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1.
The specific binding sites for tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) were investigated in human umbilical vein endothelial cells. After adding 125I-t-PA (M.W. 70 kDa) to endothelial cells in suspension culture, the ligand was recovered from the cell extract after disuccinimidyl suberate treatment as a high molecular complex with M.W. of 90 kDa on SDS-PAGE. The complex reacted to only anti-t-PA IgG but not to anti-PAI-1 IgG immunoblot analysis, indicating a t-PA specific binding protein. 125I-t-PA ligand blotting of the cell extract revealed that the binding protein had M.W. 20 kDa. The binding of 125I-t-PA to endothelial cells was reduced in the presence of an excess amount of t-PA, plasminogen and 6-aminohexanoic acid, indicating that the binding sites were also recognized by plasminogen, and that t-PA and plasminogen were bound via lysine binding sites in the molecule. These findings suggest that human endothelial cells have specific t-PA binding molecules which may be expressed on the cell surface as t-PA receptors.  相似文献   

2.
Catalytic activity of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in plasma is regulated in part by formation of complexes with specific inhibitors as well as by hepatic clearance. Potential interaction of these two regulatory mechanisms was examined in the human hepatoma cell line Hep G2. These cells secrete plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) and initiate catabolism of exogenous t-PA by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Specific binding of 125I-t-PA to cells at 4 degrees C results in dose-dependent formation of a 95-kDa species recognized by monospecific anti-PAI-1 and anti-t-PA antibodies and stable in the presence of low (0.2%) concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Specific binding of 125I-t-PA and formation of the 95-kDa SDS-stable species are inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner following preincubation of cells with anti-PAI-1 antibodies. High and low molecular weight forms of urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) capable of forming specific complexes with PAI-1 complete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. However, the proenzyme form of u-PA (scu-PA), incapable of forming complexes with PAI-1, does not compete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. The role of the serine protease active site of t-PA in mediating both interaction with PAI-1 and specific binding was examined using 125I-t-PA that had been functionally inactivated with D-phenylalanyl-L-propyl-L-arginyl-chloromethyl ketone (PPACK). 125I-t-PA-PPACK, despite a 6-fold lower affinity than active 125I-t-PA, exhibited specific binding to cells without detectable formation of SDS-stable complexes with PAI-1. Both surface-bound 125I-t-PA and 125I-t-PA-PPACK are internalized and degraded by cells at 37 degrees C. 125I-t-PA is internalized as a stable complex with PAI-1, whereas 125I-t-PA-PPACK is internalized with similar kinetics but without the presence of an SDS-stable complex. Thus, PAI-1 appears capable of modulating t-PA catabolism in the human hepatocyte.  相似文献   

3.
Plasma tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is cleared rapidly in vivo by the liver. Previous studies with the human hepatoma cell line HepG2 have identified a clearance system for t-PA modulated by plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1). In the present study, a rat hepatoma cell line MH1C1 is shown to contain a PAI-1-independent t-PA clearance system. At 4 degrees C, binding of 125I-t-PA to MH1C1 cells was rapid, specific, and saturable. Scatchard analysis of the binding data yielded a mean estimate of 105,000 high affinity binding sites per cell (Kd = 4.1 nM). When the bound ligand was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the majority (about 90%) of the specific binding was in the form of uncomplexed 125I-t-PA. This is in contrast to HepG2 cells in which specific binding was mainly in the form of a sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 complex. When availability of matrix-associated PAI-1 was blocked by preincubation with anti-PAI-1 antibody or removed by elastase treatment, specific 125I-t-PA binding to MH1C1 cells was unaffected, whereas most of the specific 125I-t-PA binding to HepG2 cells was abolished. Furthermore, when the active site of t-PA was inactivated with diisopropyl fluorophosphate, the diisopropyl fluorophosphate-t-PA specifically competed for binding of 125I-t-PA to MH1C1 cells, but failed to block specific 125I-t-PA binding to HepG2 cells. At 37 degrees C, PAI-1-independent t-PA binding to MH1C1 cells was followed by ligand uptake and degradation with kinetics similar to that seen in HepG2 cells. Chemical cross-linking of t-PA to MH1C1 cells revealed a specific t-PA binding protein with a molecular mass of about 500,000 daltons. Ligand-receptor complexes generated by chemical cross-linking were immunoprecipitable by anti-t-PA antibody but not by anti-PAI-1 antibody, further supporting the finding that binding of t-PA to MH1C1 cells is PAI-1-independent.  相似文献   

4.
Hepatic parenchymal cells contribute to the clearance of circulating tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in vivo. The hepatocyte extracellular matrix is interposed between the endothelial-lined sinusoids and the parenchymal cell surface and thus may influence t-PA clearance. To test this hypothesis, the well differentiated human hepatoma cell line HepG2 was used to characterize the role of extracellular matrix in t-PA clearance in vitro. Previous studies with these cells demonstrated their capacity for specific catabolism of t-PA in a system modulated by plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1). In the present study the extracellular matrix growth substratum of HepG2 cells is shown to contain active PAI-1. PAI-1 is distributed in a punctuate pattern throughout the substratum. Components of the substratum confer stability to active PAI-1 for intervals of at least 24 h. Exposing substratum to 125I-t-PA leads rapidly to the formation and release of a sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable 95-kDa 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 complex. In comparison, cell monolayers have the additional capacity for specific binding of the complex. However, PAI-1 is not detected at the surface of HepG2 cells in suspension, suggesting that 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 complexes form in substratum and subsequently bind to cells. Specific binding of performed 125I-t-PA.PAI-1, but not 125I-t-PA, was demonstrated for HepG2 cells in suspension. These results suggest that components of extracellular matrix participate in the clearance of t-PA by hepatocytes.  相似文献   

5.
Several groups have demonstrated that radioiodinated tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) binds to saturable sites on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) in culture (Hajjar, K. A., Hamel, N. M., Harpel, P. C., and Nachman, R. L. (1987) J. Clin. Invest. 80, 1712-1719; Beebe, D. P. (1987) Thromb. Res. 46, 241-254; Barnathan, E. S., Kuo, A., van der Keyl, H., McCrae, K. R., Larsen, G. L., and Cines, D. B. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7792-7799). Here we report that most of the specific binding of 125I-t-PA to our HUVEC cultures is accounted for by binding to (i) plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1), a t-PA inhibitor produced in abundance by HUVECs; and (ii) specific binding sites present on the plastic culture surface. The contribution of the sites on plastic can be eliminated by taking several precautions. Then, most or all of the specifically bound 125I-t-PA is present in a sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable 110-kDa 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 complex. Interestingly, a radioiodinated mutant form of t-PA, S478A, which is catalytically inactive and therefore unable to form the covalent complex with PAI-1, still binds to HUVECs. In fact, this ligand binds to HUVECs in 10-30-fold greater amounts than does wild-type 125I-t-PA (resulting in greater than 1 x 10(7) S478A 125I-t-PA molecules bound/cell at 12 nM ligand concentration). In contrast, diisopropyl fluorophosphate-treated t-PA binds to HUVECs in much smaller amounts than does wild-type t-PA. Several findings suggest that PAI-1 is a major binding site for S478A t-PA. The vast amount of binding observed with S478A t-PA, compared with wild-type t-PA, may be accounted for by an observed large scale release of wild-type 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 complexes from the solid phase (cells or extracellular matrix) into the culture medium. Immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that, in contrast to wild-type t-PA, S478A t-PA does not extract [35S]methionine-PAI antigen from metabolically labeled extracellular matrix. It is proposed that t-PA releases PAI-1 from the solid phase when it forms the irreversible covalent complex with the inhibitor, a process that does not occur with the catalytically inactive mutant form of t-PA.  相似文献   

6.
Cultured human endothelial cells synthesize and secrete two types of plasminogen activator, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase (u-PA). Previous work from this laboratory (Hajjar, K.A., Hamel, N. M., Harpel, P. C., and Nachman, R. L. (1987) J. Clin. Invest. 80, 1712-1719) has demonstrated dose-dependent, saturable, and high affinity binding of t-PA to two sites associated with cultural endothelial cell monolayers. We now report that an isolated plasma membrane-enriched endothelial cell fraction specifically binds 125I-t-PA at a single saturable site (Kd 9.1 nM; Bmax 3.1 pmol/mg membrane protein). Ligand blotting experiments demonstrated that both single and double-chain t-PA specifically bound to a Mr 40,000 membrane protein present in detergent extracts of isolated membranes, while high molecular weight, low molecular weight, and single-chain u-PA associated with a Mr 48,000 protein. Both binding interactions were reversible and cell-specific and were inhibitable by pretreatment of intact cells with nanomolar concentrations of trypsin. The relevant binding proteins were not found in subendothelial cell matrix, failed to react with antibodies to plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 and interacted with their respective ligands in an active site-independent manner. The isolated t-PA binding site was resistant to reduction and preserved the capacity for plasmin generation. In contrast, the isolated u-PA binding protein was sensitive to reduction, and did not maintain the catalytic activity of the ligand on the blot. The results suggest that in addition to sharing a matrix-associated binding site (plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1), both t-PA and u-PA have unique membrane binding sites which may regulate their function. The results also provide further support for the hypothesis that plasminogen and t-PA can assemble on the endothelial cell surface in a manner which enhances cell surface generation of plasmin.  相似文献   

7.
Receptor-mediated endocytosis of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) was characterized with the human hepatoma cell line Hep G2. At 4 degrees C binding of 125I-t-PA to Hep G2 cells is rapid, specific, saturable, and reflective of a homogeneous population of 76,000 high-affinity surface sites per cell (Kd = 3.7 nM). The kinetics of 125I-t-PA binding to its receptor are characterized by rate constants for association (k1 = 1.2 x 10(6) min-1 M-1) and dissociation (k-1 = 0.001 min-1). A specific glycosylation pattern does not appear to be required for binding. Binding does not appear to be mediated by other recognized hepatic receptor systems. At 37 degrees C a single cohort of bound 125I-t-PA molecules disappears rapidly from the cell surface. Ligand then accumulates intracellularly. Thereafter, the intracellular concentration of ligand declines simultaneously with the release of ligand degradation products into the media. In the continued presence of 125I-t-PA at 37 degrees C the concentration of cell-associated ligand plateaus after 30 min with the concomitant appearance of low molecular weight 125I-labeled fragments in the media. Cumulative degradation then increases linearly with time. Under steady state conditions half-maximal ligand uptake and degradation is 26.6 nM and maximal rate of catabolism is 1.2 pmol/10(6) cells/h. At saturating ligand concentrations uptake and degradation by Hep G2 cells continue linearly for at least 6 h even in the absence of protein synthesis. During this period the cumulative ligand uptake exceeds the total cellular capacity of binding sites, consistent with receptor recycling. We conclude that t-PA clearance in human Hep G2 cells involves ligand binding, uptake, and degradation mediated by a novel high-capacity, high-affinity specific receptor system.  相似文献   

8.
Complexes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and its rapidly acting inhibitor plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) are bound, internalized, and degraded by HepG2 cells. The mechanism involves endocytosis mediated by a specific high-affinity receptor. However, the particular domains of the complex that are recognized by the receptor have not been elucidated. To identify the determinants involved in ligand binding to the receptor, several variants of t-PA were assessed for their ability to form complexes with PAI-1 and thereby to inhibit specific cellular binding of complexes between structurally unmodified 125I-t-PA and PAI-1. Catalytically active variants lacking selected structural domains form complexes with PAI-1 and inhibit 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 binding to HepG2 cells. In addition, several forms of the plasminogen activator urokinase (u-PA), which shares partial structural homology with t-PA, were evaluated as competitors of cellular binding. The catalytically active two-chain forms of u-PA, but not the inactive proenzyme single-chain form, complex with PAI-1 and inhibit specific binding of 125I-t-PA.PAI-1, suggesting that the serine protease domain, rather than other domains, may confer the determinants required for cellular binding. However, a mutant t-PA with markedly reduced catalytic activity, resulting from replacement of the active site serine with threonine, not only forms complexes with PAI-1 but also inhibits specific cellular binding of unmodified 125I-t-PA.PAI-1. These data indicate that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 to HepG2 cells does not require a serine-containing catalytic site in the protease domain. To determine whether binding of the complex is mediated through other components of t-PA or through structural elements of PAI-1, both t-PA and PAI-1 were examined separately for capacity to bind directly to HepG2 cells. To exclude potential interactions with components of the extracellular matrix which contains binding sites for PAI-1, ligand binding to HepG2 cells in suspension was assessed. Although neither t-PA nor PAI-1 alone binds specifically to HepG2 cells, the preformed t-PA.PAI-1 complexes do. These findings suggest that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 requires elements of the PAI-1 moiety and/or parts of the protease domain of t-PA.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction in vivo of 125I-labeled tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) with the rat liver and the various liver cell types was characterized. Intravenously injected 125I-t-PA was rapidly cleared from the plasma (t1/2 = 1 min), and 80% of the injected dose associated with the liver. After uptake, t-PA was rapidly degraded in the lysosomes. The interaction of 125I-t-PA with the liver could be inhibited by preinjection of the rats with ovalbumin or unlabeled t-PA. The intrahepatic recognition site(s) for t-PA were determined by subfractionation of the liver in parenchymal, endothelial, and Kupffer cells. It can be calculated that parenchymal cells are responsible for 54.5% of the interaction of t-PA with the liver, endothelial cells for 39.5%, and Kupffer cells for only 6%. The association of t-PA with parenchymal cells was not mediated by a carbohydrate-specific receptor and could only be inhibited by an excess of unlabeled t-PA, indicating involvement of a specific t-PA recognition site. The association of t-PA with endothelial cells could be inhibited 80% by the mannose-terminated glycoprotein ovalbumin, suggesting that the mannose receptor plays a major role in the recognition of t-PA by endothelial liver cells. An excess of unlabeled t-PA inhibited the association of 125I-t-PA to endothelial liver cells 95%, indicating that an additional specific t-PA recognition site may be responsible for 15% of the high affinity interaction of t-PA with this liver cell type. It is concluded that the uptake of t-PA by the liver is mainly mediated by two recognition systems: a specific t-PA site on parenchymal cells and the mannose receptor on endothelial liver cells. It is suggested that for the development of strategies to prolong the half-life of t-PA in the blood, the presence of both types of recognition systems has to be taken into account.  相似文献   

10.
Binding of plasminogen to extracellular matrix   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
We have previously demonstrated that plasminogen immobilized on various surfaces forms a substrate for efficient conversion to plasmin by tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) (Silverstein, R. L., Nachman, R. L., Leung, L. L. K., and Harpel, R. C. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10346-10352). We now report the binding of human plasminogen to the extracellular matrix synthesized in vitro by cultured endothelial cell monolayers. The binding was specific, saturable at plasma plasminogen concentrations, reversible, and lysine-binding site-dependent. Functional studies demonstrated that matrix immobilized plasminogen was a much better substrate for t-PA than was fluid phase plasminogen as shown by a 100-fold decrease in Km. Activation of plasminogen by t-PA and urokinase on the matrix was equally efficient. The plasmin generated on the matrix, in marked contrast to fluid phase, was protected from its fast-acting inhibitor, alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor. Matrix-associated plasmin converted bound Glu- into Lys-plasminogen, which in turn is more rapidly activated to plasmin by t-PA. The extracellular matrix not only binds and localizes plasminogen but also improves plasminogen activation kinetics and prolongs plasmin activity in the subendothelial microenvironment.  相似文献   

11.
A novel triple-kringle plasminogen activator protein, PK1 delta FE1X, has been produced which is a genetic chimera between the fibrin binding kringle 1 domain of plasminogen and the two kringles and serine protease domains of naturally occurring wild-type tissue plasminogen activator (wt t-PA). This chimera also contains a modification to prevent high mannose type N-linked glycosylation on kringle 1 of t-PA. PK1 delta FE1X is biochemically and fibrinolytically similar to wt t-PA in vitro but retains the decreased plasma clearance rate characteristic of other t-PA variants which lack fibronectin finger-like and epidermal growth factor domains. The serine protease domain of PK1 delta FE1X exhibits the amidolytic activity characteristic of wt t-PA. In an indirect coupled plasminogen activator assay, the specific activity of PK1 delta FE1X is approximately 1.4 times greater than that of wt t-PA. In a fibrin film-binding assay, greater binding to untreated fibrin is observed with wt t-PA than with PK1 delta FE1X. However, following limited plasmin digestion of the fibrin film, PK1 delta FE1X binding increases to the level observed with wt t-PA. The incremental binding to plasmin-digested fibrin observed with PK1 delta FE1X is eliminated if plasmin digestion of the fibrin film is followed by carboxypeptidase B treatment. This result suggests that plasminogen kringle 1 binds plasmin-digested fibrin even after recombination with a heterologous protein. The fibrinolytic activity of PK1 delta FE1X in human plasma clot lysis assays was similar to that of wt t-PA at activator concentrations of approximately 1 microgram/ml. At substantially lower concentrations, approximately 0.1 microgram/ml, PK1 delta FE1X was only slightly less active than wt t-PA. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that wt t-PA activity is cleared approximately 15 times as rapidly as PK1 delta FE1X following intravenous bolus injection. In a rabbit jugular vein clot lysis model, intravenous bolus injection of 0.06 mg/kg of PK1 delta FE1X showed greater thrombolytic potency than a similar administration of 0.5 mg/kg of wt t-PA. Thus it appears that in vitro exon shuffling techniques can be used to generate novel fibrinolytic agents which biochemically and pharmacologically represent the combination of individual domains of naturally occurring proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Actin accelerates plasmin generation by tissue plasminogen activator.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Actin has been found to bind to plasmin's kringle regions, thereby inhibiting its enzymatic activity in a noncompetitive manner. We, therefore, examined its effect upon the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin by tissue plasminogen activator. Actin stimulated plasmin generation from both Glu- and Lys-plasminogen, lowering the Km for activation of Glu-plasminogen into the low micromolar range. Accelerated plasmin generation did not occur in the presence of epsilon-amino caproic acid or if actin was exposed to acetic anhydride, an agent known to acetylate lysine residues. Actin binds to tissue plasminogen activator (t-Pa) (Kd = 0.55 microM), at least partially via lysine-binding sites. Actin's stimulation of plasmin generation from Glu-plasminogen was inhibited by the addition of aprotinin and was restored by the substitution of plasmin-treated actin, indicating the operation of a plasmin-dependent positive feedback mechanism. Native actin binds to Lys-plasminogen, and promotes its conversion to plasmin even in the presence of aprotinin, indicating that plasmin's cleavage of either actin or plasminogen leads to further plasmin generation. Plasmin-treated actin binds Glu-plasminogen and t-PA simultaneously, thereby raising the local concentration of t-PA and plasminogen. Together, but not separately, actin and t-PA prolong the thrombin time of plasma through the generation of plasmin and fibrinogen degradation products. Actin-stimulated plasmin generation may be responsible for some of the changes found in peripheral blood following tissue injury and sepsis.  相似文献   

13.
Tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) is an extracellular serine protease that converts the proenzyme plasminogen into the broad-spectrum substrate serine protease, plasmin. Plasmin, one of the most potent pro-angiogenic factors, is a key element in fibrinolysis, cell migration, tissue remodeling and tumor invasion. In the present investigation, we assessed the impact of the truncated form of soluble melanotransferrin (sMTf) on plasminogen activation by t-PA and subsequent endothelial cell detachment. Co-treatment of human endothelial microvessel cells with plasminogen, t-PA and sMTf significantly increased plasmin formation and activity in the culture medium. Plasmin generated in the presence of sMTf also led to a 30% reduction in fibronectin detection within cell lysates and to a 9-fold increase within the corresponding cell medium. Moreover, the presence of sMTf increases EC detachment by 6-fold compared to cells treated only with plasminogen and t-PA. Although the addition of alpha(2)-antiplasmin completely prevented plasmin formation and EC detachment, epigallocatechin gallate, GM6001 and a specific antibody directed against MMP-2 prevented cellular detachment without interfering with plasminogen activation. Overall, these data suggest that the anti-angiogenic properties of sMTf may result from local overstimulation of plasminogen activation by t-PA, thus leading to subsequent degradation of the Fn matrix and EC detachment.  相似文献   

14.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) accumulates within thrombi and forming whole blood clots. To explore this phenomenon at the molecular level, PAI-1 binding to fibrin was examined. The experiments were performed by adding 125I-PAI-1, which retains its complete tissue-type plasminogen (t-PA) inhibitory activity, to fibrin matrices formed in 2-cm2 tissue culture wells. Guanidine HCl-activated PAI-1 binding was reversible and was inhibited in the presence of excess, unlabeled PAI-1. Activated 125I-PAI-1 recognized 2 sites on fibrin: a very small number of high affinity sites (Kd less than 1 nM) and principally a large number of low affinity sites with an approximate Kd of 3.8 microM. Latent PAI-1 bound to fibrin at a site indistinguishable from the lower affinity site recognized by activated PAI-1. Fibrin, pretreated with activated PAI-1, was protected from t-PA-mediated plasmin degradation in a PAI-1 dose-responsive manner (IC50 = 12.3 nM). Clot protection correlated with partial occupancy of the low affinity PAI-1 binding site on fibrin and was due to the formation of sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable, PAI-1.t-PA complexes. Latent PAI-1 (27 nM) did not protect the fibrin from dissolution. The localization of PAI-1 to a thrombus by virtue of its fibrin binding potential could result in significant protection of the thrombus from the degradative effects of the fibrinolytic system.  相似文献   

15.
Untreated Staphylococcus aureus cells, strain Cowan I, specifically bound 125I-Glu-plasminogen. The binding was inhibited by both unlabeled Glu-plasminogen and Glu-plasmin. The Lys form of plasminogen, which lacks the 8-kDa amino-terminal activation peptide, was approximately 100-fold more effective than the Glu form in competing with the binding of 125I-labeled Glu-plasminogen. This suggests an increase in binding affinity upon removal of the activation peptide. Fibronectin, fibrinogen and IgG, plasma components known to bind to the staphylococcal surface, did not significantly interfere with the binding. The competing activity in plasma was abolished by specifically absorbing plasminogen from the plasma sample. L-Lysine and a fragment of plasminogen containing three of the first five protein attachment domains present in the molecule (kringle structures) also competed with plasminogen for binding suggesting that the lysine-binding sites of plasminogen were involved in its interaction with staphylococci. Scatchard analysis revealed high- and low-affinity binding sites. Kd and the number of high-affinity binding sites were 1.7 nM and 780 binding sites/bacterial cell, respectively. 125I-Glu-plasminogen bound to staphylococcal surface was converted to plasmin by tissue-type plasminogen activator. The conversion took place also in the presence of plasma. If the conversion was carried out in the absence of low-molecular-mass plasmin inhibitors such as aprotinin, the bound Glu-plasmin was further converted to Lys-plasmin. The surface-bound plasmin was enzymically active, as judged by digestion of the synthetic substrate, S-2251. The plasminogen conversion shown by the present experiments not only leads to the surface-bound plasmin but seems to considerably increase the affinity of plasmin for its binding site. This may represent a physiologically relevant method for a bacterial cell to retain surface-bound active plasmin which is also protected from its soluble plasma inhibitors. This novel mechanism for staphylococci to adopt surface-bound proteolytic activity, without the interference of plasma components, may have some role in the tissue penetration and invasion of microbes during infection.  相似文献   

16.
The dissolution of blood clots by plasmin is normally initiated in vivo by the activation of plasminogen to plasmin through the activity of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). The rate of plasminogen activation can be stimulated several orders of magnitude by the presence of fibrin-related proteins. Here we describe the kinetic analysis of both recombinant human t-PA (wild-type) and a t-PA variant produced by site-directed mutagenesis in which the original sequence from amino acids 296 to 299, KHRR, has been altered to AAAA. This tetra-alanine variant form of t-PA, K296A/H297A/R298A/R299A t-PA, we refer to as "KHRR" t-PA here. The plasminogen activating kinetics of wild-type t-PA (Activase alteplase) showed a catalytic efficiency which changed over 100-fold dependent on the stimulator in the assay. The lowest rate was in the absence of a stimulator. The following stimulators showed increasing ability to accelerate the catalytic efficiency of the reaction: fibrinogen, fragments of fibrinogen obtained by digestion with plasmin, fibrin, and slightly degraded fibrin. This increase in efficiency was driven primarily by decreases in the Michaelis constant (KM) of the reaction, whereas the catalytic rate constant (kcat) of the reaction did not change significantly. The "KHRR" variant of t-PA displayed novel kinetics with all stimulators tested. In the absence of a stimulator or with the poorer stimulators (fibrinogen and fibrinogen fragments), the KM values of the reaction with Activase alteplase and "KHRR" t-PA were similar. The kcat however, was lower with "KHRR" t-PA than with wild-type t-PA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Leishmania mexicana is able to interact with the fibrinolytic system through its component plasminogen, the zymogenic form of the protease plasmin. In this study a new plasminogen binding protein of this parasite was identified: LACK, the Leishmania homolog of receptors for activated C-kinase. Plasminogen binds recombinant LACK with a Kd value of 1.6 ± 0.4 μM, and binding is lysine-dependent since it is inhibited by the lysine analog ε-aminocaproic acid. Inhibition studies with specific peptides and plasminogen binding activity of a mutated recombinant LACK have highlighted the internal motif 260VYDLESKAV268, similar to those found in several enolases, as involved in plasminogen binding. Recombinant LACK and secreted proteins, in medium conditioned by parasites, enhance plasminogen activation to plasmin by the tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). In addition to its localization in the cytosol, in the microsomal fraction and as secreted protein in conditioned medium, LACK was also localized on the external surface of the membrane. The results presented here suggest that LACK might bind and enhance plasminogen activation in vivo promoting the formation of plasmin. Plasminogen binding of LACK represents a new function for this protein and might contribute to the invasiveness of the parasite.  相似文献   

18.
Annexin A2 (p36) is a highly alpha-helical molecule that consists of two opposing sides, a convex side that contains the phospholipid-binding sites and a concave side, which faces the extracellular milieu and contains multiple ligand-binding sites. The amino-terminal region of annexin A2 extends along the concave side of the protein and contains the binding site for the S100A10 (p11) subunit. The interaction of these subunits results in the formation of the heterotetrameric form of the protein, annexin A2-S100A10 heterotetramer (AIIt). To simulate the orientation of AIIt on the plasma membrane we bound AIIt to a phospholipid bilayer that was immobilized on a BIAcore biosensor chip. Surface plasmon resonance was used to observe in real time the molecular interactions between phospholipid-associated AIIt or its annexin A2 subunit and the ligands, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasminogen, and plasmin. AIIt bound t-PA (Kd = 0.68 microm), plasminogen (Kd = 0.11 microm), and plasmin (Kd = 75 nm) with moderate affinity. Contrary to previous reports, the phospholipid-associated annexin A2 subunit failed to bind t-PA or plasminogen but bound plasmin (Kd = 0.78 microm). The S100A10 subunit bound t-PA (Kd = 0.45 microm), plasminogen (Kd = 1.81 microm), and plasmin (Kd = 0.36 microm). Removal of the carboxyl-terminal lysines from the S100A10 subunit attenuated t-PA and plasminogen binding to AIIt. These results show that the carboxyl-terminal lysines of S100A10 form t-PA and plasminogen-binding sites. In contrast, annexin A2 and S100A10 contain distinct binding sites for plasmin.  相似文献   

19.
alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) exerts its inhibitory effect on fibrinolysis by rapidly inhibiting the plasmin evolved; in addition, it has been suggested that interference with the binding of plasminogen to fibrin, a function shared with histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRGP), may also be significant in inhibition of fibrinolysis. To elucidate if plasminogen binding by these two alpha 2-globulins may decrease the generation of plasmin by tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) at the surface of fibrin, a system mimicking the fibrin/plasma interface was used. Attempts were made to differentiate the plasminogen binding from the plasmin inhibitory function of alpha 2-AP. The activation of human Glu-plasminogen (native plasminogen with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) by fibrin-bound t-PA was performed in a plasma environment using either normal plasma, alpha 2-AP- or HRGP-depleted plasmas supplemented with increasing amounts of the lacking protein, or in a reconstituted system with purified plasminogen and various concentrations of alpha 2-AP and HRGP. The activation of Glu-plasminogen in alpha 2-AP-depleted plasma containing a normal concentration of HRGP produced a time-dependent increase in the generation of plasmin. The addition of 1 microM-alpha 2-AP to this plasma prevented the formation of Lys-derivatives and produced a marked decrease (42%) in the number of plasminogen-binding sites. In contrast, the addition of 1.5 microM-HRGP to HRGP-depleted plasma containing a normal amount of alpha 2-AP produced only a modest (17%) decrease in the amount of plasmin(ogen) bound. Moreover, in a purified system the amount of plasminogen-binding sites and thereby of plasmin generated at the surface of fibrin in the presence of both alpha-2 globulins was similar to the amount generated in the presence of alpha 2-AP alone. These results indicate clearly that the formation of reversible complexes between plasminogen and alpha 2-AP does not interfere with the binding and activation of plasminogen at the fibrin surface. In contrast, the inhibition of plasmin by alpha 2-AP decreases importantly the number of plasminogen-binding sites (carboxyl-terminal lysines) and inhibits thereby the accelerated phase of fibrinolysis. It can be concluded that interference of the binding of plasminogen to fibrin by alpha 2-AP during plasminogen activation, does not play a significant role in inhibition of fibrinolysis, and that the plasminogen-binding effect of HRGP, if any, is obscured by the important inhibitory effect of alpha 2-AP.  相似文献   

20.
Cell surface binding sites for the constituent proteins of the fibrinolytic system may play a role in the localization and regulation of fibrinolysis. In the present study, specific binding of recombinant human tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) to human blood platelets was identified and characterized. 125I-labeled rt-PA was found to bind specifically, saturably, and reversibly to the surface of gel-filtered platelets, reaching equilibrium within 5 min at 22 degrees C. Scatchard analysis revealed a single class of binding sites. Unstimulated platelets bound 120,000 +/- 24,000 (mean +/- S.D.) molecules/platelet with an apparent Kd of 340 +/- 25 nM, whereas thrombin-stimulated platelets bound 290,000 +/- 32,000 molecules/platelet with an apparent Kd of 800 +/- 60 nM. Binding of 0.1 microM 125I-rt-PA was greater than 90% reversible by a 50-fold excess of unlabeled rt-PA. Binding was not inhibited by fibrinogen or single chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator, but plasminogen partially competed for binding of 125I-rt-PA to platelets (up to 40% displacement). These findings indicate that the platelet surface possesses a large number of specific, low affinity binding sites for t-PA and provide further evidence for the role of platelets in localization and regulation of fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

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