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1.
Bradykinin is a potent inflammatory mediator that induces vasodilation, vascular leakage, and pain sensations. This short-lived peptide hormone is liberated from its large precursor protein high molecular weight kininogen (HK) through the contact system cascade involving coagulation factor XII and plasma kallikrein. Although bradykinin release is well established in vitro, the factors and mechanisms controlling bradykinin generation in vivo are still incompletely understood. In this study we demonstrate that binding of HK to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) of the heparan and chondroitin sulfate type efficiently interferes with bradykinin release in plasma and on endothelial surfaces. Proteolytic bradykinin production on endothelial cells is restored following degradation of cell surface GAG through heparinase. Alternatively, application of HK fragments D3 or light chain, which compete with uncleaved HK for cell binding, promote kininogen proteolysis and bradykinin release. Intravital microscopy revealed that HK fragments increase bradykinin-mediated mesentery microvascular leakage. Topical application of D3 or light chain enhanced bradykinin generation and edema formation in the mouse skin. Our results demonstrate that bradykinin formation is controlled by HK binding to and detachment from GAGs. Separation of the precursor from cell surfaces is a prerequisite for its efficient proteolytic processing. By this means, fragments arising from HK processing propagate bradykinin generation, revealing a novel regulatory level for the kallikrein-kinin system.  相似文献   

2.
Human high Mr kininogen was purified from normal plasma in 35% yield. The purified high Mr kininogen appeared homogeneous on polyacrylamide gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and mercaptoethanol and gave a single protein band with an apparent Mr = 110,000. Using sedimentation equilibrium techniques, the observed Mr was 108,000 +/- 2,000. Human plasma kallikrein cleaves high Mr kininogen to liberate kinin and give a kinin-free, two-chain, disulfide-linked molecule containing a heavy chain of apparent Mr = 65,000 and a light chain of apparent Mr = 44,000. The light chain is histidine-rich and exhibits a high affinity for negatively charged materials. The isolated alkylated light chain quantitatively retains the procoagulant activity of the single-chain parent molecule. 125I-Human high Mr kininogen undergoes cleavage in plasma during contact activation initiated by addition of kaolin. This cleavage, which liberates kinin and gives a two-chain, disulfide-linked molecule, is dependent upon the presence of prekallikrein and Factor XII (Hageman factor) in plasma. Addition of purified plasma kallikrein to normal plasma or to plasmas deficient in prekallikrein or Factor XII in the presence or absence of kaolin results in cleavage of high Mr kininogen and kinin formation.  相似文献   

3.
By introduction of stepwise DEAE Sephadex A-50 and copper-Chelating Sepharose 6B column chromatographies, about 18.5 mg of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) composed of a single polypeptide chain was obtained from 500 ml of porcine plasma. Molecular weights of reduced or non-reduced preparation were estimated to be 110 kDa and 116 kDa, respectively, by SDS–PAGE. Using the preparation, cleavage of HK by porcine plasma kallikrein (KK) was investigated. A single polypeptide HK was cleaved into two chains cross-linked by disulfide bond(s), accompanying the release of kinin. Further degradation was not observed. Molecular weights of heavy-chain (H-chain) and light-chain (L-chain) were estimated to be 61 kDa and 56 kDa, respectively, by SDS–PAGE. The amino- (N-) terminal sequences of intact HK, reduced and carboxymethylated- (RCM-) H-chain, RCM-L-chain and the peptide around the kinin moiety obtained by BrCN digestion were determined. Their sequences were highly homologous with those of bovine or human HK. These results indicate that plasma KK first cleaved the Arg-Ser bond of HK, and formed nicked HK. The second cleavage yielded bradykinin (BK) and kinin-free protein, which was apparently of equal size to the nicked HK. The structure of HK was from the N-terminus to the carboxy- (C-) terminus, H-chain-BK-L-chain.  相似文献   

4.
Bradykinin (BK), generated from high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK) is the major mediator of swelling attacks in hereditary angioedema (HAE), a disease associated with C1-inhibitor deficiency. Plasma kallikrein, activated by factor XIIa, is responsible for most of HK cleavage. However other proteases, which activate during episodes of angioedema, might also contribute to BK production. The lectin pathway of the complement system activates after infection and oxidative stress on endothelial cells generating active serine proteases: MASP-1 and MASP-2. Our aim was to study whether activated MASPs are able to digest HK to release BK. Initially we were trying to find potential new substrates of MASP-1 in human plasma by differential gel electrophoresis, and we identified kininogen cleavage products by this proteomic approach. As a control, MASP-2 was included in the study in addition to MASP-1 and kallikrein. The proteolytic cleavage of HK by MASPs was followed by SDS-PAGE, and BK release was detected by HPLC. We showed that MASP-1 was able to cleave HK resulting in BK production. MASP-2 could also cleave HK but could not release BK. The cleavage pattern of MASPs is similar but not strictly identical to that of kallikrein. The catalytic efficiency of HK cleavage by a recombinant version of MASP-1 and MASP-2 was about 4.0×10(2) and 2.7×10(2) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. C1-inhibitor, the major inhibitor of factor XIIa and kallikrein, also prevented the cleavage of HK by MASPs. In all, a new factor XII- and kallikrein-independent mechanism of bradykinin production by MASP-1 was demonstrated, which may contribute to the pro-inflammatory effect of the lectin pathway of complement and to the elevated bradykinin levels in HAE patients.  相似文献   

5.
We have recently demonstrated that human high molecular weight kininogen (HMWK) is a pro-cofactor that is cleaved by kallikrein to yield a two-chain cofactor (HMWKa) and the nanopeptide bradykinin. This proteolysis enhances its association with an activating surface, an event necessary for expression of its cofactor activity. We now report that factor XIa is capable of hydrolyzing HMWK and releasing bradykinin in a purified system as well as cleaving and inactivating HMWK in a plasma environment during the contact-activation process. The profile of proteolysis differs from that produced by kallikrein and by factor XIIa in that the first cleavage by factor XIa yields 75- and 45-kDa polypeptides, whereas both factor XIIa and kallikrein initially produce 65- and 56-kDa species. Further proteolysis by all three enzymes eventually produces similar heavy chains (Mr = 65,000) and light chains (Mr = 45,000). However, the amount of factor XIa generated in plasma during contact activation further degrades the light chain of HMWK, eventually destroying its coagulant activity. Furthermore, in a purified system, enhancement of the degradation of HMWK coagulant activity by factor XIa was achieved when kallikrein was included in the incubation mixture, suggesting that the preferred substrate for factor XIa is the active form of HMWK (HMWKa), and not the pro-cofactor. These data suggest that factor XIa has the potential to act as a regulator of contact-activated coagulation by virtue of its ability to destroy the cofactor function of HMWK after its generation by either kallikrein, factor XIIa, or to a lesser extent, factor XIa, itself.  相似文献   

6.
Many proteases secreted by pathogenic bacteria can affect seriously on hemostatic system. We have reported that an extracellular zinc metalloprotease (named vEP-45) from Vibrio vulnificus ATCC29307 activates prothrombin to active thrombin, leading the formation of fibrin clot. In this study, the effects of vEP-45 on the intrinsic pathway of coagulation and the kallikrein/kinin system were examined. The protease could activate proteolytically clotting factor zymogens, including FXII, FXI, FX, and prothrombin, to their functional enzymes in vitro and plasma milieu. In addition, it could cleave plasma prekallikrein (PPK) to form an active kallikrein as well as actively digest high-molecular weight kininogen (HK), probably producing bradykinin. In fact, vEP-45 could induce a vascular permeability in a dose-dependent manner in vivo. Taken together, the results demonstrate that vEP-45 can activate plasma contact system by cleaving key zymogen molecules, participating in the intrinsic pathway of coagulation and the kallikrein/kinin system.  相似文献   

7.
Low molecular weight kininogen from human plasma was subjected to limited proteolysis with trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase, and bromelain, and the resulting fragments of 20,000 or 40,000 Da were isolated. Amino-terminal sequence analysis of the fragments disclosed for the various proteinases eight independent cleavage sites distinct from the typical kallikrein cleavage sites flanking the kinin region. All the identified cleavage sites cluster in two stretches of 11-12 residues of the kininogen heavy chain. These short segments represent the primary attack sites for proteinases ("proteinase-sensitive regions") in the heavy chain portion of human low molecular weight kininogen. The amino acid sequences of the two proteinase-sensitive regions are mutually homologous; they are further characterized by the presence of a single copy each of the consensus tetrapeptide Cys-X-Gly-Cys known to form a narrow disulfide loop (Kellermann, J., Thelen, C., Lottspeich, F., Henschen, A., Vogel, R., and Müller-Esterl, W. (1987) Biochem. J. 247, 15-21). The proteinase-sensitive regions are located at the junctions of the three cystatin-like domains constituting the kininogen heavy chain. Proteolytic cleavage at the sensitive regions dissects the kininogen heavy chain and releases single domains of 20,000 Da and combined domains of 40,000 Da which can function as cysteine proteinase inhibitors. The presence of kininogen heavy chain domains in plasma samples under pathologic conditions suggests that cleavage of the proteinase-sensitive regions might also occur in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Trypanosoma cruzi activates the kinin pathway through the activity of its major cysteine proteinase, cruzipain. Because kininogen molecules may be displayed on cell surfaces by binding to glycosaminoglycans, we examined whether the ability of cruzipain to release kinins from high molecular weight kininogen (HK) is modulated by heparan sulfate (HS). Kinetic assays show that HS reduces the cysteine proteinase inhibitory activity (K(i app)) of HK about 10-fold. Conversely, the catalytic efficiency of cruzipain on kinin-related synthetic fluorogenic substrates is enhanced up to 6-fold in the presence of HS. Analysis of the HK breakdown products generated by cruzipain indicated that HS changes the pattern of HK cleavage products. Direct measurements of bradykinin demonstrated an up to 35-fold increase in cruzipain-mediated kinin liberation in the presence of HS. Similarly, kinin release by living trypomastigotes increased up to 10-fold in the presence of HS. These studies suggest that the efficiency of T. cruzi to initiate kinin release is potently enhanced by the mutual interactions between cruzipain, HK, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans.  相似文献   

9.
Two peptides exhibiting kinin activity in an isolated rat uterus assay were purified from pasteurized skim bovine milk. The amino acid sequence of the more prominent peptide was found to be that of bradykinin. Partially purified kinin preparations were also obtained from N-tosyl-L-phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone-treated trypsin digests of non-fat dry milk and insoluble lactalbumin. The application of fast atom bombardment/mass spectrometry permitted detection of the bradykinin protonated molecular ion in each of these samples. Collision-activated decomposition of the ion of m/z 1061 confirmed it to be the protonated molecular ion of bradykinin. Fast atom bombardment/mass spectrometry analysis further confirmed the occurrence of bradykinin in a pancreatic kallikrein digest of a partially purified bovine milk kininogen preparation. In apparent contrast with bovine plasma kininogens, the forms of kininogen which occur in milk include a high Mr kininogen (Mr greater than 68,000) and a low Mr kininogen (Mr 16,000-17,000). Kinin formation from the high Mr kininogen is catalyzed by porcine pancreatic kallikrein or trypsin.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated in detail the cleavage of human high molecular weight (HMW) kininogen by human plasma kallikrein and revealed the formation of a nicked kininogen and a novel kinin-free protein (KFP) as intermediate cleavage products. The cleavage of a single chain HMW kininogen (Mr=120,000) by plasma kallikrein was a three-step reaction. The first cleavage yielded a nicked kininogen composed of two disulfide-linked 62,000 and 56,000 daltons chains. The second cleavage yielded kinin and an intermediate kinin-free protein, KFP-I, which was apparently of equal size to the nicked kininogen. The third cleavage yielded a stable kinin-free protein, KFP-II, composed of two disulfide-linked 62,000 and 45,000 daltons chains. The liberation of an 8,000 daltons fragment was identified when the 56,000 daltons chain isolated by SP-Sephadex C-50 chromatography of reduced and alkylated KFP-I was cleaved by plasma kallikrein into the 45,000 daltons chain. Although the antiserum against HMW kininogen cross-reacted with low molecular weight (LMW) kininogen, the antiserum against the 45,000 daltons chain was specific for HMW kininogen. These results suggest that the antigenic determinant groups common to HMW and LMW kininogens are located in the 62,000 daltons heavy chain, while those specific for HMW kininogen are located in the 45,000 daltons light chain, which is known to retain blood coagulation activity.  相似文献   

11.
The ratio of kininogen that is substrate of plasma kallikrein to kininogen, which is not substrate of plasma kallikrein in canine plasma, was about 1:3.6 by differential assay of kininogens. When the plasma was gel-filtered through a column of Sephacryl S-300 superfine, two fractions, which released kinin by trypsin, were obtained. These results indicate that two kininogens with different molecular weights are present in the plasma and they show different susceptibility to plasma kallikrein. One kininogen was purified by ion-exchange and zinc-chelating affinity chromatographies. Purified kininogen showed a single band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing condition and its molecular weight was 125 kDa. Released kinin from the kininogen by trypsin was bradykinin. The kininogen inhibited papain and ficin but did not inhibit bromelain at the concentration used. The kininogen bound to carboxymethylated-papain and this binding was dissociated by 3M NaSCN. Canine plasma shortened the abnormal clotting time of human high molecular weight kininogen-deficint plasma. The kininogen also shortened the abnormal clotting time of the plasma. From these results, the purified kininogen was high molecular weight kininogen and it was multi-functional protein.  相似文献   

12.
From the homogenate of rat submaxillary gland, two kinds of serine proteinases, named tentatively proteinases A and B, were isolated and their chemical properties and activities toward rat kininogens were examined, in comparison with those of submaxillary kallikrein. Proteinase A with Mr of 28,200 rapidly cleaved high-molecular-weight (HMW) kininogen into a protein of 67 kDa, which retained thiol-proteinase inhibitory activity, but had lost the correcting activity of HMW kininogen on the prolonged clotting time of Fitzgerald trait plasma. It liberated bradykinin from HMW kininogen but did not liberate kinin from T-kininogen and did not degrade T-kininogen. On the other hand, proteinase B with Mr of 30,400 showed a very weak activity for the liberation of kinin from T-kininogen and the cleavage of T-kininogen at pH 8.0. However, the enzyme extensively degraded T-kininogen at pH 4.5. Proteinase B also degraded HMW kininogen at pH 4.5 and pH 8.0, but liberated bradykinin only at pH 8.0. Thiol-proteinase inhibitory activities of HMW kininogen and T-kininogen were inactivated after the incubation with proteinase B at pH 4.5 but not at pH 8.0, while the correcting activity of HMW kininogen on the Fitzgerald trait plasma was inactivated at pH 4.5 and 8.0. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequences of proteinases A and B were different from each other, and distinguishable with those of serine proteinases in rat submaxillary gland so far reported. These results provide evidence that in addition to the known kallikrein, there exist at least two kinds of serine proteinases in rat submaxillary gland, both of which liberate bradykinin from rat HMW kininogen at pH 8.0 and modulate the functional activities of HMW kininogen and T-kininogen, degrading these proteins at pH 8.0 or 4.5.  相似文献   

13.
A highly purified preparation of low molecular weight kininogen (LMrK) was isolated from the plasminogen-free rabbit blood plasma, using chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B, gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 34 and Sephadex G-100 as well as gradient chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column. The yield of the 320-fold purified LMrK was 16%. Trypsin released 13-14 micrograms-eq. of bradykinin (BK) from 1 mg of LMrK or 0.85-0,95 mol of BK per mol of kininogen. Rabbit LMrK consists of one polypeptide chain of Mr 69 000 and pI 4.63. Porcine pancreatic kallikrein splits off kinin from the LMrK polypeptide chain by disrupting two peptide bonds resulting in the formation of S-S-bound two chain molecule. After reduction of the S-S bonds by dithioerithritol the latter is separated into a heavy (Mr 61 000) and light (Mr 6 800) chains. A biologically active peptide was isolated from the products of CNBr cleavage of LMrK. This peptide consists of Lys-BK elongated from the C-terminal with several amino acid residues. Rabbit LMrK closely resembles human LMrK in terms of Mr, pI and location of the kinin fragment in the protein molecule.  相似文献   

14.
Kallikreins cleave plasma kininogens to release the bioactive peptides bradykinin (BK) or kallidin (Lys-BK). These peptides then activate widely disseminated B2 receptors with consequences that may be either noxious or beneficial. We used cultured cells to show that kallikrein can bypass kinin release to activate BK B2 receptors directly. To exclude intermediate kinin release or kininogen uptake from the cultured medium, we cultured and maintained cells in medium entirely free of animal proteins. We compared the responses of stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells that express human B2 receptors (CHO B2) and cells that coexpress angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) as well (CHO AB). We found that BK (1 nM or more) and tissue kallikrein (1-10 nM) both significantly increased release of arachidonic acid beyond unstimulated baseline level. An enzyme-linked immunoassay for kinin established that kallikrein did not release a kinin from CHO cells. We confirmed the absence of kininogen mRNA with RT-PCR to rule out kininogen synthesis by CHO cells. We next tested an ACE inhibitor for enhanced BK receptor activation in the absence of kinin release and synthesized an ACE-resistant BK analog as a control for these experiments. Enalaprilat (1 microM) potentiated kallikrein (100 nM) in CHO AB cells but was ineffective in CHO B2 cells that do not bear ACE. We concluded that kallikrein activated B2 receptors without releasing a kinin. Furthermore, inhibition of ACE enhanced the receptor activation by kallikrein, an action that may contribute to the manifold therapeutic effects of ACE inhibitors.  相似文献   

15.
Kininogens are multifunctional proteins involved in a variety of regulatory processes including the kinin-formation cascade, blood coagulation, fibrynolysis, inhibition of cysteine proteinases etc. A working hypothesis of this work was that the properties of kininogens may be altered by oxidation of their methionine residues by reactive oxygen species that are released at the inflammatory foci during phagocytosis of pathogen particles by recruited neutrophil cells. Two methionine-specific oxidizing reagents, N-chlorosuccinimide (NCS) and chloramine-T (CT), were used to oxidize the high molecular mass (HK) and low molecular mass (LK) forms of human kininogen. A nearly complete conversion of methionine residues to methionine sulfoxide residues in the modified proteins was determined by amino acid analysis. Production of kinins from oxidized kininogens by plasma and tissue kallikreins was significantly lower (by at least 70%) than that from native kininogens. This quenching effect on kinin release could primarily be assigned to the modification of the critical Met-361 residue adjacent to the internal kinin sequence in kininogen. However, virtually no kinin could be formed by human plasma kallikrein from NCS-modified HK. This observation suggests involvement of other structural effects detrimental for kinin production. Indeed, NCS-oxidized HK was unable to bind (pre)kallikrein, probably due to the modification of methionine and/or tryptophan residues at the region on the kininogen molecule responsible for the (pro)enzyme binding. Tests on papain inhibition by native and oxidized kininogens indicated that the inhibitory activity of kininogens against cysteine proteinases is essentially insensitive to oxidation.  相似文献   

16.
We used cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) as a model of activation of the contact system and investigated the involvement of the plasma and tissue kallikrein-kinin systems (KKS) in this process. Circulating levels of bradykinin and kallidin and their metabolites, plasma and tissue kallikrein, low and high molecular weight kininogen, and kallistatin were measured before, during, and 1, 4, and 10 h after CPB in subjects undergoing cardiac surgery. Bradykinin peptide levels increased 10- to 20-fold during the first 10 min, returned toward basal levels by 70 min of CPB, and remained 1.2- to 2.5-fold elevated after CPB. Kallidin peptide levels showed little change during CPB, but they were elevated 1.7- to 5.2-fold after CPB. There were reductions of 80 and 60% in plasma and tissue kallikrein levels, respectively, during the first minute of CPB. Kininogen and kallistatin levels were unchanged. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition did not amplify the increase in bradykinin levels during CPB. Aprotinin administration prevented activation of the KKS. The changes in circulating kinin and kallikrein levels indicate activation of both the plasma and tissue KKS during activation of the contact system by CPB.  相似文献   

17.
Components of kinin-forming systems operating at inflammatory sites are likely to interact with elastase that is released by recruited neutrophils and may, at least temporarily, constitute the major proteolytic activity present at these sites. The aim of this work was to determine the effect of kininogen degradation by human neutrophil elastase (HNE) on kinin generation by tissue and plasma kallikreins. We show that the digestion of both low molecular mass (LK) and high molecular mass (HK) forms of human kininogen by HNE renders them essentially unsusceptible to processing by human urinary kallikrein (tissue-type) and also significantly quenches the kinin release from HK by plasma kallikrein. Studies with synthetic model heptadecapeptide substrates, ISLMKRPPGFSPFRSSR and SLMKRPPGFSPFRSSRI, confirmed the inability of tissue kallikrein to process peptides at either termini of the internal kinin sequence, while plasma kallikrein was shown to release the kinin C-terminus relatively easily. The HNE-generated fragments of kininogens were separated by HPLC and the fractions containing internal kinin sequences were identified by a kinin-specific immunoenzymatic test after trypsin digestion. These fractions were analyzed by electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry. In this way, multiple peptides containing the kinin sequence flanked by only a few amino acid residues at each terminus were identified in elastase digests of both LK and HK. These results suggest that elastase may be involved in quenching the kinin-release cascade at the late stages of the inflammatory reaction.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibition of cell adhesion by high molecular weight kininogen   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
An anti-cell adhesion globulin was purified from human plasma by heparin-affinity chromatography. The purified globulin inhibited spreading of osteosarcoma and melanoma cells on vitronectin, and of endothelial cells, platelets, and mononuclear blood cells on vitronectin or fibrinogen. It did not inhibit cell spreading on fibronectin. The protein had the strongest antiadhesive effect when preadsorbed onto the otherwise adhesive surfaces. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed that the globulin is cleaved (kinin-free) high molecular weight kininogen (HKa). Globulin fractions from normal plasma immunodepleted of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) or from an individual deficient of HK lacked adhesive activity. Uncleaved single-chain HK preadsorbed at neutral pH, HKa preadsorbed at pH greater than 8.0, and HKa degraded further to release its histidine-rich domain had little anti-adhesive activity. These results indicate that the cationic histidine-rich domain is critical for anti-adhesive activity and is somehow mobilized upon cleavage. Vitronectin was not displaced from the surface by HKa. Thus, cleavage of HK by kallikrein results in both release of bradykinin, a potent vasoactive and growth-promoting peptide, and formation of a potent anti-adhesive protein.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of the contact system has two classical consequences: initiation of the intrinsic pathway of coagulation, and cleavage of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) leading to the release of bradykinin, a potent proinflammatory peptide. In human plasma, activation of the contact system at the surface of significant bacterial pathogens was found to result in further HK processing and bacterial killing. A fragment comprising the D3 domain of HK is generated, and within this fragment a sequence of 26 amino acids is mainly responsible for the antibacterial activity. A synthetic peptide covering this sequence kills several bacterial species, also at physiological salt concentration, as effectively as the classical human antibacterial peptide LL-37. Moreover, in an animal model of infection, inhibition of the contact system promotes bacterial dissemination and growth. These data identify a novel and important role for the contact system in the defence against invasive bacterial infection.  相似文献   

20.
It has been proposed that a cysteine proteinase inhibitor (CPI) found in the ascitic fluid of Sarcoma 180 tumor-bearing mice is a kind of kininogen (Itoh, N., Yokota, S., Takagishi, U., Hatta, A., and Okamaoto, H. (1987) Cancer Res. 47, 5560-5565). The first 40 NH2-terminal residues and 54 residues of the COOH-terminal sequence, including the bradykinin moiety of highly purified ascites CPI, were determined and compared with those of mammalian low molecular weight kininogens (LMWK). The significant identity between these amino acid sequences with those of other mammalian LMWKs suggests that ascites CPI corresponds precisely to mouse LMWK. This kininogen has a light chain composed of 43 amino acid residues, which contains a unique Met-Ala-Arg-bradykinin sequence. Hydroxyproline, which was recently identified in the bradykinin sequence of kininogen from the ascitic fluid of a cancer patient, was not found in the kinin moiety of this mouse kininogen. Among purified glandular kallikreins from human, hog, rat, and mouse, only mouse submaxillary gland kallikrein was able to release bradykinin from this kininogen. Kinetic studies using a newly synthesized fluorogenic substrate, N-t-butoxycarbonyl-Met-Ala-Arg-MCA, revealed that mouse kallikrein hydrolyzes this substrate approximately 80-fold faster than does hog kallikrein, suggesting that the unique Met-Ala-Arg-bradykinin sequence is responsible for the varied susceptibility of mouse kininogen to different kallikreins.  相似文献   

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