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1.
Studies on the glutamine substrate specificities of human plasma factor XIIIa and guinea pig liver transglutaminase have been made using variants of the synthetic peptide substrate, Ser-Val-Leu-Ser-Leu-Ser-Gln-Ser-Lys-Val-Leu-Pro-Val-Pro-Glu. The sequence of this effective peptide substrate corresponds to the primary site of factor XIIIa-catalyzed amine incorporation into beta-casein, the most sensitive known macromolecular substrate for this enzyme (Gorman, J.J., and Folk, J.E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 419-427). Variations in specificity observed with factor XIIIa for peptides containing single substitutions and multiple substitutions in this sequence are indications that several important determinants for enzyme recognition are contained therein. Among these are several of the hydrophobic amino acid residues and the lysine residue. Less pronounced changes in specificity occur with the liver enzyme and the differences in effects of the various substitutions reveal important differences in specificity requirements of factor XIIIa and the liver enzyme. Comparisons of the activities of the enzymes toward the synthetic peptides to their activities toward macromolecular substrates suggest that higher order macromolecular structural features contribute to specificity.  相似文献   

2.
Thrombin activation of platelets induces the release of a high molecular weight glycoprotein, thrombospondin. On treatment with factor XIII transglutaminase and [3H]putrescine, thrombospondin undergoes specific incorporation of this labeled amine, with 2-3 mol of putrescine being incorporated per mol of thrombospondin. Analysis of plasmin digests of [3H]putrescine-thrombospondin showed that the Mr 53,000-core peptide contains the glutamine site for amine incorporation. In the absence of amine substrate, thrombospondin was found to provide both donor (glutamine) and acceptor (lysine) sites for intermolecular cross-links by factors XIIIa, and high molecular weight protein complexes were formed. Homopolymers of thrombospondin were also observed by electron microscopy. Thrombin-cleaved thrombospondin has more cross-linking sites accessible for [3H]putrescine incorporation or for cross-linkage to itself than does the uncleaved native protein. Examination of thrombospondin cross-linkage in the presence of other protein substrates (fibronectin, collagen, fibrinogen, and von Willebrand factor) for factor XIIIa, resulted in reduced thrombospondin polymer formation. Electron microscopy and autoradiography of fibrin clots formed in the presence of 125I-thrombospondin showed an association of thrombospondin with fibrin fibrils. However, confirmation that this association involves covalent epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysyl cross-links between thrombospondin and fibrin was not obtained.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, we have investigated the interactions of a Staphylococcal recombinant fibronectin-binding protein A (rFnbA) with fibronectin, fibrinogen, and fibrin. Using analytical size-exclusion chromatography, we evaluated the stoichiometry of reversible binding of FnbA to fibronectin and demonstrated that, in solution, it can accommodate at least two molecules of fibronectin. Results of ELISA experiments demonstrated that rFnbA binds with equally high affinity to both immobilized fibrinogen and fibrin. When included into a thrombin-induced fibrin polymerization reaction, rFnbA strongly inhibited fibrin assembly in a dose-dependent manner. In this study, we have shown that rFnbA can act as a substrate for coagulation factor XIIIa. Factor XIIIa catalyzes the incorporation of amine donor (dansylacadaverine) and amine acceptor (peptide patterned on the N-terminal sequence of fibronectin) synthetic probes into rFnbA, suggesting that it serves as a bifunctional substrate containing reactive glutamine and lysine residues. We have demonstrated that the reversible complex formed by rFnbA and fibronectin or rFnbA and fibrin is covalently stabilized by the transglutaminase action of factor XIIIa. Incubation of rFnbA in the presence of either of its ligands and factor XIIIa results in the introduction of intermolecular epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine isopeptide bond(s) and the formation of high molecular mass heteropolymers. These findings suggest a novel mechanism by which pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus may utilize the transglutaminase activity of factor XIIIa for attachment to soluble proteins, cell surfaces, and matrixes.  相似文献   

4.
Heat denatured type I and type III calf skin collagen were found to be substrates for guinea pig liver transglutaminase (R-glutaminyl-peptide:amine gamma-glutamyl-yltransferase, EC 2.3.2.13) but not for active plasma factor XIII (factor XIIIa). Liver transglutaminase was shown to catalyse incorporation of 14C-putrescine into subunits of denatured collagen of both types, cross-linking of the latter into high molecular weight polymers and their co-cross-linking to fibrin and fibrinogen. Factor XIIIa is inactive in these respects. None of these reactions was catalysed by liver transglutaminase and plasma factor XIIIa when nondenatured collagens both soluble or in the forms of reconstituted fibrils served as substrates. Some cross-linking of cleavage products of collagen type I (obtained by treatment with collagenase from human neutrophiles) was induced by liver transglutaminase and factor XIIIa. The results indicate that although appropriate glutamine and lysine residues for a epsilon-(gamma-glutamine) lysine cross-linked formation are present in collagen, the native conformation of collagen prevents the action of liver transglutaminase and factor XIIIa.  相似文献   

5.
Biotinylated peptides Biot-Gln-Gln-Ile-Val and Biot-epsilon-Aca-Gln-Gln-Ile-Val were shown to act as acceptor substrates for amines in reactions catalyzed by both tissue transglutaminase and coagulation factor XIIIa. Moreover, the peptides could be employed for specifically blocking the potential amine donor sites of protein substrates participating in biological cross-linking with these enzymes. The presence of the biotin label allowed for ready detectability of the marked donor substrates during the cross-linking of crystallins in lens homogenate by the intrinsic transglutaminase and that of the alpha chains of human fibrin by factor XIIIa.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian transglutaminase (TGase) catalyzes covalent cross-linking of peptide-bound lysine residues or incorporation of primary amines to limited glutamine residues in substrate proteins. Using an unbiased M13 phage display random peptide library, we developed a screening system to elucidate primary structures surrounding reactive glutamine residue(s) that are preferred by TGase. Screening was performed by selecting phage clones expressing peptides that incorporated biotin-labeled primary amine by the catalytic reactions of TGase 2 and activated Factor XIII (Factor XIIIa). We identified several amino acid sequences that were preferred as glutamine donor substrates, most of which have a marked tendency for individual TGases: TGase 2, QxPphiD(P), QxPphi, and QxxphiDP; Factor XIIIa, QxxphixWP (where x and phi represent a non-conserved and a hydrophobic amino acid, respectively). We further confirmed that the sequences were favored for transamidation using modified glutathione S-transferase (GST) for recombinant peptide-GST fusion proteins. Most of the fusion proteins exhibited a considerable increase in incorporation of primary amines over that of modified GST alone. Furthermore, we identified the amino acid sequences that demonstrated higher specificity and inhibitory activity in the cross-linking reactions by TGase 2 and Factor XIIIa.  相似文献   

7.
During blood clotting Factor XIIIa, a transglutaminase, catalyzes the formation of covalent bonds between the epsilon-amino group of lysine and the gamma-carboxamide group of peptide-bound glutamine residues between fibrin molecules. We report that glycyl-L-prolyl-L-arginyl-L-proline (GPRP), a tetrapeptide that binds to the fibrin polymerization sites (D-domain) in fibrin(ogen), inhibits transglutaminase cross-linking by modifying the glutamine residues in the alpha- and gamma-chains of fibrinogen. Purified platelet Factor XIIIa, and tissue transglutaminase from adult bovine aortic endothelial cells were used for the cross-linking studies. Gly-Pro (GP) and Gly-Pro-Gly-Gly (GPGG), peptides which do not bind to fibrinogen, had no effect on transglutaminase cross-linking. GPRP inhibited platelet Factor XIIIa-catalyzed cross-linking between the gamma-chains of the following fibrin(ogen) derivatives: fibrin monomers, fibrinogen and polymerized fibrin fibers. GPRP functioned as a reversible, noncompetitive inhibitor of Factor XIIIa-catalyzed incorporation of [3H]putrescine and [14C]methylamine into fibrinogen and Fragment D1. GPRP did not inhibit 125I-Factor XIIIa binding to polymerized fibrin, demonstrating that the Factor XIIIa binding sites on fibrin were not modified. GPRP also had no effect on Factor XIIIa cross-linking of [3H]putrescine to casein. This demonstrates that GPRP specifically modified the glutamine cross-linking sites in fibrinogen, and had no effect on either Factor XIIIa or the lysine residues in fibrinogen. GPRP also inhibited [14C]putrescine incorporation into the alpha- and gamma-chains of fibrinogen without inhibiting beta-chain incorporation, suggesting that the intermolecular cross-linking sites were selectively affected. Furthermore, GPRP inhibited tissue transglutaminase-catalyzed incorporation of [3H]putrescine into both fibrinogen and Fragment D1, without modifying [3H]putrescine incorporation into casein. GPRP also inhibited intermolecular alpha-alpha-chain cross-linking catalyzed by tissue transglutaminase. This demonstrates that the glutamine residues in the alpha-chains involved in intermolecular cross-linking are modified by GPRP. This is the first demonstration that a molecule binding to the fibrin polymerization sites on the D-domain of fibrinogen modifies the glutamine cross-linking sites on the alpha- and gamma-chains of fibrinogen.  相似文献   

8.
Staphylococcal fibronectin-binding protein (FnbA) is a surface-associated receptor responsible for the reversible binding of bacteria to human fibronectin and fibrin(ogen). Recently we have shown that FnbA serves as a substrate for coagulation factor XIIIa and undergoes covalent cross-linking to its ligands, resulting in the formation of heteropolymers (Matsuka, Y. V., Anderson, E. T., Milner-Fish, T., Ooi, P., and Baker, S. (2003) Staphylococcus aureus fibronectin-binding protein serves as a substrate for coagulation factor XIIIa: Evidence for factor XIIIa-catalyzed covalent cross-linking to fibronectin and fibrin, Biochemistry 42, 14643-14652). Factor XIIIa also catalyzes the incorporation in FnbA of fluorescent probes dansylcadaverine and glutamine-containing synthetic peptide patterned on the NH(2)-terminal segment of fibronectin. In this study, the above probes were utilized for site-specific labeling and identification of reactive Gln and Lys residues targeted by factor XIIIa in rFnbA. Probe-decorated rFnbA samples were subjected to trypsin or Glu-C digestion, followed by separation of labeled peptides using reversed phase HPLC. Sequencing and mass spectral analyses of isolated probe-modified peptides have been employed for the identification of factor XIIIa-reactive Gln and Lys residues. Analysis of dansylcadaverine-labeled peptides resulted in the identification of one major, Gln103, and three minor, Gln105, Gln783, and Gln830, amine acceptor sites. The labeling procedure with dansyl-PGGQQIV probe revealed that Lys157, Lys503, Lys620, and Lys762 serve as amine donor sites. The identified reactive glutamine acceptor and lysine donor sites of FnbA may participate in transglutaminase-mediated cross-linking reactions resulting in the covalent attachment of pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus to human host proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Amino acid residues at several locations in close primary vicinity to a substrate glutamine residue have been recognized as important determinants for the specificities of human plasma factor XIIIa and guinea pig liver transglutaminase (Gorman, J. J., and Folk, J. E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2712-2715). The present studies measure the influence on transglutaminase specificity of some changes in amino acid side chains in a small synthetic glutamine peptide amide, Leu-Gly-Leu-Gly-Gln-Gly-Lys-Val-Leu-GlyNH2, which was designed to contain most of the known elements needed for enzyme recognition. The results are in agreement with previous findings and show that full catalytic activity of each enzyme may be retained upon replacement of the lysine residue by certain other amino acid residues. Evidence is provided that serine in place of glycine at one or more positions causes a significant increase in specificity with factor XIIIa, but not with liver enzyme. The effective substrate property for factor XIIIa seen with the model peptide amide is lost upon reversal of the sequence Val-Leu. This is not the case with the liver enzyme even though replacement of either of these amino acids by alanine causes a pronounced loss in activity with this enzyme. These differences and the effects of various other substitutions in the model peptide amide on the enzymes' specificities points up the relatively stringent structural requirements of factor XIIIa and the rather broad requirements for liver transglutaminase.  相似文献   

10.
A new procedure for the photochemical labeling of peptides and for the production of cleavable cross-links between protein molecules is given. This method is mediated through the catalytic action of the enzyme guinea pig liver transglutaminase. Each of the labeling and cross-linking reagents described here is an amine substrate for transglutaminases and, because of the narrow specificity of these enzymes, is introduced covalently only at the gamma-carboxamide group of available peptide-bound glutamine residues. Cross-linking results either solely through the action of the enzyme in the case of a diamine substrate, or by subsequent photolysis in the case of photosensitive amine substrates. Cleavable bonds in several of the substrates are disulfide or vicinal hydroxyl groups. The validity of the procedure is demonstrated by the preparation of photosensitive derivatives of substance P and glucagon 1-6 and in the cleavable covalent cross-linking of guanidinated beta-casein.  相似文献   

11.
Three-dimensional neurite outgrowth rates within fibrin matrices that contained variable amounts of RGD peptides were shown to depend on adhesion site density and affinity. Bi-domain peptides with a factor XIIIa substrate in one domain and a RGD sequence in the other domain were covalently incorporated into fibrin gels during coagulation through the action of the transglutaminase factor XIIIa, and the RGD-dependent effect on neurite outgrowth was quantified, employing chick dorsal root ganglia cultured two- and three-dimensionally within the modified fibrin. Two separate bi-domain peptides were synthesized, one with a lower binding affinity linear RGD domain and another with a higher binding affinity cyclic RGD domain. Both peptides were cross-linked into fibrin gels at concentrations up to 8.2 mol of peptide/mol of fibrinogen, and their effect on neurite outgrowth was measured. Both two- and three-dimensional neurite outgrowth demonstrated a bi-phasic dependence on RGD concentration for both the linear and cyclic peptide, with intermediate adhesion site densities yielding maximal neurite extension and higher densities inhibiting outgrowth. The adhesion site density that yielded maximal outgrowth depended strongly on adhesion site affinity in both two and three dimensions, with lower densities of the higher affinity ligand being required (0.8-1.7 mol/mol for the linear peptide versus 0.2 mol/mol for the cyclic peptide yielding maximum neurite outgrowth rates in three-dimensional cultures).  相似文献   

12.
Transglutaminases catalyze the cross-linking and amine incorporation of proteins, and are implicated in various biological phenomena. To elucidate the physiological roles of transglutaminase at the molecular level, we need to identify its physiological protein substrates and clarify the relationship between transglutaminase modification of protein substrates and biological responses. Here we examined whether betaine-homocysteine S-methyltransferase (BHMT: EC 2.1.1.5) can be a substrate of tissue-type transglutaminase by in vitro experiments using porcine liver BHMT and guinea pig liver transglutarninase. Guinea pig liver transglutaminase incorporated 5-(biotinamido) pentylamine and [3H] histamine into BHMT in a time-dependent manner. Putrescine and spermidine also seemed to be incorporated into BHMT by transglutaminase. In the absence of the primary amines, BHMT subunits were cross-linked intra- and intermolecularly. BHMT activity was decreased significantly through the cross-linking by transglutaminase. Histamine incorporation slightly reduced the BHMT activity. Peptide fragments of BHMT containing the glutamine residues reactive for transglutaminase reaction were isolated through biotin labelling, proteinase digestion, biotin-avidin a affinity separation, and reverse phase HPLC. The results of amino acid sequence analyses of these peptides and sequence homology alignment with other mammalian liver BHMT subunits showed that these reactive glutamine residues were located in the region near the carboxyl terminal of porcine BHMT subunit. These results suggested that the liver BHMT can be modified by tissue-type transglutaminase and its activity is regulated repressively by the modification, especially by the cross-linking. This regulatory reaction might be involved in the regulation of homocysteine metabolism in the liver.  相似文献   

13.
Transglutaminases were found to catalyze the formation of cross-links between peptide chains by means of a transfer reaction between the carboxamide group of a glutamine residue in each chain and both primary amino groups of a diamine or a polyamine. Production of this heretofore undescribed linkage by guinea pig liver transglutaminase was demonstrated by the use of high performance liquid chromatography in a model system using glutamine peptide derivatives and a variety of diamines and polyamines. Evidence for intermolecular cross-linking through polyamines with both the liver enzyme and thrombin-activated human plasma blood coagulation factor XIII was obtained by the use of a guanidinated derivative of beta-casein.  相似文献   

14.
Interactions of factor XIII with fibrin as substrate and cofactor.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Factor XIIIa (a2') is a homodimeric transglutaminase that is formed via limited alpha-thrombin-catalyzed proteolysis of the platelet (a2) or plasma (a2b2) factor XIII zymogen in a reaction that results in proteolytic removal of a 37-aminoacyl residue peptide from the N-terminus of the a chains and exposure of the active-site thiol group in the resulting a' chains of factor XIIIa. In this study, we characterized interactions of factor XIII and factor XIIIa with fibrin, a natural substrate for factor XIIIa and a cofactor for the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed activation of plasma factor XIII. The carbamylmethyl derivatives of the active-site thiol group of platelet factor XIII (CMa2) and factor XIIIa (CMa2') were prepared, and their interactions with fibrin were measured. The enzyme-like derivative (CMa2') which contained nicked a' chains bound more tightly to fibrin (Kd = 2.1 microM) than did CMa2 (Kd = 14 microM), the platelet zymogen-like derivative with intact a chains, but the binding of each was weaker than the binding of plasma factor XIII zymogen (a2b2) to fibrin (Kd = 0.20 microM) under the same conditions. Saturation of fibrin with plasma factor XIII zymogen (a2b2) did not affect the binding of CMa2' to fibrin, suggesting that the plasma factor XIII zymogen (a2b2) and the active-site-modified form of factor XIIIa (CMa2') bind to separate, noninteracting sites of fibrin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
A novel and sensitive chemiluminescent assay is described to quantitate the acyl transfer activities of blood coagulation factor XIIIa or liver transglutaminase using aminobutyl-N-ethyl-isoluminol as acyl acceptor and N,N′-dimethylcasein, human plasma fibrinogen or fibronectin as acyl donors. The method involved covalently linking aminobutyl-N-ethyl-isoluminol through its free amino group with the γ-carboxamide of protein-bound glutamine resulting in an isopeptide bond; a reaction catalysed by both transglutaminase and factor XIIIa. The protein-bound aminobutyl-N-ethyl-isoluminol was separated from non-conjugated amine by precipitation with trichloroacetic acid. The protein–amine conjugate was dissolved in 500 mmol/L NaOH, oxidized using 15 mmol/L ammonium persulphate and light emission quantitated using a luminometer. Optimal conditions were established to detect factor XIIIa and transglutaminase activities with the chemiluminescent assay. Specificity was demonstrated by lack of activity in the presence of ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid or unactivated factor XIII, or boiled enzymes, and by competitive inhibition with putrescine and 5′-(biotinamido) pentylamine. The enzymatic and kinetic properties of factor XIIIa and transglutaminase in utilizing aminobutyl-N-ethyl-isoluminol as an acyl acceptor substrate were comprehensively documented. The reaction could be carried out in either a purified system or a complex plasma or cell lysates milieu. The assay is sensitive, specific, and eliminates a need for radioactive reagents. The assay could be used to photolabel reactive glutamines in substrates. The assay could also be adapted to a variety of solid- and solution-phase formats and is amenable to X-ray film and/or light photography imaging. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
For the purpose of developing a transglutaminase inhibitor which could be effective in physiological and pharmacological studies, a series of phenylthiourea derivatives of alpha, omega-diaminoalkanes were designed, synthesized, and evaluated kinetically as inhibitors of transglutaminases. A homologous series of compounds of the structure phenylthiourea-(CH2)n-NH2, where n = 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, were tested for the inhibition of both guinea pig liver transglutaminase-catalyzed amine incorporation into various glutamine-containing substrates and plasma transglutaminase (factor XIIIa)-catalyzed amine incorporation into fibrin and fibrin cross-linking. It was found that the inhibitory activity of the compounds increases with increasing number of methylene groups in the side chain up to a maximum of n = 5. A further increase in the length of the methylene side chain to n = 6 results in decreased activity. The Ki value (4.9 X 10(-5) M) of 1-(5-aminopentyl)-3-phenylthiourea (PPTU) (n = 5) for the inhibition of guinea pig transglutaminase-catalyzed amine incorporation into the B chain of oxidized insulin is in close agreement to its Km(app) value (7.1 X 10(-5) M) obtained using 14C-labeled PPTU. PPTU was also found to be a potent inhibitor of plasma transglutaminase-catalyzed fibrin cross-linking. The finding that the specificity of the alkylamines for inhibition is correlated with the length of their methyl side chains is compatible with those reported for aliphatic amines and monodansylcadaverine analogues (where dansyl is 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl). The phenylthiourea derivatives, however, are far less toxic in mice than monodansylcadaverine as indicated by their LD50 values: PPTU, 400 +/- 25 mg/kg; and monodansylcadaverine, 160 +/- 20 mg/kg.  相似文献   

17.
Vasoactive intestinal peptide is an amino acceptor and donor substrate for tissue transglutaminase (TGase) in vitro. This peptide contains a single glutamine residue, Gln16, which was identified as the amino acceptor substrate. Different gamma(glutamyl16)amine derivatives of vasoactive intestinal peptide were synthesized enzymatically in vitro. The modification is very fast when compared with that of many native substrates of TGase. The analogs 1,3-diaminopropane, putrescine, cadaverine, spermidine, spermine, glycine ethyl ester and mono-dansylcadaverine of the peptide were purified by high-performance liquid chromatography on a reverse-phase column and were analyzed by electrospray mass spectrometry. When amines were absent in the assay mixture as an external amino donor, lysine residue occurring in the peptide was an effective amino donor site for TGase. Only one of the three lysine residues of vasoactive intestinal peptide, namely Lys21, was demonstrated to be involved in both inter- and intramolecular cross-link formation.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, we report the finding of functional cross-talk between two non-protease components of the complement and coagulation cascades. We show that complement C3, a central component of the complement system, is associated with the fibrin clot and that C3 becomes covalently cross-linked to other proteins during coagulation. Enzymatic incorporation of dansylcadaverine and dansyl-PGGQQIV into C3 by coagulation factor XIIIa and tissue transglutaminase demonstrated that C3 is a transglutaminase substrate. This suggested that coagulation factor XIIIa covalently cross-links C3 to clot components during coagulation. Using mass spectrometry, we verified that C3 indeed is covalently associated with the fibrin clot in a ratio of 0.05:1 relative to the known coagulation factor XIIIa substrate α2-antiplasmin.  相似文献   

19.
C1 inhibitor, a plasma proteinase inhibitor of the serpin superfamily involved in the regulation of complement classical pathway and intrinsic blood coagulation, has been shown to bind to several components of the extracellular matrix. These reactions may be responsible for C1 inhibitor localization in the perivascular space. In the study reported here, we have examined whether C1 inhibitor could function as a substrate for plasma (factor XIIIa) or tissue transglutaminase. We made the following observations: 1) SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography showed that C1 inhibitor exposed to tissue transglutaminase (but not to factor XIIIa) incorporated the radioactive amine donor substrate [(3)H]putrescine in a calcium-dependent manner; 2) the maximum stoichiometry for the uptake of [(3)H]putrescine by C1 inhibitor was 1:1; 3) proteolytic cleavage and peptide sequencing of reduced and carboxymethylated [(3)H]putrescine-C1 inhibitor identified Gln(453) (P'9) as the single amine acceptor residue; 4) studies with (125)I-labeled C1 inhibitor showed that tissue transglutaminase was also able to cross-link C1 inhibitor to immobilized fibrin; and 5) C1 inhibitor cross-linked by tissue transglutaminase to immobilized fibrin had inhibitory activity against its target enzymes. Thus, tissue transglutaminase-mediated cross-linking of C1 inhibitor to fibrin or other extracellular matrix components may serve as a mechanism for covalent serpin binding and influence local regulation of the proteolytic pathways inhibited by C1 inhibitor.  相似文献   

20.
A Ichinose  T Tamaki  N Aoki 《FEBS letters》1983,153(2):369-371
The NH2-terminal 12-residue peptide of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, Asn-Gln-Glu-Gln-Val-Ser-Pro-Leu-Thr-Gly-Leu-Lys-NH2 . AcOH, was found to be a good substrate for plasma transglutaminase (activated blood coagulation factor XIII) and rapidly incorporated into fibrin by the enzyme. A high concentration of the peptide inhibited the enzyme-mediated cross-linking of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor to fibrin probably by competing with the inhibitor for the same site of fibrin alpha-chain.  相似文献   

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