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1.
The binding of 125I-transforming growth factors-beta 1 and beta 2 (TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2) to alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) was studied before and after reaction with plasmin, thrombin, trypsin, or methylamine. Complex formation between TGF-beta and native or reacted forms of alpha 2M was demonstrated by non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. Reaction of native alpha 2M with plasmin or methylamine markedly increased the binding of 125I-TGF-beta 1 and 125I-TGF-beta 2 to alpha 2M. The alpha 2M-plasmin/TGF-beta complexes were minimally dissociated by heparin. Reaction of alpha 2M with thrombin or trypsin reduced the binding of 125I-TGF-beta 1 and 125I-TGF-beta 2; the resulting complexes were readily dissociated by heparin. Complexes between TGF-beta 2 and native or reacted forms of alpha 2M were less dissociable by heparin than the equivalent complexes with TGF-beta 1. These studies demonstrate that the TGF-beta-binding activity of alpha 2M is significantly affected by plasmin, thrombin, trypsin and methylamine. Observations that alpha 2M-plasmin preferentially binds TGFs-beta suggest a mechanism by which alpha 2M may regulate availability of TGFs-beta to target cells in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
A monoclonal antibody was obtained from the fusion of spleen cells of mice, immunized with methylamine-treated alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M), with the myeloma cell line P3-X63-Ag8.653. A competitive binding assay demonstrated that the antibody was specific for a neoantigen expressed on alpha 2M when the inhibitor reacts with proteinases or with methylamine. When immobilized, the monoclonal antibody retained its ability to specifically bind alpha 2M-proteinase complexes or methylamine-treated alpha 2M, both of which could be quantitatively recovered from the immunoaffinity column by lowering the pH to 5.0. Binary alpha 2M-proteinase complexes of trypsin, plasmin, and thrombin, prepared by incubating large amounts of alpha 2M with a small amount of enzyme, were isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography. Each purified complex was characterized with regard to proteinase content, extent of alpha 2M subunit cleavage, extent of thiol ester hydrolysis, and extent of conformational change. Each complex contained 0.8-0.9 mol of proteinase/mol of inhibitor. In the alpha 2M-thrombin, alpha 2M-plasmin, and alpha 2M-trypsin complexes, approximately 50%, 60%, and 75% of the subunits are cleaved, respectively. Titration of sulfhydryl groups revealed that all purified binary complexes contained 2 +/- 0.5 mol of thiol/mol of complex, suggesting that each complex retains two intact thiol ester bonds. When the purified complexes were incubated with excess trypsin or with methylamine, an additional 1-2 mol of sulfhydryl/mol of complex could be titrated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The low level of enzymatic activity of certain alpha 2-macroglobulin-proteinase complexes could be important to the function of factor VIII/von Willebrand glycoprotein since it is especially sensitive to proteolytic cleavage. To test this possibility, complexes of alpha 2-macroglobulin with plasmin, trypsin, and thrombin were formed in at least a 2:1 molar ratio of alpha 2-macroglobulin:proteinase and tested for effects on the factor VIII procoagulant activity of the factor VIII/von Willebrand glycoprotein. Neither the alpha 2-macroglobulin-trypsin complex nor the alpha 2-macroglobulin-plasmin complex affected factor VIII procoagulant activity. The behavior of the alpha 2-macroglobulin-thrombin complex was different. When alpha 2-macroglobulin and thrombin were incubated in a mole ratio of 3:1 or less, factor VIII procoagulant activity was enhanced to about the same extent as with free thrombin. Even at a 24:1 mole ratio, the mixture could produce 45% of the increase in factor VIII activity obtained with free thrombin. The isolated alpha 2-macroglobulin-thrombin complex could also activate the factor VIII procoagulant function to about 45% of the level obtained with an identical amount of uncomplexed thrombin. Analysis of the alpha 2-macroglobulin-125I-labeled thrombin complexes by rechromatography or by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that this activation was not due to free thrombin. We conclude that the alpha 2-macroglobulin-thrombin complex retains sufficient proteolytic activity to activate the procoagulant function of factor VIII/von Willebrand glycoprotein despite the latter being a very large substrate, having an estimated molecular weight of 1-20 million.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Characterization of thrombin binding to alpha 2-macroglobulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The formation and structural characteristics of the human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M)-thrombin complex were studied by intrinsic protein fluorescence, sulfhydryl group titration, electrophoresis in denaturing and nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel systems, and in macromolecular inhibitor assays. The interaction between alpha 2M and thrombin was also assessed by comparison of sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoretic patterns of peptides produced by Staphylococcus aureus V-8 proteinase digests of denatured alpha 2M-125I-thrombin and alpha 2M-125I-trypsin complexes. In experiments measuring fluorescence changes and sulfhydryl group exposure caused by methylamine, we found that thrombin produced its maximum effects at a mole ratio of approximately 1.3:1 (thrombin:alpha 2M). Measurements of the ability of alpha 2M to bind trypsin after prior reaction with thrombin indicated that thrombin binds rapidly at one site on alpha 2M, but occupies the second site with some difficulty. Intrinsic fluorescence studies of trypsin binding to alpha 2M at pH 5.0, 6.5, and 8.0 not only revealed striking differences in trypsin's behavior over this pH range, but also some similarities between the behavior of thrombin and trypsin not heretofore recognized. Structural studies, using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to measure alpha 2M-125I-thrombin covalent complex formation, indicated that covalency reached a maximum at a mole ratio of approximately 1.5:1. At this ratio, only 1 mol of thrombin is bound covalently per mol of alpha 2M. These gel studies and those of proteolytic digests of denatured alpha 2M-125I-trypsin and alpha 2M-125I-thrombin complexes suggest that proteinases form covalent bonds with uncleaved alpha 2M subunits. The sum of our results is consistent with a mechanism of proteinase binding to alpha 2M in which the affinity of the proteinase for alpha 2M during an initial reversible interaction determines its binding ratio to the inhibitor.  相似文献   

6.
Human cationic (trypsin 1) and anionic (trypsin 2) trypsins were obtained by controlled activation of purified trypsinogens 1 and 2, respectively. The interactions of trypsin 1 and trypsin 2 with human alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1PI) were analysed and compared by studies in vitro. The enzymatic activity and inhibitory capacity measurements were assessed using Glp-Gly-Arg-Nan as substrate. The association rate constants showed that the inhibition of trypsin 2 occurred more than 10 times faster than that of trypsin 1. The equimolar complexes obtained between either trypsin and alpha 1PI were visualized by electrophoresis followed by immunoblotting. The inhibition of the two trypsins was temporary i.e. the complexes trypsin 1-alpha 1PI and trypsin 2-alpha 1PI broke down with time yielding inactive alpha 1PI (Mr 50,000) and active enzyme. But the stability time for trypsin 1-alpha 1PI was much larger than that of trypsin 2-alpha 1PI. In vivo, alpha 1PI is not able to control the activity of trypsin 1 except when alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) is already saturated. According to the delay times of inhibition calculated from normal concentrations in serum, alpha 1PI inhibits trypsin 2 as fast as alpha 2M inhibits trypsin 1. These results suggest that a significant role can be assigned to alpha 1PI in the inhibition of trypsin 2 in physiological conditions and of trypsin 1 in pathological ones.  相似文献   

7.
The unique steric inhibition of endopeptidases by human alpha(2)M (alpha(2)-macroglobulin) and the inactivation of the latter by methylamine were examined in relation to each other. Progressive binding of trypsin by alpha(2)M was closely correlated with the loss of the methylamine-reactive sites in alpha(2)M: for each trypsin molecule bound, two such sites were inactivated. The results further showed that, even at low proteinase/alpha(2)M ratios, no unaccounted loss of trypsin-binding capacity occurred. As alpha(2)M is bivalent for trypsin binding and no trypsin bound to electrophoretic slow-form alpha(2)M was observed, this indicates that the two sites must react (bind trypsin) in rapid succession. Reaction of [(14)C]methylamine with alpha(2)M was biphasic in time; in the initial rapid phase complex-formation with trypsin caused a largely increased incorporation of methylamine. In the subsequent slow phase trypsin had no such effect. These results prompted further studies on the kinetics of methylamine inactivation of alpha(2)M with time of methylamine treatment. It was found that conformational change of alpha(2)M and decrease in trypsin binding (activity resistant to soya-bean trypsin inhibitor) showed different kinetics. The latter decreased rapidly, following pseudo-first-order kinetics. Conformational change was much slower and followed complex kinetics. On the other hand, binding of (125)I-labelled trypsin to alpha(2)M did follow the same kinetics as the conformational change. This discrepancy between total binding ((125)I radioactivity) and trypsin-inhibitor-resistant binding of trypsin indicated formation of anomalous complexes, in which trypsin could still be inhibited by soya-bean trypsin inhibitor. Further examination confirmed that these complexes were proteolytically active towards haemoglobin and bound (125)I-labelled soya-bean trypsin inhibitor to the active site of trypsin. The inhibition by soya-bean trypsin inhibitor was slowed down as compared with reaction with free trypsin. The results are discussed in relation to the subunit structure of alpha(2)M and to the mechanism of formation of the complex.  相似文献   

8.
P A Roche  S V Pizzo 《Biochemistry》1987,26(2):486-491
When human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) binds proteinases, it undergoes subunit cleavage. Binding of small proteinases such as trypsin results in proteolysis of each of the four subunits of the inhibitor. By contrast, previous studies suggest that reaction of plasmin with alpha 2M results in cleavage of only two or three of the inhibitor subunits. In this paper, we demonstrate that the extent of subunit cleavage of alpha 2M is a function of plasmin concentration. When alpha 2M was incubated with a 2.5-fold excess of plasmin, half of the subunits were cleaved; however, at a 20-fold enzyme to inhibitor ratio, greater than 90% of the subunits were cleaved with no additional plasmin binding. This increased cleavage was catalyzed by free rather than bound plasmin. It is concluded that this "nonproductive" subunit cleavage is dependent upon the molar ratio of proteinase to inhibitor. The consequence of complete subunit cleavage on receptor recognition of alpha 2M-plasmin (alpha 2M-Pm) complexes was studied. Preparations of alpha 2M-Pm with only two cleaved subunits bound to the murine macrophage receptor with a Kd of 0.4 nM and 60 fmol of bound complex/mg of cell protein. When preparations of alpha 2-M-Pm with four cleaved subunits were studied, the Kd was unaltered but ligand binding increased to 140 fmol/mg of cell protein. The receptor binding behavior of the latter preparation is equivalent to that observed when alpha 2M is treated with small proteinases such as trypsin. This study suggests that receptor recognition site exposure is not complete in the alpha 2M-Pm complex with half of the subunits cleaved. Proteolytic cleavage of the remaining subunits of the inhibitor results in a further conformational change exposing the remaining receptor recognition sites.  相似文献   

9.
A slight decrease in pH below neutrality causes the dissociation of alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) into dimers formed of two disulfide-bonded subunits. Half-dissociation occurs at pH 6.30 (50 mM NaCl), as determined by gel filtration analysis. The dissociation can be reversed either by increasing the pH or the ionic strength. The ability of alpha 2 M half-molecules at pH 5.75 to bind chymotrypsin is not too different from that of the whole molecule at pH 7.5. Furthermore, the steady-state kinetic parameters toward chromogenic substrate of chymotrypsin bound to alpha 2 M half and whole molecules are quite identical. Likewise, the accessibility of trypsin toward soybean trypsin inhibitor is also fairly similar when involved in half or whole alpha 2 M complexes. These results are consistent with the idea that alpha 2 M-half molecules on chymotrypsin binding undergo a conformational change. This change can be observed by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

10.
Physical and chemical properties of human plasma alpha2-macroglobulin.   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Alpha2-M (alpha2-macroglobulin) was purified from human plasma by two different procedures. As well as having no detectable impurities by the usual criteria for testing the homogeneity of protein preparations, these alpha2M preparations showed a single component, after reduction in urea, of 185000 daltons by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of the alpha2M was found to be 718000 by sedimentation equilibrium experiments using the gravimetrically determined -v of 0.731 ml/g. The interaction of several proteinases with alpha2M was studied by using a novel discontinuous polyacrylamide-gel system, which showed clear separation of the enzyme-complexed alpha2M from the free alpha2M. These studies indicated that urokinase, as well as trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasmin and thrombin forms complexes with alphaM. The cleavage of the 185000-dalton subunit to a 85000-dalton species on interaction of trypsin with alpha2M was demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis after reduction of the alpha2M-trypsin complex in urea. The amino acid composition, carbohydrate content, absorption coefficient at 280 nm, the specific refractive increment and the sedimentation coefficient for these alpha2M preparations were measured. The stability of the trypsin-binding activity of the alpha2M preparations was also studied under several storage situations.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanism of inhibition of activated protein C by protein C inhibitor   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Protein C inhibitor isolated from human plasma inhibited thrombin, factor Xa, trypsin and chymotrypsin as well as activated protein C, but had very little effect on urokinase and plasmin. The inhibition constants (K1) of protein C inhibitor for activated protein C, thrombin and factor Xa were 5.6 X 10(-8) M, 6.7 X 10(-8) M and 3.1 X 10(-7) M, respectively. The second-order rate constant for inhibition of activated protein C by the inhibitor increased about 30-fold in the presence of an optimal heparin concentration (5-10 units/ml). The inhibition of activated protein C by plasma protein C inhibitor was also accelerated by heparin. When activated protein C (Mr = 62,000) was incubated with protein C inhibitor (Mr = 57,000), enzyme-inhibitor complexes with apparent Mr = 102,000 and 88,000 were observed in the nonreduced and the reduced samples, respectively, on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In addition to these complexes, a band of unbound enzyme and a band with Mr = 54,000 were detected. When 125I-labeled protein C inhibitor was exposed to activated protein C, the inhibitor band was converted to bands with apparent Mr = 102,000 and 54,000 in the nonreduced samples, as determined by autoradiography after gel electrophoresis in SDS. The band with Mr = 54,000 also appeared when the inhibitor reacted with other serine proteases. The activated protein C was released from the inactive complex by treatment with 1 M ammonia or hydroxylamine. This phenomenon was found by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to represent the dissociation of the enzyme-inhibitor complex by ammonia or hydroxylamine into the free enzyme and the proteolytically modified inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
A series of dihydropyrid-2-ones was synthesized and tested for inhibitory activity against serine protease enzymes. Moderate to low nanomolar inhibitory activities were obtained against thrombin and excellent selectivity against trypsin was observed.  相似文献   

13.
The partition of trypsin and pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI) in reaction mixtures with human serum was studied by electroimmunoassay and also by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. The same pattern of trypsin complexes with alpha2-macroglobulin and alpha1-antitrypsin was observed in the presence or absence of PSTI. When sufficient trypsin was added to saturate the alpha2-macroglobulin, more complex with alpha1-antitrypsin was formed. A small amount of PSTI-trypsin complex was formed only when large amounts of trypsin and PSTI were present. The majority of PSTI was found in the fractions containing alpha2-macroglobulin, indicating the formation of a PSTI-trypsin-alpha2-macroglobulin complex. The remaining PSTI was eluted as free inhibitor. Increasing the added PSTI increased the fraction eluted as free inhibitor. alpha1-Antitrypsin and alpha2-macroglobulin appear to be much stronger than PSTI in their competition for trypsin in reaction mixtures of human serum, trypsin and PSTI.  相似文献   

14.
The soybean vegetative storage protein genes (vspA, and vspB) are regulated in a complex manner developmentally and in response to external stimuli such as wounding and water deficit. The proteins accumulate to almost one-half the amount of soluble leaf protein when soybean plants are continually depodded and have been identified as storage proteins because of their abundance and pattern of expression in plant tissues. We have shown that purified VSP homodimers (VSP alpha and VSP beta) and heterodimers (VSP alpha/beta) possess acid phosphatase activity (alpha = 0.3-0.4 units/mg; beta = 2-4 units/mg; alpha/beta = 7-10 units/mg). Specific activities were determined by monitoring o-carboxyphenyl phosphate (0.7 mM) cleavage at pH 5.5 (VSP alpha) or pH 5.0 (VSP alpha/beta and VSP beta) in 0.15 M sodium acetate buffer at 25 degrees C. These enzymes are active over a broad pH range, maintaining greater than 40% of maximal activity from pH 4.0 to 6.5 and having maximal activity at pH 5.0-5.5. They are inactivated by sodium fluoride, sodium molybdate, and heating at 70 degrees C for 10 min. These phosphatases can liberate Pi from several different substrates, including napthyl acid phosphate, carboxyphenyl phosphate, sugar-phosphates, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate, ATP, ADP, PPi, and short chain polyphosphates. VSP alpha/beta cleaved phosphoenolpyruvate, ATP, ADP, PPi, and polyphosphates most efficiently. Apparent Km and Vmax values at 25 degrees C and pH 5.0 were 42 microM and 2.0 mumol/min/mg, 150 microM and 4.2 mumol/min/mg, and 420 microM and 4.1 mumol/min/mg, for tetrapolyphosphate, pyrophosphate, and phosphoenolpyruvate, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
Highly purified human alpha 2 M inhibits hepatocyte proliferation. 1 mg of alpha 2 M corresponds to 1 baby rat unit (BRU). alpha 2 M is bound to a low molecular weight glycopeptide, which is released during trypsinization of alpha 2 M. 3 micrograms of trypsin-treated alpha 2 M release 1 BRU. alpha 2 M and the glycopeptide have been shown to be identical, respectively, to high and low molecular weight components present in normal human plasma. Both components inhibit the G1-S transition of the hepatocyte cycle. alpha 2 M acts as an antagonist to the inhibitory effect of the glycopeptide when the molar ratio of trypsin to alpha 2 M is greater than 2.  相似文献   

16.
S L Gonias  S V Pizzo 《Biochemistry》1983,22(21):4933-4940
Human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) half-molecules were prepared by limited reduction and alkylation of the native protein. Reaction with plasmin resulted in nearly quantitative cleavage of the half-molecule Mr approximately 180000 subunits into Mr approximately 90000 fragments. Subunit cleavage was significantly less complete when plasmin was reacted with alpha 2M whole molecules. The plasmin and trypsin binding capacities of the two forms of alpha 2M were compared by using radioiodinated proteases. alpha 2M half-molecules bound an equivalent number of moles of plasmin or trypsin. Native unreduced alpha 2M bound only half as much plasmin as trypsin. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the two protease binding sites are adjacent in native alpha 2M. alpha 2M half-molecule-plasmin complexes reassociated less readily than half-molecule-trypsin complexes, supporting this interpretation. The frequency of covalent bond formation between plasmin and alpha 2M was considerably higher than that previously observed with other proteases. Approximately 80-90% of the plasmin that reacted with alpha 2M whole molecules or half-molecules became covalently bound. The reactivities of purified alpha 2M-plasmin complexes were compared with small and large substrates. Equivalent kcat/Km values were determined at 22 degrees C for the hydrolysis of H-D-Val-Leu-Lys-p-nitroanilide dihydrochloride by whole molecule-plasmin complex and half-molecule-plasmin complex (40 mM-1 s-1 and 39 mM-1 s-1, respectively, compared with 66 mM-1 s-1 determined for free plasmin).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Following determination of trypsin inhibitory activity, a serine protease inhibitor was purified and characterized from frog Duttaphrynus melanostictus serum. It was identified as serum albumin, with molecular weight of 67 kDa (DmA-serum). Different from bovine serum albumin, DmA-serum potently inhibited trypsin with similar K i values around 1.6 × 10−7 M. No inhibitory effect on thrombin, chymotrypsin, elastase and subtilisin was observed under the assay conditions. The N-terminal amino acid is EAEPHSRI. Subsequently, a protein with same N-terminal amino acid was purified from skin, termed as DmA-skin. However, DmA-skin is distinct from DmA-serum by binding of a haem b (0.5 mol/mol protein), and with low trypsin inhibitory activity. Frog albumin is distributed in frog skin and exhibited trypsin inhibitory activity, suggesting that it plays important roles in skin physiological functions, like water economy, metabolite exchange and osmoregulation, etc.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of trypsin, acrosin and a recently described trypsin-like protease from bovine sperm were studied on adenylate cyclase activity in membranes of human platelets. These proteases caused an immediate decrease in adenylate cyclase activity, which was independent of the platelet membrane concentration used and which was constant for up to 20 min of incubation at 25 degrees C. When the incubation was prolonged, the proteases eliminated their own inhibitory action as well as that of the inhibitory hormone epinephrine. The adenylate cyclase inhibition caused by the proteases was strictly dependent on the presence of GTP (EC50 approximately 0.1 microM), whereas in the absence of GTP only minor changes in enzyme activity were observed at the conditions and protease concentrations used. Maximal inhibition caused by the proteases was between 40% and 60%. Half-maximal inhibition by the purified proteases trypsin and acrosin was observed at about 30 ng/ml and 2 micrograms/ml respectively. Inhibition of platelet adenylate cyclase by the proteases was partially additive with that caused by epinephrine, while with thrombin no additivity was observed. The serine protease inhibitor leupeptin blocked the actions of the proteases when added simultaneously with the enzymes, but was ineffective when added later on. Treatment of platelet membranes with the alkylating N-ethylmaleimide at low concentrations and Mn2+ ions (greater than or equal to 1 mM), both agents known to abolish inhibition of adenylate cyclase via the inhibitory guanine-nucleotide-binding protein Gi, eliminated the inhibitory action of the proteases. The data indicate that trypsin and trypsin-like proteases have two opposite effects on the platelet adenylate cyclase system, the well-documented elimination of Gi action and, as shown here, an immediate activation of Gi with subsequent adenylate cyclase inhibition. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the activation of Gi caused by the proteases is due to an interaction of the proteases with specific cell-surface receptor sites in a manner similar to thrombin.  相似文献   

19.
Interaction of 125I-labeled human antithrombin III (125I-AT III) X protease complexes with bovine corneal endothelial cells has been studied in tissue culture. 125I-AT III does not bind to endothelial cells, but its complexes with either thrombin or trypsin bind specifically to the cultures. The binding of 125I-AT III X protease complexes is not via the moiety of the free antithrombin III (AT III) or the free protease, since neither AT III nor thrombin compete on the binding of 125I-AT III X thrombin complexes. Only unlabeled AT III X thrombin complexes compete on the binding of the iodinated ligand. 125I-AT III X trypsin complexes bind with a KD of 1.4 X 10(-7) M to high affinity-binding sites present on the cell surface of corneal endothelial cells. Saturation of binding to the cell surface is observed at a concentration of 2.5 X 10(-7) M 125I-AT III X trypsin complexes and the number of binding sites per cell is about 4 X 10(4). The cell surface binding reaches a maximum by 15 min and then decreases with time. The cells, when incubated at 37 degrees C, appear to internalize the bound complexes by adsorptive endocytosis which proceeds at a rate of 0.5-0.8 pmole/1 X 10(6) cells/h. The internalization process of 125I-AT III X protease complexes is saturated at a concentration of 2.5 X 10(-7) M. Since the cells release 125I-labeled material into the extracellular media which cannot be precipitated by trichloroacetic acid (TCA), it probably represents degradation of 125I-AT III X protease complexes into small fragments at a linear rate of about 0.5 pmole/1 X 10(6) cells/h. The described process of AT III X protease complexes binding, internalization and subsequent degradation by corneal endothelial cells may represent a clearing mechanism for extracellular AT III X protease complexes formed under pathological conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Binding and endocytosis of alpha 2-macroglobulin-plasmin complexes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
K A Ney  S Gidwitz  S V Pizzo 《Biochemistry》1985,24(17):4586-4592
The clearance of 125I-labeled alpha 2-macroglobulin-plasmin complexes (125I-alpha 2M-PM) from mouse circulation is slower than that of 125I-labeled alpha 2M-methylamine complexes (125I-alpha 2M-CH3NH2). In addition, clearance of 125I-alpha 2M-PM is biphasic, but that of 125I-alpha 2M-CH3NH2 follows simple first-order kinetics. Treatment of alpha 2M-PM with trypsin yields a complex that clears like alpha 2M-CH3NH2. Complexes of alpha 2M with Val442-plasmin (alpha 2M-Val442-PM) were prepared; alpha 2M-Val442-PM has a stoichiometry of 2 mol of Val442-PM to 1 mol of alpha 2M and also clears like alpha 2M-CH3NH2. In vitro 4 degrees C binding inhibition studies with mouse peritoneal macrophages show that alpha 2M-CH3NH2, alpha 2M-PM, trypsin-treated alpha 2M-PM, and alpha 2M-Val442-PM bind with the same affinity, apparent Kd = 0.4 nM. The binding isotherms at 4 degrees C are the same for 125I-alpha 2M-CH3NH2, 125I-alpha 2M-PM, and 125I-trypsin-treated alpha 2M-PM in both mouse peritoneal macrophages and 3T3-L1 fibroblasts. The Scatchard plots for the binding isotherms in macrophages were curved; those in 3T3-L1 fibroblasts were linear with an apparent Kd of 0.48 nM and a receptor activity of 140 fmol/mg of cell protein for alpha 2M-CH3NH2, an apparent Kd of 0.29 nM and a receptor activity of 110 fmol/mg of cell protein for alpha 2M-PM, and an apparent Kd of 0.35 nM and a receptor activity of 210 fmol/mg of cell protein for trypsin-treated alpha 2M-PM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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