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1.
Use of fragments of hirudin to investigate thrombin-hirudin interaction   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to create hirudin in which Asn52 was replaced by methionine. Cyanogen bromide cleavage at this unique methionine resulted in two fragments. These fragments have been used to study the kinetic mechanism of the inhibition of thrombin by hirudin and to identify areas of the two molecules which interact with each other. The binding of the C-terminal fragment (residues 53-65) to thrombin resulted in a decrease in the Michaelis constant for the substrate D-phenylalanylpipecolylarginyl-p-nitroanilide (DPhe-Pip-Arg-NH-Ph). The N-terminal fragment (residues 1-52) was a competitive inhibitor of thrombin. There was a small amount of cooperativity in the binding of the two fragments. Whereas hirudin and its C-terminal fragment protected alpha-thrombin against cleavage by trypsin, the N-terminal fragment did not. Hirudin and the N-terminal fragment completely prevented the cleavage of alpha-thrombin by pancreatic elastase while the C-terminal fragment afforded a lesser degree of protection. The results of these experiments with trypsin and elastase are discussed in terms of interaction areas on thrombin and hirudin.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetic mechanism of the inhibition of alpha-thrombin by hirudin was analyzed using the hirudin-derived fragments hirudin(1-47) and hirudin(45-65). Previously, these fragments have been shown to interact with alpha-thrombin at distinct sites inhibiting thrombin-mediated clot formation. Binding to the active site the N-terminal fragment hirudin(1-47) competitively inhibits hydrolysis of the substrates Tos-Gly-Pro-Arg-NH-Mec (Tos, tosyl; NH-Mec, 4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide) and fibrinogen with Ki values of 420 +/- 18 nM and 460 +/- 25 nM, respectively. Interacting with the anion-binding site of alpha-thrombin the C-terminal fragment competitively inhibits the hydrolysis of fibrinogen with a Ki of 760 +/- 40 nM. It was found, however, that this fragment acts as a hyperbolic uncompetitive inhibitor with respect to the hydrolysis of the peptide-NH-Mec substrate. According to the Botts-Morales scheme for enzyme inhibition, the parameters Ki = 710 +/- 38 nM, K'i = 348 +/- 22 nM, as well as alpha = beta = 0.49 of thrombin inhibition by the C-terminal fragment hirudin(45-65), were obtained. The results are discussed in terms of the interaction of hirudin and thrombin.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism by which thrombin induces neurite retraction was studied in NB2a mouse neuroblastoma cells. The rapid effect of thrombin (completed within minutes) appears to involve an interaction between its anion-binding exosite and the thrombin receptor. Structural alterations of this site increase the EC50 for thrombin-mediated retraction, and a hirudin C-terminal peptide that blocks this site inhibits the response. The thrombin effect was mimicked by a 14 amino acid peptide starting with Ser-42, at the proposed cleavage site of the human thrombin receptor. The protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine and H-7 blocked thrombin-induced retraction. It is therefore proposed that thrombin-mediated neurite retraction is caused by cleavage-induced activation of the thrombin receptor and involves stimulation of a protein kinase(s).  相似文献   

4.
Anticoagulant activity of synthetic hirudin peptides   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Synthetic peptides based on the COOH-terminal 21 residues of hirudin were prepared in order to 1) evaluate the role of this segment in hirudin action toward thrombin, 2) define the shortest peptide derivative with anticoagulant activity, and 3) investigate the role of tyrosine sulfation in the peptides' inhibitory activities. A hirudin derivative of 20 amino acids, Hir45-64 (derived from residues 45-64 of the hirudin polypeptide), was found to effect a dose-dependent increase in the activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) of normal human plasma but to have no measurable inhibitory activity toward thrombin cleavage of a tripeptidyl p-nitroanilide substrate. Anticoagulant activity in hirudin derivatives was comparable in peptides of 20, 16, and 12 residues truncated from the NH2 terminus. Additional truncated peptides prepared by synthesis and carboxypeptidase treatment reveal that the minimal sequence of a hirudin peptide fragment with maximal anticoagulant activity is contained within the sequence: NH2-Asn-Gly-Asp-Phe-Glu-Glu-Ile-Pro-Glu-Glu-Tyr-Leu-COOH. The 12-residue derivative thus identified was reacted with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide in the presence of sulfuric acid to yield a Tyr-sulfated peptide, S-Hir53-64. By comparison to unsulfated peptide, S-Hir53-64 was found to contain a specific inhibitory activity enhanced by one order of magnitude toward increase in APTT and to effect a dose-dependent increase in thrombin time of normal human plasma to yield a 4-fold increase in thrombin time with 2.5 micrograms/ml peptide using 0.8 units/ml alpha-thrombin. Comparison of S-Hir53-64 to hirudin in thrombin time and APTT assays reveals a 50-fold difference in molar specific activities toward inhibition of thrombin. Comparison of antithrombin activities of S-Hir53-64 using a variety of animal thrombins demonstrates greatest inhibitory activity toward murine, rat, and human enzymes and a 10-fold reduced activity toward bovine thrombin.  相似文献   

5.
Nuclear relocation of normal huntingtin   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
In Huntington's Disease (HD), the huntingtin protein (Htt) includes an expanded polyglutamine domain. Since mutant Htt concentrates in the nucleus of affected neurons, we have inquired whether normal Htt (Q16−23) is also able to access the nucleus. We observe that a major pool of normal full-length Htt of HeLa cells is anchored to endosomes and also detect RNase-sensitive nuclear foci which include a 70-kDa N-terminal Htt fragment. Agents which damage DNA trigger caspase-3-dependent cleavage of Htt and dramatically relocate the 70 kDa fragment to the nucleoplasm. Considering that polyglutamine tracts stimulate caspase activation, mutant Htt is therefore poised to enter the nucleus. These considerations help rationalize the nuclear accumulation of Htt which is characteristic of HD and provide a first example of involvement of caspase cleavage in release of membrane-bound proteins which subsequently enter the nucleus.  相似文献   

6.
A group of peptides from the salivary gland of the tick Hyalomma marginatum rufipes, a vector of Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever show weak similarity to the madanins, a group of thrombin-inhibitory peptides from a second tick species, Haemaphysalis longicornis. We have evaluated the anti-serine protease activity of one of these H. marginatum peptides that has been given the name hyalomin-1. Hyalomin-1 was found to be a selective inhibitor of thrombin, blocking coagulation of plasma and inhibiting S2238 hydrolysis in a competitive manner with an inhibition constant (Ki) of 12 nM at an ionic strength of 150 mM. It also blocks the thrombin-mediated activation of coagulation factor XI, thrombin-mediated platelet aggregation, and the activation of coagulation factor V by thrombin. Hyalomin-1 is cleaved at a canonical thrombin cleavage site but the cleaved products do not inhibit coagulation. However, the C-terminal cleavage product showed non-competitive inhibition of S2238 hydrolysis. A peptide combining the N-terminal parts of the molecule with the cleavage region did not interact strongly with thrombin, but a 24-residue fragment containing the cleavage region and the C-terminal fragment inhibited the enzyme in a competitive manner and also inhibited coagulation of plasma. These results suggest that the peptide acts by binding to the active site as well as exosite I or the autolysis loop of thrombin. Injection of 2.5 mg/kg of hyalomin-1 increased arterial occlusion time in a mouse model of thrombosis, suggesting this peptide could be a candidate for clinical use as an antithrombotic.  相似文献   

7.
Plasma phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) is a factor that plays an important role in HDL metabolism. In this study we present data suggesting that PLTP has an inherent protease activity. After incubation of HDL3 in the presence of purified plasma PLTP, the d < 1.25 g/ml particles (fusion particles) contained intact 28.2 kDa apoA-I while the d > 1.25 g/ml fraction (apoA-I-PL complexes) contained, in addition to intact apoA-I, a cleaved 23 kDa form of apoA-I. Purified apoA-I was also cleaved by PLTP and produced a similar 23 kDa apoA-I fragment. The cleavage of apoA-I increased as a function of incubation time and the amount of PLTP added. The process displayed typically an 8-10 h lag or induction period, after which the cleavage proceeded in a time-dependent manner. This lag-phase was necessary for the development of the cleavage activity during incubation at 37 degrees C. The specific apoA-I cleavage activity of different PLTP preparations varied between 0.4-0.8 microg apoA-I degraded/h per 1000 nmol per h of PLTP activity. The 23 kDa apoA-I fragment reacted with monoclonal antibodies specific for the N-terminal part of apoA-I, indicating that the apoA-I cleavage occurred in the C-terminal portion. The apoA-I cleavage products were further characterized by mass spectrometry. The 23 kDa fragment yielded a mass of 22.924 kDa, demonstrating that the cleavage occurs in the C-terminal portion of apoA-I between amino acid residues 196 (alanine) and 197 (threonine). The intact apoA-I and the 23 kDa fragment revealed identical N-terminal amino acid sequences. The cleavage of apoA-I could be inhibited with APMSF and chymostatin, suggesting that it is due to a serine esterase-type of proteolytic activity. Recombinant PLTP produced in CHO cells or using the baculovirus-insect cell system caused an apoA-I cleavage pattern identical to that obtained with plasma PLTP. The present results raise the question of whether PLTP-mediated proteolytic cleavage of apoA-I might affect plasma HDL metabolism by generating a novel kinetic compartment of apoA-I with an increased turnover rate.  相似文献   

8.
Early digestion of pure human platelet glycoprotein IIIa (GPIIIa) leads to a single cleavage of the molecule at 23 kDa far from one of the terminal amino acids. Automated Edman degradation demonstrates that GPIIIa and the smaller (23 kDa) tryptic fragment share the same N-terminal amino acid sequence. A further cleavage occurs in the larger fragment (80 kDa), reducing its apparent molecular mass by 10 kDa. The 23 kDa fragment remains attached to the larger ones in unreduced samples. Stepwise reduction of early digested GPIIIa with dithioerythritol selectively reduces the single disulphide bond joining the smaller (23 kDa) to the larger (80/70 kDa) fragments. Two fractions were obtained by size-exclusion chromatography of early digested GPIIIa after partial or full reduction and alkylation. The larger-size fraction contains the 80/70 kDa fragments, while the 23 kDa fragment is isolated in the smaller. The amino acid compositions of these fractions do not differ very significantly from the composition of GPIIIa; however the 23 kDa fragment contains only 10.2% by weight of sugars and is richer in neuraminic acid. Disulphide bonds are distributed four in the 23 kDa glycopeptide and 20-21 in the 80/70 kDa glycopeptide. The epitope for P37, a monoclonal antibody which inhibits platelet aggregation [Melero & González-Rodríguez (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 141, 421-427] is situated within the first 17 kDa of the N-terminal region of GPIIIa, which gives a special functional interest to this extracellular region of GPIIIa. On the other hand, the epitopes for GPIIIa-specific monoclonal antibodies, P6, P35, P40 and P97, which do not interfere with platelet aggregation, are located within the larger tryptic fragment (80/70 kDa). Thus, the antigenic areas available in the extracellular surface of GPIIIa for these five monoclonal antibodies are now more precisely delineated.  相似文献   

9.
Thrombin is a serine protease that plays a central role in blood coagulation. It is inhibited by hirudin, a polypeptide of 65 amino acids, through the formation of a tight, noncovalent complex. Tetragonal crystals of the complex formed between human alpha-thrombin and recombinant hirudin (variant 1) have been grown and the crystal structure of this complex has been determined to a resolution of 2.95 A. This structure shows that hirudin inhibits thrombin by a previously unobserved mechanism. In contrast to other inhibitors of serine proteases, the specificity of hirudin is not due to interaction with the primary specificity pocket of thrombin, but rather through binding at sites both close to and distant from the active site. The carboxyl tail of hirudin (residues 48-65) wraps around thrombin along the putative fibrinogen secondary binding site. This long groove extends from the active site cleft and is flanked by the thrombin loops 35-39 and 70-80. Hirudin makes a number of ionic and hydrophobic interactions with thrombin in this area. Furthermore hirudin binds with its N-terminal three residues Val, Val, Tyr to the thrombin active site cleft. Val1 occupies the position P2 and Tyr3 approximately the position P3 of the synthetic inhibitor D-Phe-Pro-ArgCH2Cl. Thus the hirudin polypeptide chain runs in a direction opposite to that expected for fibrinogen and that observed for the substrate-like inhibitor D-Phe-Pro-ArgCH2Cl.  相似文献   

10.
Hirudin is an anticoagulant polypeptide isolated from a medicinal leech that inhibits thrombin with extraordinary potency (Kd = 0.2-1.0 pM) and selectivity. Hirudin is composed of a compact N-terminal region (residues 1-47, cross-linked by three disulfide bridges) that binds to the active site of thrombin, and a flexible C-terminal tail (residues 48-64) that interacts with the exosite I of the enzyme. To minimize the sequence of hirudin able to bind thrombin and also to improve its therapeutic profile, several N-terminal fragments have been prepared as potential anticoagulants. However, the practical use of these fragments has been impaired by their relatively poor affinity for the enzyme, as given by the increased value of the dissociation constant (Kd) of the corresponding thrombin complexes (Kd = 30-400 nM). The aim of the present study is to obtain a derivative of the N-terminal domain 1-47 of hirudin displaying enhanced inhibitory potency for thrombin compared to the natural product. In this view, we have synthesized an analogue of fragment 1-47 of hirudin HM2 in which Val1 has been replaced by tert-butylglycine, Ser2 by Arg, and Tyr3 by beta-naphthylalanine, to give the BugArgNal analogue. The results of chemical and conformational characterization indicate that the synthetic peptide is able to fold efficiently with the correct disulfide topology (Cys6-Cys14, Cys16-Cys28, Cys22-Cys37), while retaining the conformational properties of the natural fragment. Thrombin inhibition data indicate that the effects of amino acid replacements are perfectly additive if compared to the singly substituted analogues (De Filippis V, Quarzago D, Vindigni A, Di Cera E, Fontana A, 1998, Biochemistry 37:13507-13515), yielding a molecule that inhibits the fast or slow form of thrombin by 2,670- and 6,818-fold more effectively than the natural fragment, and that binds exclusively at the active site of the enzyme with an affinity (Kd,fast = 15.4 pM, Kd,slow = 220 pM) comparable to that of full-length hirudin (Kd,fast = 0.2 pM, Kd,slow = 5.5 pM). Moreover, BugArgNal displays absolute selectivity for thrombin over the other physiologically important serine proteases trypsin, plasmin, factor Xa, and tissue plasminogen activator, up to the highest concentration of inhibitor tested (10 microM).  相似文献   

11.
Fluorescent labeling, limited proteolysis, amino acid sequence determinations, affinity chromatography and specific chemical crosslinking were used to determine the smallest fragment of gizzard caldesmon that interacts with actin. The time course of cleavage with thrombin or submaxillaris arginase-C protease indicates that 90kDa and 35kDa fragments are the two major pieces of the 120kDa native protein. Amino acid sequence determination indicates that the 90kDa fragment is the N-terminal portion of the molecule. Further degradation gave rise to a 15kDa product whose N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined within the first 28 amino acids. Carbodiimide crosslinking with actin revealed that the 15kDa part of the molecule is probably not involved in the actin binding process but may participate in a twisting of the F-actin filament and be responsible of the caldesmon regulatory function during smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

12.
Hirudin, a thrombin-specific inhibitor, comprises a compact amino-terminal core domain (residues 1-52) and a disordered acidic carboxyl-terminal tail (residues 53-65). An array of core fragments were prepared from intact recombinant hirudin by deletion of various lengths of its carboxyl-terminal tail on selective enzymatic cleavage. Hir1-56 and Hir1-53 were produced by pepsin digestion at Phe56-Glu57 and Asp53-Gly54. Hir1-52 was generated by Asp-N cleavage at Asn52-Asp53. Hir1-49 was prepared by cleavage of Gln49-Ser50 by chymotrypsin, elastase, and thermolysin. In addition, Hir1-62 (containing part of the carboxyl-terminal tail) was derived from Hir1-65 by selective removal of the three carboxyl-terminal amino acids using carboxypeptidase A. Hirudin amino-terminal core fragments were stable at extreme pH (1.47 and 12.6), high temperature (95 degrees C), and resistant to attack by various proteinases. For instance, following 24-h incubation with an equal weight of pepsin, the covalent structure of Hir1-52 remained intact and its anticoagulant activity unaffected. Unlike intact hirudin (Hir1-65) the inhibitory potency of which is a consequence of concerted binding of its amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal domains to the active site and the fibrinogen recognition site of thrombin, the core fragments block only the active site of thrombin with binding constants of 19 nM (Hir1-56), 35 nM (Hir1-52), and 72 nM (Hir1-49). As an anticoagulant Hir1-56 is about 2-, 4-, and 30-fold more potent (on a molar basis) than Hir1-52, Hir1-49, and Hir1-43, respectively. Hir1-56 was also about 15-fold more effective than the most potent carboxyl-terminal fragment of hirudin, sulfated-Hir54-65, although they bind to independent sites on thrombin. The potential advantages of hirudin core fragments as antithrombotic agents are discussed in this report.  相似文献   

13.
Activation of prothrombin (Pro) by factor Xa to form thrombin occurs by proteolysis of Arg271-Thr272 and Arg320-Ile321, resulting in expression of regulatory exosites I and II. Cleavage of Pro by thrombin liberates fragment 1 and generates the zymogen analog, prethrombin 1 (Pre 1). The properties of exosite I on Pre 1 and its factor Xa activation intermediates were characterized in spectroscopic and equilibrium binding studies using the fluorescein-labeled probe, hirudin(54-65) ([5F]Hir(54-65)-(SO3-)). Prethrombin 2 (Pre 2), formed by factor Xa cleavage of Pre 1 at Arg271-Thr272, had the same affinity for hirudin(54-65) peptides as Pre 1 in the absence or presence of near-saturating fragment 2 (F2). Pre 2 and thrombin also had indistinguishable affinities for F2. By contrast, cleavage of Pre 1 at Arg320-Ile321, to form active meizothrombin des-fragment 1 MzT(-F1), showed a 11- to 20-fold increase in affinity for hirudin(54-65), indistinguishable from the 13- to 20-fold increase seen for conversion of Pre 2 to thrombin. Thus, factor Xa cleavage of Pre 1 at Arg271-Thr272 does not effect exosite I expression, whereas cleavage at Arg320-Ile321 results in concomitant activation of the catalytic site and exosite I. Furthermore, expression of exosite I on the Pre 1 activation intermediates is not modulated by F2, and exosite II is not activated conformationally. The differential expression of exosite I affinity on the Pre 1 activation intermediates and the previously demonstrated role of (pro)exosite I in factor Va-dependent substrate recognition suggest that changes in exosite I expression may regulate the rate and direction of the Pre 1 activation pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Thrombin is a primary target for the development of novel anticoagulants, since it plays two important and opposite roles in hemostasis: procoagulant and anticoagulant. All thrombin functions are influenced by Na+ binding, which triggers the transition of this enzyme from an anticoagulant (slow) form to a procoagulant (fast) form. In previous studies, we have conveniently produced by chemical synthesis analogues of the N-terminal fragment 1-47 of hirudin HM2 containing noncoded amino acids and displaying up to approximately 2700-fold more potent antithrombin activity, comparable to that of full-length hirudin. In the work presented here, we have exploited the versatility of chemical synthesis to probe the structural and energetic properties of the S3 site of thrombin through perturbations introduced in the structure of hirudin fragment 1-47. In particular, we have investigated the effects of systematic replacement of Tyr3 with noncoded amino acids retaining the aromatic nucleus of Tyr, as well as similar hydrophobic and steric properties, but possessing different electronic (e.g., p-fluoro-, p-iodo-, or p-nitro-Phe), charge (p-aminomethyl-Phe), or conformational (homo-Phe) properties. Our results indicate that the affinity of fragment 1-47 for thrombin is proportional to the desolvation free energy change upon complex formation, and is inversely related to the electric dipole moment of the amino acid side chain at position 3 of hirudin. In this study, we have also identified the key features that are responsible for the preferential binding of hirudin to the procoagulant (fast) form of thrombin. Strikingly, shaving at position 3, by Tyr --> Ala exchange, abolishes the differences in the affinity for thrombin allosteric forms, whereas a bulkier side chain (e.g., beta-naphthylalanine) improves binding preferentially to the fast form. These results provide strong, albeit indirect, evidence that the procoagulant (fast) form of thrombin is in a more open and accessible conformation with respect to the less forgiving structure it acquires in the slow form. This view is also supported by the results of molecular dynamics simulations conducted for 18 ns on free thrombin in full explicit water, showing that after approximately 5 ns thrombin undergoes a significant conformational transition, from a more open conformation (which we propose can be related to the fast form) to a more compact and closed one (which we propose can be related to the slow form). This transition mainly involves the Trp148 and Trp60D loop, the S3 site, and the fibrinogen binding site, whereas the S1 site, the Na+-binding site, and the catalytic pocket remain essentially unchanged. In particular, our data indicate that the S3 site of the enzyme is less accessible to water in the putative slow form. This structural picture provides a reasonable molecular explanation for the fact that physiological substrates related to the procoagulant activity of thrombin (fibrinogen, thrombin receptor 1, and factor XIII) orient a bulky side chain into the S3 site of the enzyme. Taken together, our results can have important implications for the design of novel thrombin inhibitors, of practical utility in the treatment of coagulative disorders.  相似文献   

15.
The serine peptidases, thrombocytin and PA-BJ, isolated from the venom of Bothrops atrox and Bothrops jararaca, respectively, induce platelet aggregation and granule secretion without clotting fibrinogen. The specific platelet aggregation activity of each enzyme was about 15 times lower than that of thrombin. This activity was blocked by monoclonal antibodies recognizing protease activated receptor 1 (PAR1) and by heparin, but not by hirudin nor thrombomodulin. Both enzymes induced calcium mobilization in platelets and desensitized platelets to the action of thrombin and the SFLLRN peptide. We compared the effect of thrombin, PA-BJ, and thrombocytin on the degradation of the soluble N-terminal domain of the PAR1 receptor. The major cleavage site by thrombin and both viper enzymes was Arg41-Ser42. In addition, a rapid cleavage of the peptide bond at Arg46-Asn47 by the viper enzymes was observed, resulting in the inactivation of the tethered ligand. PA-BJ and thrombocytin both cleaved at 41-42 and 46-47 peptide bonds, and fragment 42-103 disappeared rapidly. Both viper enzymes caused calcium mobilization in fibroblasts transfected with PAR4 and desensitized these cells to the thrombin action. In conclusion, both PAR1 and PAR4 mediate the effect of viper venom serine peptidases on platelets.  相似文献   

16.
Hirudin is a specific polypeptide thrombin inhibitor consisting of 65 amino acids that is produced by the leech, Hirudo medicinalis. We describe a rapid method for the purification of hirudin from a leech extract. Crude hirudin, purchased from a commercial source, was first fractionated on a DEAE-HPLC column using a salt gradient. Hirudin activity was monitored by inhibition of the thrombin-mediated hydrolysis of a synthetic substrate H-D-Phenylalanyl-Pipecolyl-Arginine-p-Nitroanilide. The fractions containing antithrombin activity were pooled and further purified by reverse-phase HPLC. The homogeneity of purified hirudin was confirmed by a single amino-terminal sequence for 43 residues with Val-Val as the first two amino acids. Residue 33 was Asn rather than Asp as reported previously.  相似文献   

17.
J Y Chang 《Biochemistry》1991,30(27):6656-6661
The C-terminal peptide of a hirudin acts as an anticoagulant by binding specifically to a noncatalytic (fibrinogen recognition) site of thrombin. This binding has been shown to shield five spatially distant lysines of the thrombin B-chain (Lys21, Lys65, Lys77, Lys106, and Lys107). It was also demonstrated that modification of the sequence of the hirudin C-terminal peptide invariably diminished its anticoagulant activity. The major object of this study is to investigate how the decreased activity of the modified hirudin C-terminal peptide is reflected by the change of its binding properties to these five lysines of thrombin. A synthetic peptide representing the last 12 C-terminal amino acids of hirudin (Hir54-65) was (1) truncated from both its N-terminal and its C-terminal ends, or (2) substituted with Gly along residues 57-62, or (3) chemically modified to add (sulfation at Tyr63) or abolish (Asp and Glu modification with carbodiimide/glycinamide) its negatively charged side chains. The binding characteristics of these peptides to thrombin were investigated by chemical methods, and their corresponding anticoagulant activities were studied. Our results demonstrated the following: (1) the anticoagulant activities of hirudin C-terminal peptides were quantitatively related to their abilities to shield the five identified lysines of thrombin. The most potent peptide was sulfated Hir54-65 (S-Hir54-65) with an average binding affinity to the five lysines of 120 nM. A heptapeptide (Hir54-60) also displayed anticoagulant activity and thrombin binding ability at micromolar concentrations. (2) All active hirudin C-terminal peptides regardless of their sizes and potencies were shown to be capable of shielding the five lysines of thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of hirudin with the dysfunctional enzymes thrombin Quick I and II has been investigated. Natural and recombinant hirudin caused nonlinear competitive inhibition of thrombin Quick I. The results were consistent with thrombin Quick I existing in two forms that have different affinities for hirudin. The affinities of these forms for natural hirudin were respectively 10(4)- and 10(6)-fold lower than that of alpha-thrombin. In contrast, truncated hirudin molecules lacking the C-terminal tail of the molecule caused linear inhibition of thrombin Quick I. These results indicate that different modes of interaction of the two forms of thrombin Quick I with the C-terminal tail of hirudin were the cause of the nonlinear inhibition. Comparison of the dissociation constants of thrombin Quick I with the truncated and full-length forms of hirudin suggested that the interactions that normally occur between the C-terminal tail of hirudin and thrombin were completely disrupted with the low-affinity form of thrombin Quick I. Thrombin Quick II displayed an affinity for natural hirudin that was 10(3)-fold lower than that observed with alpha-thrombin. In contrast, it bound a mutant hirudin with altered N-terminal amino acids only 16-fold less tightly. These results are discussed in terms of structural alterations in the active-site cleft in thrombin Quick II.  相似文献   

19.
R R Lobb 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2572-2578
Incubation of bovine brain derived acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) with bovine or human thrombin, 0.5 NIH unit/mL, for 24 h at 37 degrees C results in cleavage of the mitogen, generating a 14-kilodalton fragment which has significantly reduced affinity for immobilized heparin as compared to aFGF, and is at least 50-fold less potent at stimulating mitogenesis. In addition, an 18 amino acid peptide, aFGF(123-140), is generated, identifying one of the thrombin cleavage sites as the Arg-122/Thr-123 bond. The peptide, aFGF(123-140), is neither mitogenic itself nor an inhibitor of the mitogenic activity of aFGF. The cleavage of aFGF by thrombin is inhibited by heparin (50 micrograms/mL) and is completely blocked by the irreversible thrombin inhibitors D-Phe-Pro-Arg chloromethyl ketone and hirudin. Incubation of aFGF with 50 units/mL thrombin at 37 degrees C results in rapid cleavage of the mitogen into several fragments. In contrast, incubation of bovine brain derived basic fibroblast growth factor with 1 unit/mL thrombin for 24 h, or 50 units/mL thrombin for 6 h, does not result in significant cleavage of mitogen. The results show that the C-terminal region of aFGF is of functional importance in both mitogenesis and heparin binding. Most importantly, a novel role for anionic heparin-binding growth factors and their fragments is indicated in physiologic and pathologic situations associated with thrombin generation.  相似文献   

20.
Like most metalloproteases, matrix metalloprotease 2 (MMP-2) is synthesized as a zymogen. MMP-2 propeptide plays a role in inhibition of catalytic activity through a cysteine-zinc ion pairing, disruption of which results in full enzyme activation. A variety of proteases have been shown to be involved in the activation of pro-MMP-2, including metalloproteases and serine proteases. In the previous study we showed that MMP-2 activation occurred via specific cleavages of the propeptide by thrombin followed by intermolecular autoproteolytic processing for full enzymatic activity. Thrombin also degraded MMP-2, but this degradation was reduced greatly under cell-associated conditions with a concomitant increase in activation, prompting us to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying thrombin-mediated MMP-2 activation. In the present study we demonstrate that heparan sulfate is essential for thrombin-mediated activation of pro-MMP-2. Binding of heparan sulfate to thrombin is primarily responsible for this activation process, presumably through conformational changes at the active site. Furthermore, interaction of MMP-2 with exosites 1 and 2 of thrombin is crucial for thrombin-mediated MMP-2 degradation, and inhibition of this interaction by heparan sulfate or hirudin fragment results in a decrease in MMP-2 degradation. Finally, we demonstrated interaction between exosite 1 and hemopexin-like domain of MMP-2, suggesting a regulatory role of hemopexin-like domain in MMP-2 degradation. Taken together, our experimental data suggest a novel regulatory mechanism of thrombin-dependent MMP-2 enzymatic activity by heparan sulfate proteoglycans.  相似文献   

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