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1.
Interaction of plasminogen and fibrin in plasminogen activation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Glu1-, Lys77-, miniplasminogens, kringle 1-3, kringle 1-5A, and kringle 1-5R were able to bind with fibrin, while microplasminogen and kringle 4 did not bind significantly. Kringle 1-5A, but not kringle 1-3, effectively inhibited the binding of Glu1-, Lys77-, and miniplasminogens with fibrin. Miniplasminogen also inhibited the binding of Glu1-plasminogen with fibrin. The binding of kringle 1-3 with fibrin was blocked by mini- or Glu1-plasminogen. It is therefore evident that there are two fibrin-binding domains in plasminogen and that the one in kringle 5 is of higher affinity than that in kringle 1-3. CNBr cleavage products of fibrinogen effectively enhanced the activation of Glu1-, Lys77-, or miniplasminogens, but not microplasminogen, by tissue-type plasminogen activator. Kringle 1-5, but not kringle 1-3, dose-dependently inhibited the enhancement by fibrinogen degradation products of Glu1-plasminogen activation by the activator. Lysine and epsilon-aminocaproic acid could inhibit the binding of plasminogens and plasminogen derivatives with fibrin and block the enhancement effect of fibrinogen degradation products on plasminogen activation. The data clearly illustrate that the binding of plasminogen with fibrin, mainly determined by kringle 5, is essential for effective activation by tissue-type plasminogen activator. However, the presence of kringle 1-4 in the plasminogen molecule is required for the full enhancing effect since the kcat/Km of miniplasminogen activation in the presence of fibrinogen degradation products was 8.2 microM-1 min-1 which is significantly less than 52.0 microM-1 min-1 of Glu1-plasminogen.  相似文献   

2.
Human tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) catalyses the conversion of inactive plasminogen into active plasmin, the main fibrinolytic enzyme. This process is confined to the fibrin surface by specific binding of t-PA to fibrin and stimulation of its activity by fibrin. Tissue-type plasminogen activator contains five domains designated finger, growth factor, kringle 1, kringle 2 and protease. The involvement of the domains in fibrin specificity was investigated with a set of variant proteins lacking one or more domains. Variant proteins were produced by expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells of plasmids containing part of the coding sequence for the activator. It was found that kringle 2 domain only is involved in stimulation of activity by fibrin. In the absence of plasminogen and at low concentration of fibrin, binding of t-PA is mainly due to the finger domain, while at high fibrin concentrations also kringle 2 is involved in fibrin binding. In the presence of plasminogen, fibrin binding of the kringle 2 region of t-PA also becomes important at low fibrin concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], but not low-density lipoprotein (LDL), was previously shown to impair the generation of fibrin-bound plasmin [Rouy et al. (1991) Arterioscler. Thromb. 11, 629-638] by a mechanism involving binding of Lp(a) to fibrin. It was therefore suggested that the binding was mediated by apolipoprotein(a) [apo(a)], a glycoprotein absent from LDL which has a high degree of homology with plasminogen, the precursor of the fibrinolytic enzyme plasmin. Here we have evaluated this hypothesis by performing comparative fibrin binding studies using a recombinant form of apo(a) containing 17 copies of the apo(a) domain resembling kringle 4 of plasminogen, native Lp(a), and Glu-plasminogen (Glu1-Asn791). Attempts were also made to identify the kringle domains involved in such interactions using isolated elastase-derived plasminogen fragments. The binding experiments were performed using a well-characterized model of an intact and of a plasmin-digested fibrin surface as described by Fleury and Anglés-Cano [(1991) Biochemistry 30, 7630-7638]. Binding of r-apo(a) to the fibrin surfaces was of high affinity (Kd = 26 +/- 8.4 nM for intact fibrin and 7.7 +/- 4.6 nM for plasmin-degraded fibrin) and obeyed the Langmuir equation for adsorption at interfaces. The binding to both surfaces was inhibited by the lysine analogue AMCHA and was completely abolished upon treatment of the degraded surface with carboxypeptidase B, indicating that r-apo(a) binds to both the intrachain lysines of intact fibrin and the carboxy-terminal lysines of degraded fibrin. As expected from these results, both r-apo(a) and native Lp(a) inhibited the binding of Glu-plasminogen to the fibrin surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Human tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) consists of five domains designated (starting from the N-terminus) finger, growth factor, kringle 1, kringle 2, and protease. The binding of t-PA to lysine-Sepharose and aminohexyl-Sepharose was found to require kringle 2. The affinity for binding the lysine derivatives 6-aminohexanoic acid and N-acetyllysine methyl ester was about equal, suggesting that t-PA does not prefer C-terminal lysine residues for binding. Intact t-PA and a variant consisting only of kringle 2 and protease domains were found to bind to fibrin fragment FCB-2, the very fragment that also binds plasminogen and acts as a stimulator of t-PA-catalyzed plasminogen activation. In both cases, binding could completely be inhibited by 6-aminohexanoic acid, pointing to the involvement of a lysine binding site in this interaction. Furthermore, the second site in t-PA involved in interaction with fibrin, presumably the finger, appears to interact with a part of fibrin, different from FCB-2.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structure of the kringle 2 domain of tissue plasminogen activator was determined and refined at a resolution of 2.43 A. The overall fold of the molecule is similar to that of prothrombin kringle 1 and plasminogen kringle 4; however, there are differences in the lysine binding pocket, and two looping regions, which include insertions in kringle 2, take on very different conformations. Based on a comparison of the overall structural homology between kringle 2 and kringle 4, a new sequence alignment for kringle domains is proposed that results in a division of kringle domains into two groups, consistent with their proposed evolutionary relation. The crystal structure shows a strong interaction between a lysine residue of one molecule and the lysine/fibrin binding pocket of a noncrystallographically related neighbor. This interaction represents a good model of a bound protein ligand and is the first such ligand that has been observed in a kringle binding pocket. The structure shows an intricate network of interactions both among the binding pocket residues and between binding pocket residues and the lysine ligand. A lysine side chain is identified as the positively charged group positioned to interact with the carboxylate of lysine and lysine analogue ligands. In addition, a chloride ion is located in the kringle-kringle interface and contributes to the observed interaction between kringle molecules.  相似文献   

6.
Apolipoprotein(a) [apo(a)] is the distinctive glycoprotein of lipoprotein Lp(a), which is disulfide linked to the apo B100 of a low density lipoprotein particle. Apo(a) possesses a high degree of sequence homology with plasminogen, the precursor of plasmin, a fibrinolytic and pericellular proteolytic enzyme. Apo(a) exists in several isoforms defined by a variable number of copies of plasminogen-like kringle 4 and single copies of kringle 5, and the protease region including the backbone positions for the catalytic triad (Ser, His, Asp). A lysine-binding site that is similar to that of plasminogen kringle 4 is present in apo(a) kringle IV type 10. These kringle motifs share some amino acid residues (Asp55, Asp57, Phe64, Tyr62, Trp72, Arg71) that are key components of their lysine-binding site. The spatial conformation and the function of this site in plasminogen kringle 4 and in apo(a) kringle IV-10 seem to be identical as indicated by (i) the ability of apo(a) to compete with plasminogen for binding to fibrin, and (ii) the neutralisation of the lysine-binding function of these kringles by a monoclonal antibody that recognises key components of the lysine-binding site. In contrast, the lysine-binding site of plasminogen kringle 1 contains a Tyr residue at positions 64 and 72 and is not recognised by this antibody. Plasminogen bound to fibrin is specifically recognised and cleaved by the tissue-type plasminogen activator at Arg561-Val562, and is thereby transformed into plasmin. A Ser-Ile substitution at the activation cleavage site is present in apo(a). Reinstallation of the Arg-Val peptide bond does not ensure cleavage of apo(a) by plasminogen activators. These data suggest that the stringent specificity of tissue-type plasminogen activator for plasminogen requires molecular interactions with structures located remotely from the activation disulfide loop. These structures ensure second site interactions that are most probably absent in apo(a).  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The heavy chain of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) consists of four domains [finger, epidermal-growth-factor (EGF)-like, kringle 1 and kringle 2] that are homologous to similar domains present in other proteins. To assess the contribution of each of the domains to the biological properties of the enzyme, site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate a set of mutants lacking sequences corresponding to the axons encoding the individual structural domains. The mutant proteins were assayed for their ability to hydrolyze artificial and natural substrates in the presence and absence of fibrin, to bind to lysine-Sepharose and to be inhibited by plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. All the deletion mutants exhibit levels of basal enzymatic activity very similar to that of wild-type t-PA assayed in the absence of fibrin. A mutant protein lacking the finger domain has a 2-fold higher affinity for plasminogen than wild-type t-PA, while the mutant that lacks both finger and EGF-like domains is less active at low concentrations of plasminogen. Mutants lacking both kringles neither bind to lysine-Sepharose nor are stimulated by fibrin. However, mutants containing only one kringle (either kringle 1 or kringle 2) behave indistinguishably from one another and from the wild-type protein. We conclude that kringle 1 and kringle 2 are equivalent in their ability to mediate stimulation of catalytic activity by fibrin.  相似文献   

9.
Fibrin interacts with tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) via the finger and the kringle 2 domains. Three monoclonal antibodies against tPA, designated MPW3VPA, MPW6VPA, and MPW7VPA, which react with epitopes in the tPA molecule involved in fibrin binding, were characterized. The IgM monoclonal antibody MPW6VPA, directed against an epitope close to the finger and epidermal growth factor domains, stimulated plasminogen activation only in the absence of CNBr-fibrinogen fragments by increasing kcat in a dose-dependent fashion, an effect which was not restricted to the intact molecule. These results suggest that MPW6VPA mimics the initial effect of fibrin bound to the tPA molecule, which results in a change of kcat values. The MPW6VPA effect was reversed by another antibody, MPW3VPA, also directed against epidermal growth factor and finger domains. The latter antibody also inhibited plasminogen activation by tPA in the presence of CNBr-fibrinogen fragments in a dose-dependent, apparently noncompetitive way. No effect of MPW3VPA was seen in the absence of CNBr-fibrinogen fragments. MPW7VPA directed against kringle 2 of tPA inhibited plasminogen activation by tPA only when CNBr-fibrinogen fragments were present. This inhibition was apparently competitive and dose-dependent. These data suggest that MPW3VPA interferes with the first phase of fibrin binding to tPA, whereas MPW7VPA interferes with the second phase of fibrin binding to the tPA molecule via kringle 2, resulting in Km changes.  相似文献   

10.
The solution structure of the complex containing the isolated kringle 2 domain of human plasminogen (K2Pg) and VEK-30, a 30-amino acid residue internal peptide from a streptococcal M-like plasminogen (Pg) binding protein (PAM), has been determined by multinuclear high-resolution NMR. Complete backbone and side-chain assignments were obtained from triple-resonance experiments, after which structure calculations were performed and ultimately refined by restrained molecular simulation in water. We find that, in contrast with the dimer of complexes observed in the asymmetric unit of the crystal, global correlation times and buoyant molecular weight determinations of the complex and its individual components showed the monomeric nature of all species in solution. The NMR-derived structure of K2Pg in complex with VEK-30 presents a folding pattern typical of other kringle domains, while bound VEK-30 forms an end-to-end α-helix (residues 6–27) in the complex. Most of the VEK-30/K2Pg interactions in solution occur between a single face of the α-helix of VEK-30 and the lysine binding site (LBS) of K2Pg. The canonical LBS of K2Pg, consisting of Asp54, Asp56, Trp60, Arg69, and Trp70 (kringle numbering), interacts with an internal pseudo-lysine of VEK-30, comprising side-chains of Arg17, His18, and Glu20. Site-specific mutagenesis analysis confirmed that the electrostatic field formed by the N-terminal anionic residues of the VEK-30 α-helix, viz., Asp7, and the non-conserved cationic residues of K2Pg, viz., Lys43 and Arg55, play additional important roles in the docking of VEK-30 to K2Pg. Structural analysis and kringle sequence alignments revealed several important features related to exosite binding that provide a structural rationale for the high specificity and affinity of VEK-30 for K2Pg.  相似文献   

11.
Recent data from several studies have suggested that the non-protease domains in tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) determine their biological specificities, including binding to fibrin clots and survival in the circulatory system (Van Zonneveld, A.-J., Veerman, H., and Pannekoek, H. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 83, 4670-4674; Rijken, D. C., and Emeis, J. J. (1986) Biochem. J. 238, 643-646). Structural manipulations (e.g. deletions, additions, or substitutions) in these domains can thus be utilized to maximize the desired biological effects. Using recombinant DNA technology, we constructed a number of hybrid molecules from the t-PA and u-PA genes. In hybrid A, the epidermal growth factor and finger domains of t-PA (residues 1-91) were replaced by the epidermal growth factor and kringle of u-PA (residues 1-131). In hybrids B and C, the u-PA kringle (residues 50-131) was inserted either before (residue 92) or after (residue 261) the double-kringle region of t-PA. All these hybrid PAs containing three kringles were expressed in mouse fibroblast cells (C-127). The hybrid proteins were synthesized in predominantly a single-chain form with molecular weights of 70,000-80,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and were enzymatically active as assayed by the fibrin-agar plate method. In vitro studies on the binding of hybrid PAs to fibrin showed that hybrid B, like t-PA, possesses affinity toward fibrin, while hybrid A shows lower binding. This suggests that the finger domain, which is not present in hybrid A, plays a role in conferring fibrin affinity to the hybrid PAs. The enzymatic activities of the hybrids were compared with that of recombinant t-PA (rt-PA) expressed in the same vector/host system and found to be similar in activity toward a chromogenic peptide substrate. In addition, plasminogen activation with all the hybrid-PAs, as with rt-PA, was stimulated by fibrin, with the order of activity being rt-PA greater than or equal to hybrid B greater than hybrid C greater than hybrid A. This study shows the feasibility of shuffling functional domain(s) of known specificity in plasminogen activators which may lead to the design of a superior thrombolytic agent.  相似文献   

12.
Kringle 1 (Tyr 79/Leu 80-His 167 and Tyr 79/Leu 80-Tyr 173), a chymotryptic fragment of human plasminogen that has high affinity for fibrin and omega-aminocarboxylic acids, has been subjected to modification with 1,2-cyclohexanedione to identify arginine residues essential for ligand binding. Reaction of 1,2-cyclohexanedione with kringle 1 was found to rapidly abolish the fibrin-Sepharose affinity of the fragment, whereas the affinity for lysine-Sepharose was lost at a significantly slower rate. Successive affinity chromatography of modified kringle 1 on fibrin- and lysine-Sepharose was used to separate kringle 1 that lost affinity for fibrin-, but retained affinity for lysine-Sepharose from kringle 1 that lost affinity for both affinants. The modified proteins were subjected to structural studies in order to locate the labeled arginine residues in kringle 1. These studies have revealed that modification of Arg 34 leads to the loss of both the fibrin- and lysine-Sepharose affinities of kringle 1, whereas reaction of Arg 32 abolishes fibrin affinity but leaves lysine-Sepharose affinity unaltered. The results suggest that Arg 32 and Arg 34 are both involved in fibrin binding and that Arg 34 is also involved in binding omega-aminocarboxylic acids. Previous NMR studies on kringles have indeed shown that the segment containing residue 34 is in the proximity of and interacts with the omega-aminocarboxylic acid-binding site. This interaction may explain the influence of omega-aminocarboxylic acids on fibrin binding by kringle 1.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of small molecules to the kringle 5 domain fragment of human plasminogen has been investigated by 1H NMR spectroscopy at 300 MHz. The compounds tested as potential ligands include L-arginine, L-lysine, and a number of aliphatic and aromatic analogs of similar size but different ionic charge configurations. Ligand/kringle 5 association constant (Ka) values were obtained from ligand titration experiments at 22 degrees C, pH 7.2. Neither L-arginine nor N alpha-acetyl-L-arginine and N alpha-acetyl-L-arginine methyl ester bind measurably to kringle 5 (Ka approximately less than 0.05 mM-1). In contrast, binding of hexylamine or epsilon-aminocaproic acid (epsilon ACA) is favored (Ka approximately 2.9 and 10.5 mM-1, respectively). Benzamidine and p-benzylaminesulfonic acid associate with kringle 5 with similar affinities (Ka approximately 3.4 and 2.2 mM-1, respectively) while benzylamine binds about twice as tightly (Ka approximately 6.3 mM-1). The higher affinities toward both benzylamine and epsilon ACA indicate that a free carboxylate group is not, by itself, a main determinant of ligand-binding to kringle 5. The experiments also reveal a definite affinity for L-arginine methyl ester, L-lysine, and N alpha-acetyl-L-lysine methyl ester. It is suggested that, although weak (0.1 approximately less than Ka approximately less than 0.6 mM-1), these interactions could be of physiological relevance in the context of plasminogen binding to the fibrin clot. Ligand-induced shifts of kringle 5 proton resonances indicate that the Trp25, His33, Tyr50, Trp62, and Tyr72 (kringle numbering convention) side chains form or neighbor the kringle 5-binding site. Benzamidine-kringle 5 magnetization transfer (Overhauser) experiments verify a close proximity of the bound ligand to these aromatic groups. A model of the binding site is proposed in which the above residues interact closely with each other and define a lipophilic surface which is accessible to the free ligand.  相似文献   

14.
The plasma lipoprotein lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] comprises a low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-like particle covalently attached to the glycoprotein apolipoprotein(a) [apo(a)]. Apo(a) consists of multiple tandem repeating kringle modules, similar to plasminogen kringle IV (designated KIV1-KIV10), followed by modules homologous to the kringle V module and protease domain of plasminogen. The apo(a) KIV modules have been classified on the basis of their binding affinity for lysine and lysine analogues. The strong lysine-binding apo(a) KIV10 module mediates lysine-dependent interactions with fibrin and cell-surface receptors. Weak lysine-binding apo(a) KIV7 and KIV8 modules display a 2-3-fold difference in lysine affinity and play a direct role in the noncovalent step in Lp(a) assembly through binding to unique lysine-containing sequences in apolipoproteinB-100 (apoB-100). The present study describes the nuclear magnetic resonance solution structure of apo(a) KIV8 and its solution dynamics properties, the first for an apo(a) kringle module, and compares the effects of epsilon-aminocaproic acid (epsilon-ACA) binding on the backbone and side-chain conformation of KIV7 and KIV8 on a per residue basis. Apo(a) KIV8 adopts a well-ordered structure that shares the general tri-loop kringle topology with apo(a) KIV6, KIV7, and KIV10. Mapping of epsilon-ACA-induced chemical-shift changes on KIV7 and KIV8 indicate that the same residues are affected, despite a 2-3-fold difference in epsilon-ACA affinity. A unique loop conformation within KIV8, involving hydrophobic interactions with Tyr40, affects the positioning of Arg35 relative to the lysine-binding site (LBS). A difference in the orientation of the aromatic side chains comprising the hydrophobic center of the LBS in KIV8 decreases the size of the hydrophobic cleft compared to other apo(a) KIV modules. An exposed hydrophobic patch contiguous with the LBS in KIV8 and not conserved in other weak lysine-binding apo(a) kringle modules may modulate specificity for regions within apoB-100. An additional ligand recognition site comprises a structured arginine-glycine-aspartate motif at the N terminus of the KIV8 module, which may mediate Lp(a)/apo(a)-integrin interactions.  相似文献   

15.
Elevated levels of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] in plasma are a significant risk factor for the development of atherosclerotic disease, a property which may arise from the ability of this lipoprotein to inhibit fibrinolysis. In the present study we have quantitated the binding of recombinant forms of apolipoprotein(a) [17K and 12K r-apo(a); containing 8 and 3 copies, respectively, of the major repeat kringle sequence (kringle IV type 2)] to modified fibrinogen surfaces. Iodinated 17K and 12K r-apo(a) bound to immobilized thrombin-modified fibrinogen (i.e., fibrin) surfaces with similar affinities (Kd approximately 1.2-1.6 microM). The total concentration of binding sites (Bmax) present on the fibrin surface was approximately 4-fold greater for the 12K than for the 17K (Bmax values of 0.81 +/- 0.09 nM, and 0.20 +/- 0.01 nM respectively), suggesting that the total binding capacity on fibrin surfaces is reduced for larger apolipoprotein(a) (apo(a)) species. Interestingly, binding of apo(a) to intact fibrin was not detected as assessed by measurement of intrinsic fluorescence of free apo(a) present in the supernatants of sedimented fibrin clots. In other experiments, the total concentration apo(a) binding sites available on plasmin-modified fibrinogen surfaces was shown to be 13.5-fold higher than the number of sites available on unmodified fibrin surfaces (Bmax values of 2.7 +/- 0.3 nM and 0.20 +/- 0.01 nM respectively) while the affinity of apo(a) for these surfaces was similar. The increase in Bmax was correlated with plasmin-mediated exposure of C-terminal lysines since treatment of plasmin-modified fibrinogen surfaces with carboxypeptidase B produced a significant decrease in total binding signal as detected by ELISA (enzyme linked immunosorbent assay). Taken together, these data suggest that apo(a) binds to fibrin with poor affinity (low microM) and that the total concentration of apo(a) binding sites available on modified-fibrinogen surfaces is affected by both apo(a) isoform size and by the increased availability of C-terminal lysines on plasmin-degraded fibrinogen surfaces. However, the low affinity of apo(a) for fibrin indicates that Lp(a) may inhibit fibrinolysis through a mechanism distinct from binding to fibrin, such as binding to plasminogen.  相似文献   

16.
Activation of human Glu-plasminogen, Lys-plasminogen and low-Mr plasminogen (lacking lysine-binding sites) by pro-urokinase (pro-UK), obtained from a human lung adenocarcinoma cell line (Calu-3, ATCC), obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Activation occurs with a comparable affinity (Km 0.40-0.77 microM), while the catalytic rate constant (kcat) is comparable for Glu-plasminogen (0.0022s-1) and low-Mr plasminogen (0.0034 s-1), but is somewhat higher for Lys-plasminogen (0.0106 s-1). The rate of activation of plasminogen by pro-UK is not significantly influenced by the presence of 6-aminohexanoic acid, purified fragments LBS I or LBS II or histidine-rich glycoprotein, indicating that the high affinity of pro-UK for plasminogen is not mediated via the high-affinity lysine-binding site of plasminogen located in kringles 1-3 (LBS I) nor via the low-affinity lysine-binding site comprised within kringle 4 (LBS II). The site(s) in plasminogen involved in the high-affinity interaction with pro-UK thus appear to be located within the low-Mr plasminogen moiety.  相似文献   

17.
A method is described for measuring relative binding constants of lysine and analogs of lysine to plasminogen and plasminogen 'kringle' fragments. Plasminogen or kringle fragments adsorbed to lysine-Sepharose are eluted with increasing concentrations of lysine or other ligands, the concentration of ligand required to elute 50% of the protein being taken as a measure of the binding constant. The method is simple and is not dependent on monitoring conformational changes. We confirm earlier reports that the best ligands for the lysine binding sites of plasminogen are omega-amino acids containing five or six carbons. We show further that both Glu-plasminogen (the native form with N-terminal glutamic acid) and Lys-plasminogen (a degraded form with N-terminal lysine), as well as the heavy chain fragments, kringle 4 and kringle 1+2+3, have very similar properties with regard to binding specificity for omega-amino acids. For all species optimal binding is observed when the distance between the amino and carboxyl carbon is about 0.68 nm. The finding of ligands is decreased by the presence of polar atoms on the alpha and beta positions of the carbon chain of amino acids. Arginine binds relatively weakly at the lysine site and there does not appear to be a separate arginine binding site in plasminogen.  相似文献   

18.
Glu-plasminogen, kringle 1-5, kringle 1-3, and miniplasminogen exhibited strong binding to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). On the other hand, no significant binding was obtained with microplasminogen and kringle 4. Kringle 1-5 and miniplasminogen, which both contained kringle 5, specifically inhibited the binding of plasminogen to HUVEC while kringle 1-3 did not. The results implied plasminogen molecule contained at least two binding sites, with which it interacted HUVEC. The stronger binding site was located in kringle 5 and the weaker one was in kringle 1-3. Kringle 4 and the active site domain exhibited no significant binding to HUVEC. The interaction of plasminogen with HUVEC is mainly through binding site on kringle 5.  相似文献   

19.
M R Rejante  I J Byeon  M Llinás 《Biochemistry》1991,30(46):11081-11092
The ligand specificity of the human plasminogen kringle 4 was characterized in terms of ligand size, aromatic/aliphatic character, and ionic charge distribution. The binding of the following ligands was investigated via 1H NMR spectroscopy, and their equilibrium association constants (Ka) were determined: (1) p-aminomethylbenzoic acid (Ka approximately 4.8 mM-1), (2) benzylamine (Ka approximately 0.2 mM-1), (3) l-aminohexane (Ka approximately 0.07 mM-1), (4) 7-aminoheptanoic acid (Ka approximately 6.6 mM-1), (5) 5-aminopentanoic acid (Ka approximately 16 mM-1), (6) N alpha-acetyl-L-arginine (Ka approximately 0.3 mM-1), and (7) N alpha-acetyl-L-arginine methyl ester (Ka approximately 0.08 mM-1). Benzamidine and L-arginine do not bind measurably to kringle 4. We have also established that 1-hexanoic acid and 4-methylbenzoic acid do not interact significantly with kringle 4 (Ka less than 0.05 mM-1). The Trp62 resonances were found to be quite sensitive to aromatic ligands as well as to aliphatic ligand length. Phe64 is similarly sensitive to the ligand aromatic/aliphatic character and chain length and to the identity of the ligand anionic group. His31 and His33 do not respond significantly to variations in ligand structure, although they are perturbed by aromatic and aliphatic effectors. The perturbations induced by the arginine derivatives on these residues show that these compounds interact with the lysine-binding site (LBS) of kringle 4. The LBS was further characterized using 2D NMR studies of a kringle 4/trans-(aminomethyl)cyclohexanecarboxylic acid (AMCHA) complex. A complete assignment of the AMCHA spectrum in the bound state was achieved. This enabled the unambiguous identification of intermolecular contact points between the central AMCHA protons and Trp62 and Trp72. A model based on the X-ray crystallographic structure of kringle 4, incorporating these constraints, has been derived.  相似文献   

20.
When thrombin-mediated fibrin formation and tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA)-mediated fibrinolysis proceed in dynamic interaction, desA-(desB beta 1-42)-fragment X polymers are shown to be the predominant fibrin derivatives present during the rapid second phase of Glu1- and Lys78-plasminogen activation. To further investigate the effect of this intermediate, a method was developed for the production and purification of fibrinogen-derived desA-(desB beta 1-42)-fragment X, deprived of both COOH-terminal A alpha-chains, but still capable of thrombin-mediated polymerization. DesA-(desB beta 1-42)-fragment X polymer was compared to intact fibrin with regard to its stimulatory effect on Glu1-, Lys78-, and Val443-plasminogen activation, and its binding of Glu1- and Lys78-plasminogen. Pure fragment X polymer gave rise to a biphasic activation pattern like that of fibrin, demonstrating similar kinetics of rapid phase activation. The dissociation constant for the binding of plasminogen to the effector decreases by a factor of 14, and the stoichiometry increases by a factor of 2 upon plasmin-catalyzed cleavage of both native Glu1- to Lys78-plasminogen, and fibrin to fragment X polymer. We conclude that desA-fibrin protofibril formation is sufficient to initiate fibrin enhancement of t-PA-catalyzed plasminogen activation, and that optimal stimulation depends on further plasmin-mediated modification of the fibrin effector to desA-fragment X-related moieties. Optimal stimulation is dependent on the presence of the kringle 1-4 domains of plasminogen and probably results from altered and increased binding of both plasminogen and t-PA to the modified effector.  相似文献   

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