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1.
Serpin alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor have been studied in human subjects and in mice of different lines as acute phase reactant and during tumor development. In humans, there was no difference of serpin activity between men and women. Increased activity was noted in men with acute trauma (acute phase reaction). Comparatively to male, in female mice of different lines decreased activity of serum alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, was shown. There was no increase of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor activity during inflammation induced by zymosan administration in mice. alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor belongs to acute phase reactants in humans but not in mice; for mice alpha-2-macroglobulin is a more typical acute phase reactant as compared to alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor. Murine tumor development (hepatoma HA-1, lymphosarcoma LS, Lewis lung adenocarcinoma) was followed by a decreased activity of serum alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor both in successfully treated and untreated groups. According to data of literature, similar dated were obtained in humans with tumors. It was suggested that changes of expressiln of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor by tumors and its secretion were involved in decreased activity of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor.  相似文献   

2.
1. alpha-1-Antiproteinase (also called alpha-1-antitrypsin or alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor) with a molecular mass of 60 kDa was purified to apparent homogeneity from hamster plasma. 2. It inhibited elastase, chymotrypsin and trypsin, but did not significantly affect pancreatic kallikrein, plasma kallikrein or plasmin. 3. It has the same N-terminal heptapeptide sequence as that of rat alpha-1-antiproteinase. 4. Its plasma level decreased after injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide.  相似文献   

3.
Summary. Human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor is a well-characterized protease inhibitor with a wide spectrum of anti-protease activity. Its major physiological role is inhibition of neutrophil elastase in the lungs, and its deficiency is associated with progressive ultimately fatal emphysema. Currently in the US, only plasma-derived human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor is available for augmentation therapy, which appears to be insufficient to meet the anticipated clinical demand. Moreover, despite effective viral clearance steps in the manufacturing process, the potential risk of contamination with new and unknown pathogens still exists. In response, multiple efforts to develop recombinant versions of human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, as an alternative to the plasma-derived protein, have been reported. Over the last two decades, various systems have been used to express the human gene for alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor. This paper reviews the recombinant versions of human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor produced in various hosts, considers current major safety and efficacy issues regarding recombinant glycoproteins as potential therapeutics, and the factors that are impeding progress in this area1. 1 The opinions expressed in this paper reflect the authors’ personal views, based on published data and the information available from the public domains, and have no relation to the official statements, if any, held by the US FDA, National Institutes of Health, or the US Department of Health and Human Services. FDA official recommendations for plasma protein therapeutics and recombinant proteins regarding safety, purity, and potency of new drugs and biologics produced by recombinant DNA technology are referred below as the US FDA Guidances.  相似文献   

4.
Mutant rat trypsin Asp189Ser was prepared and complexed with highly purified human α1-proteinase inhibitor. The complex formed was purified to homogeneity and studied by N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis and limited proteolysis with bovine trypsin. As compared to uncomplexed mutant trypsin, the mutant enzyme complexed with α1-proteinase inhibitor showed a highly increased susceptibility to enzymatic digestion. The peptide bond selectively attacked by bovine trypsin was identified as the Arg117-Val118 one of trypsin. The structural and mechanistic relevance of this observation to serine proteinase-substrate and serine proteinase-serpin reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Incubation of trypsin with m-guanidinobenzenesulfonic acid methyl ester (mGBSOM) under mild conditions resulted in its quantitative and specific conversion to N-3-methylhistidinyl-57-trypsin (methyltrypsin). The interactions of alpha-2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2PI) and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1PI) with the active-site modified enzymes methyltrypsin and dehydroalanyl-195-trypsin (anhydrotrypsin) were studied by thionine difference spectroscopy. For methyltrypsin the KA with alpha 1PI and alpha 2PI was 2.7 X 10(5) M-1 and 1.3 X 10(5) M-1, respectively, and with anhydrotrypsin, 7.0 X 10(3) M-1 and 3.2 X 10(5) M-1, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
The urinary trypsin inhibitor was recently shown to inhibit human leukocyte elastase. Complexes of human urinary trypsin inhibitor with human leukocyte elastase or human trypsin were produced and subjected to gel filtration. The complexes were found to be sufficiently stable up to 24 h incubation (at least 70% recovery). When human serum was added, elastase and trypsin dissociated from the urinary trypsin inhibitor and associated with alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor or alpha 2-macroglobulin. The addition of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor to a complex of urinary trypsin inhibitor and leukocyte elastase caused a rapid dissociation of the complex (kdiss = 3.2 X 10(-2) s-1).  相似文献   

7.
The glycoprotein alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha-1-PI) is a member of the serpin super family that causes rapid and irreversible inhibition of redundant serine protease activity. A homogenous preparation of ovine alpha-1-PI, a 60 kDa protein was obtained by serially subjecting ovine serum to 40-70% (NH(4))(2)SO(4) precipitation, Blue Sepharose, size-exclusion, and concanavalin-A chromatography. Extensive insights into the trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase interaction with ovine alpha-1-PI, point towards the involvement of Phe(350) besides the largely conserved Met(356) in serine protease recognition and consequent inhibition. The N-terminal of C-terminal peptides cleaved on interaction with elastase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin prove the presence of diffused sub-sites in the vicinity of Met(356) and the strategically positioned Pro anchored peptide stretch. Further, human alpha-1-PI is more thermolabile compared to ovine alpha-1-PI, higher thermolability is mainly attributed to poorer glycosylation. The enzymatic deglycosylation of human and ovine alpha-1-PI results in diminished thermostability of the inhibitors, with sharp decrease in thermal transition temperatures but retaining their inhibitory potency. Homology modeling of the deduced amino acid sequence of ovine alpha-1-PI using the human alpha-1-PI template has been used to explain the observed inhibitor-protease interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Purification of nine plasma proteinase inhibitors and one zymogen from a single batch of human plasma, using affinity chromatography has been accomplished. Those isolated were plasminogen (lysine-Sepharose), alpha-2-antiplasmin (plasminogen-Sepharose), high and low molecular weight kininogens (CM-papain-Sepharose), alpha-2-macroglobulin (Zn++ chelate-Sepharose), alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, Cl-inhibitor, inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor (Blue-Sepharose) and antithrombin III (heparin-Sepharose). Alpha-2-macroglobulin and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor required gel filtration as additional purification steps. Each protein was recovered in both high yield and purity.  相似文献   

9.
A method for purifying porcine anionic and cationic trypsin is presented. Reaction mixtures with increasing amounts of the two porcine trypsins and porcine serum were studied in vitro to evaluate the relative importance of alpha 1-macroglobulin and alpha 2-macroglobulin as well as alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor in the rapid binding of porcine anionic and cationic trypsin. Porcine cationic trypsin was preferentially bound to alpha 1-macroglobulin, while anionic trypsin exhibited equal binding to both alpha-macroglobulins. Both trypsins were also bound by the alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor but not until alpha 1-macroglobulin approached saturation. Trypsin-alpha-macroglobulin complexes were cleared from plasma with a half-life of 6 min. For trypsin-alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor-complexes the half-life was 120 min. These findings are in accordance with results for other mammalian species, including man.  相似文献   

10.
Both the clotting and esterase activities of thrombin are inhibited by alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1-antitrypsin). The inhibition is a time-and temperature-dependent reaction which is proportional to the molar ratio of thrombin to inhibitor. Both the active-site serine residue of thrombin and the reactive-site lysine residue of alpha1-proteinase inhibitor are involved. alpha1-Proteinase inhibitor forms a 1:1 complex with thrombin that is comparable with the complex formed with trypsin and other proteinases. Incubation of the inhibitor with excess of thrombin, however, results in inactivation of nearly all the enzyme, even though only as much complex is formed as alpha1-proteinase inhibitor present. A portion of the remaining thrombin apparently aggregates. These results suggest that the mechanism for inhibition of thrombin may not be exactly the same as for trypsin, which is inhibited only to the extent to which complex is formed.  相似文献   

11.
The pentoxifylline influence on neutral proteinase, alpha-2-macroglobulin, trypsin-alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor and elastaseinhibitory activity under cycloheximide injection has been investigated. Two hours after cycloheximide injection the activity of neutral proteinases increases in rats serum, lungs, heart, liver and kidneys. The preliminary injection of pentoxifylline prevents increase of neutral proteinases activity. Cycloheximide also decreases alpha-2-macroglobulin activity in serum and liver and trypsin-, elastaseinhibitory activity of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor in all investigated organs. At using pentoxifylline the alpha-2-macroglobulin activity doesn't change in liver and increases in serum in comparison with only cycloheximide and there are no observed any alpha-1 inhibitor proteinase activity changes in rats serum and organs.  相似文献   

12.
Gupta VK  Gowda LR 《Biochimie》2008,90(5):749-761
Alpha-1-proteinase (alpha-1-PI) inhibitor is the major circulating serine protease inhibitor in humans. The porcine elastase and trypsin inhibitory activity of human and ovine alpha-1-PI is activated several fold in the presence of anti-coagulant heparin. The activation is allosteric and appears to be characterized by two steps of binding; a weak followed by a strong binding. The Kass for ovine and human alpha-1-PI inhibition of porcine pancreatic elastase was increased approximately 45 fold and 38 fold respectively. Using a combinatorial approach of multiple sequence alignment, surface topology, chemical modification and tryptic peptide mapping to identify the sequence of the heparin bound peptide; we demonstrate that heparin binds to the lysyl rich region of the F-helix of alpha-1-PI, which differs from that of heparin-antithrombin (AT) interactions. Molecular docking prediction using the MEDock algorithm approximates the three positively charged lysines (K154, K155, K174) of human alpha-1-PI in this interaction. This heparin alpha-1-PI interaction has been exploited to develop an affinity purification method, which can be used universally to obtain homogenous preparations of mammalian alpha-1-PIs useful for augmentation therapy. Collectively, all these findings imply that alpha-1-PI has a major role in regulating extra cellular protease activity and the physiological activator is heparin.  相似文献   

13.
Human plasma alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (α1-antitrypsin) has been re-isolated from its complex with porcine trypsin. The re-isolated protein (α1-PI*) was found to be non-inhibitory and 8,000 lower in molecular weight than the native inhibitor. Sequence analysis of α1-PI* showed that an amino terminal peptide had been lost, apparently the result of cleavage at a Lys-Thr bond. These data indicate that limited proteolysis is the first step in the inhibitory mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Three different serine proteinase inhibitors were isolated from rat serum and purified to apparent homogeneity. One of the inhibitors appears to be homologous to alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor isolated from man and other species, but the other two, designated rat proteinase inhibitor I and rat proteinase inhibitor II, seem to have no human counterpart. alpha 1-Proteinase inhibitor (Mr 55000) inhibits trypsin, chymotrypsin and elastase, the three serine proteinases tested. Rat proteinase inhibitor I (Mr 66000) is active towards trypsin and chymotrypsin, but is inactive towards elastase. Rat proteinase inhibitor II (Mr 65000) is an effective inhibitor of trypsin only. Their contributions to the trypsin-inhibitory capacity of rat serum are about 68, 14 and 18% for alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor, rat proteinase inhibitor I and rat proteinase inhibitor II respectively.  相似文献   

15.
Free radicals produced in a Fenton reaction (H202/Cu), modelling some xenobiotic and cell-mediated inflammatory affronts, efficiently inactivated the elastase-inhibitor eglin, but equally, human neutrophil elastase itself. Elastase activity was not regenerated from proteinase/inhibitor complexes during radical attack. Three different elastase inhibitors, eglin, secretory leukocyte proteinase inhibitor and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor were all similarly sensitive to inactivation. Unlike certain oxidants which can selectively inactivate alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, free radicals may influence comparably the availability of both proteinase inhibitors and their targets.  相似文献   

16.
The replacement of ser359 with ala359 at the P1 position in human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor results in the production of a variant protein containing 15% of the inhibitory activity of the normal inhibitor. Separation of active from inactive inhibitor on anhydrochymotrypsin-sepharose yields a form which has a second order association rate with neutrophil elastase which is approximately one half that for the native protein. These data indicate that the P1 residue is not of primary importance during the interaction of proteinases with alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor. Since substitution of alanine for serine causes the formation, primarily, of inactive inhibitor the major function of ser359 probably involves proper folding to give a functionally active inhibitory conformation.  相似文献   

17.
Complexes of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor with proteases were examined by SDS-PAGE in 7.5% polyacrylamide gel and in a gel gradient. While the inhibitor-chymotrypsin complex was stable under both sets of conditions, the inhibitor-trypsin complex quantitatively dissociated under the second set of conditions, indicating that trypsin, unlike chymotrypsin, is not linked covalently to the inhibitor. Although the inhibitor sustained at least two discrete cleavages by trypsin, its overall recovery after dissociation was 100%. Due to an increased rate of autolytic breakdown in the presence of the inhibitor, the recovery of trypsin after dissociation was appreciably less than 100%. Based on these observations, a new theory of trypsin inhibition by alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor is proposed. This method is suitable for the examination of other inhibition systems as well.  相似文献   

18.
Alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha-1-PI) was isolated from goat plasma by salt fractionation, and chromatography on a DEAE-cellulose column. The inhibitor was found to be homogeneous by gel chromatography, SDS-PAGE and PAGE.Mr values by gel filtration (57 kDa), and by SDS-PAGE (52 kDa), under reducing conditions were nearly the same suggesting that the inhibitor consists of a single polypeptide chain. It contained 13.8% neutral hexose but no sialic acid residue. The values of isoionic pH, and extinction coefficient at 278 nm were 4.84, and 4.6, respectively. Fluorescence spectral properties showed tryptophan residues in the inhibitor. Solvent perturbation difference spectra suggested 74% exposure of the tryptophan residues in the native molecule. Gel filtration behaviour of the inhibitor was consistent with a Stokes radius of 3.16 nm, diffusion coefficient of 7.02 X 10(-7) cm2-sec-1 and a frictional ratio of 1.24 suggesting asymmetry and/or excessive hydration of the inhibitor molecule. Goat alpha-1-PI, unlike human alpha-1-PI was found to be potent inhibitor of bovine trypsin but a poor inhibitor of porcine pancreatic elastase. It was virtually devoid of antichymotryptic activity.  相似文献   

19.
Contrapsin and two isoforms, F (fast) and S (slow), of alpha-1-antiproteinase (also called alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor) were isolated in an apparently homogeneous state from plasma of inflamed guinea pigs. Contrapsin inactivated trypsin, but did not significantly affect chymotrypsin, pancreatic elastase, or pancreatic kallikrein. On the other hand, both isoforms of alpha-1-antiproteinase inhibited trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase, but not plasma or pancreatic kallikrein. The S isoform of alpha-1-antiproteinase was present in barely detectable amounts in healthy animals, but increased markedly when the acute-phase reaction was induced by subcutaneous injection of turpentine. On the other hand, the plasma levels of the F isoform, contrapsin, and alpha-macroglobulin showed moderate (1.5 to 2.3-fold) elevation during the acute-phase reaction. In contrast to the previous findings that rats and rabbits contain two different alpha-macroglobulins, one of which is an acute-phase reactant while the other is not, inflamed guinea pigs contained only one species of alpha-macroglobulin. Murinoglobulin, the most prominent acute-phase negative protein in both mice and rats, showed no significant change in guinea pigs. These results indicate that guinea pig plasma contains four major trypsin inhibitors, i.e., contrapsin, alpha-1-antiproteinase, alpha-macroglobulin, and murinoglobulin, the properties of which are very similar to those of the respective mouse homologues, but that the acute-phase response of these inhibitors differs greatly from that of the homologous proteins in rats or mice.  相似文献   

20.
The theory of acyl-enzyme kinetics (Bender, M.L., Kézdy, F.J. and Wedler, F.C. (1967) J. Chem. Educ. 44, 84-88) has been adapted for use in evaluating the kinetics of inhibition of serine proteases by both natural and synthetic irreversible inhibitors. The new theory is based upon formal analysis of the case of an irreversible, active-site-directed inhibitor competing with an irreversible, active-site-directed substrate for the active site of a serine protease. From this theory, an experimentally simple and accurate method is described to obtain a second-order rate constant that is characteristic of the efficiency with which an irreversible inhibitor reacts. The experimental method is particularly useful for characterizing fast-acting, irreversible inhibitors. The theory and method which are applicable to a wide variety of enzymes are verified by analysis of the inhibition of bovine trypsin by three model inhibitors, p-nitrophenyl p'-guanidinobenzoate, soybean trypsin inhibitor and alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor as well as by human antithrombin III in the presence of heparin and by bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor.  相似文献   

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