII during blood clotting.  相似文献   

17.
This study deals with the effect of fibrin on the transformation of Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin during fibrinolysis. It focuses particularly on changes in fibrin effector function caused by plasmin-catalysed fibrin degradation. Conversion of 125I-labelled Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin was catalysed by urokinase or tissue plasminogen activator, in the presence of different preparations of progressively degraded fibrin. Plasmin catalysis of Glu-plasminogen and the fibrin (derivative) effector was inhibited by aprotinin. The presence of intact fibrin enhanced the rate of Glu-plasmin formation catalysed by tissue plasminogen activator, but not by urokinase. The presence of initially plasmin-cleaved fibrin, however, increased the rates of Glu-plasmin formation with both activators, as compared to those found with intact fibrin. The rate enhancements induced by initial plasmin degradation of the fibrin effector were associated with an increase in its affinity to both Glu-plasminogen and tissue plasminogen activator, suggesting causal relationships. The weak binding of urokinase was unaffected by fibrin degradation, indicating that effector function was solely exerted on the Glu-plasminogen moiety of urokinase-activated systems. Further degradation of fibrin decreased the stimulating effect on Glu-plasmin formation. This decrease occurred at an earlier stage of degradation with tissue plasminogen activator than with urokinase, indicating that greater integrity of the fibrin effector is necessary for its optimal interaction with the tissue plasminogen activator than with Glu-plasminogen. Concentrations of tranexamic acid that saturate low-affinity lysine-binding sites nearly completely dissociated the binding of Glu-plasminogen to degraded fibrin, but not to intact fibrin. In analogy with the binding of lysine analogues to these sites, the conformation of Glu-plasminogen may be altered by binding to degraded fibrin, thus giving rise to the increased activation rate.  相似文献   

18.
While the transglutaminase activity is associated exclusively with the thrombin-cleaved a chains of plasma Factor XIII, there is little information regarding the role of the b-chains. The present investigations were undertaken to clarify the role of the b-chains during proteolytic activation of plasma factor XIII a-chains. The a-chains of platelet Factor XIII (a2) were extremely sensitive to alpha-thrombin proteolysis, especially in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, resulting in two major fragments with molecular masses 51 +/- 3 kDa and 19 +/- 4 kDa. Furthermore, fibrin enhanced the alpha-thrombin proteolysis of thrombin-cleaved platelet Factor XIII a-chains in presence of CaCl2 or EDTA, resulting in several peptide fragments with molecular masses from 51 +/- 3 kDa to 14 +/- 4 kDa. By contrast, thrombin-cleaved a-chains of plasma Factor XIII (a2b2) were not further degraded by alpha-thrombin in presence of 5 mM EDTA. Even in the combined presence of 5 mM EDTA and 0.1 mg/ml fibrin, alpha-thrombin proteolysis of plasma Factor XIIIa was limited to the formation of a 76 kDa fragment (= Factor XIIIa), a 51 +/- 3 kDa fragment and trace amounts of a 14 +/- 4 kDa species. Platelet Factor XIII proteolyzed by 500 nM alpha-thrombin in presence of 5 mM EDTA expressed less than 20% of enzymatic activity obtained when platelet Factor XIII was activated in presence of 5 mM CaCl2. In contrast, plasma Factor XIII activated by 500 nM apha-thrombin in presence of 5 mM EDTA expressed nearly 65% of original transglutaminase activity. Likewise, when plasma Factor XIII was proteolyzed by 100-1000 nM gamma-thrombin in presence of 5 mM CaCl2 or 5 mM EDTA, maximal transglutaminase activity was observed. However, when platelet Factor XIII was similarly treated with gamma-thrombin in presence of 5 mM EDTA, only one-half the original transglutaminase activity was obtained. The b-chains thus appear to mimic the function of Ca2+ in preserving transglutaminase activity of thrombin-cleaved a-chains. The b-chains of plasma Factor XIII were not degraded by either alpha- or gamma-thrombin treatment, in presence of 5 mM EDTA or 5 mM CaCl2. Both platelet and plasma Factor XIII a-chains were degraded by trypsin to fragments with molecular masses of 51 +/- 3 kDa and 19 +/- 4 kDa in presence of 5 mM CaCl2 and to fragments with molecular masses of 19 +/- 4 kDa and lower, in presence of 5 mM EDTA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The effect of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) or urokinase on the specific binding of human Glu-plasminogen to fibrin I formed in plasma by clotting with Reptilase was studied using 125I-plasminogen and 131I-fibrinogen. In the absence of TPA, small amounts of plasminogen were bound to fibrin I. TPA induced binding of plasminogen to plasma fibrin I that was dependent upon the concentrations of TPA and plasminogen as well as upon the time of incubation. Plasminogen binding occurred in association with fibrin clot lysis and the formation in the clot supernatant of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasmin complexes. Urokinase also induced binding of plasminogen to plasma fibrin I that was concentration- and time-dependent. The molecular form of plasminogen bound to the fibrin I plasma clot was identified as Glu-plasminogen by dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by fast performance liquid chromatography. Further studies demonstrated that fibrin I formed from fibrinogen that had been progressively degraded by plasmin-bound Glu-plasminogen. The mole ratio of plasminogen bound increased with the time of plasmin digestion. Glu-plasminogen did not bind to fibrin I formed from fibrinogen progressively digested by human leukocyte elastase, thereby demonstrating the specificity of plasmin. These studies demonstrate that plasminogen activators regulate the binding of Glu-plasminogen to fibrin I by catalyzing plasmin-mediated modifications in the fibrin substrate.  相似文献   

20.
D Lukacova  G R Matsueda  E Haber  G L Reed 《Biochemistry》1991,30(42):10164-10170
As the final enzyme in the coagulation cascade, activated fibrin stabilizing factor or factor XIII catalyzes the intermolecular cross-linking of fibrin chains. To study this enzyme in plasma, we derived a monoclonal antibody (MAb 309) against a peptide sequence (NH2-G-V-N-L-Q-E-F-C-COOH) in the thrombin activation site of factor XIII. Radioimmunoassays indicate that MAb 309 binds specifically to both platelet and plasma factor XIII. Peptide inhibition studies demonstrate that the MAb binds equally well to the factor XIII (FXIII) zymogen and the active form of FXIII (FXIIIa). In immunoblots of whole platelet lysates, MAb 309 binds only to FXIII and does not cross-react with other proteins. In saturation binding studies, the antibody shows a binding avidity of (1.75 +/- 0.35) x 10(9) M-1. MAb 309 also inhibited 99% of apparent FXIIIa activity in a standard transglutaminase assay. SDS-PAGE analysis of fibrin clots showed that MAb 309 inhibited fibrin gamma-gamma cross-linking. Moreover, MAb 309 accelerated the lysis of plasma clots, consistent with inhibition of fibrin-fibrin and fibrin-alpha 2-antiplasmin cross-linking. Immunoblotting experiments revealed that MAb 309 affected apparent FXIIIa activity by inhibiting the thrombin activation of the FXIII zymogen. In addition to its utility as a specific probe for the FXIII a-subunit, the strategy used to obtain MAb 309 may be used to generate MAbs that inhibit the activation of other coagulation factor zymogens.  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