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1.
Human neutrophils stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) produce the reactive oxidant hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and release the matrix metalloproteinases collagenase and gelatinase from secretory granules. We have investigated the stoichiometry of activation and inactivation of the two metalloproteinases with HOCl. HOCl activated purified neutrophil procollagenase at ratios between 10 and 40 mol of HOCl/mol enzyme, but caused inactivation at higher ratios. Maximum activation was about the same as that achieved by p-aminophenyl-mercuric acetate. However, less than a third of the total collagenase released from PMA-stimulated neutrophils was activated by coreleased HOCl and most of the activity was destroyed after 1 h of stimulation. These results indicate that the HOCl/enzyme ratio must fall within a narrow range for activation to occur. In contrast to collagenase, purified progelatinase underwent negligible activation (2.5 +/- 1.2%) at HOCl/enzyme molar ratios less than 30 and was destroyed at higher ratios. Likewise no active gelatinase could be detected in supernatant from PMA-stimulated cells and almost all of the proenzyme was destroyed by HOCl after 60 min stimulation. Our results illustrate that only collagenase can be activated by HOCl in vitro and that gelatinase is much more sensitive to inactivation. Since a precise HOCl/enzyme ratio is required for collagenase activation it is doubtful whether effective enzyme regulation by HOCl could occur in vivo where various HOCl scavengers are present.  相似文献   

2.
Using myeloperoxidase and hydrogen peroxide, activated neutrophils produce high local concentrations of hypochlorous acid (HOCl). They also secrete cathepsin G, a serine protease implicated in cytokine release, receptor activation, and degradation of tissue proteins. Isolated cathepsin G was inactivated by HOCl but not by hydrogen peroxide in vitro. We found that activated neutrophils lost cathepsin G activity by a pathway requiring myeloperoxidase, suggesting that oxidants generated by myeloperoxidase might regulate cathepsin G activity in vivo. Tandem mass spectrometric analysis of oxidized cathepsin G revealed that loss of a peptide containing Asp108, which lies in the active site, associated quantitatively with loss of enzymatic activity. Catalytic domain peptides containing Asp108 were lost from the oxidized protein in concert with the conversion of Met110 to the sulfoxide. Release of this peptide was blocked by pretreating cathepsin G with phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, strongly implying that oxidation introduced proteolytic cleavage sites into cathepsin G. Model system studies demonstrated that methionine oxidation can direct the regiospecific proteolysis of peptides by cathepsin G. Thus, oxidation of Met110 may contribute to cathepsin G inactivation by at least two distinct mechanisms. One involves direct oxidation of the thioether residue adjacent to the aspartic acid in the catalytic domain. The other involves the generation of new sites that are susceptible to proteolysis by cathepsin G. These observations raise the possibility that oxidants derived from neutrophils restrain pericellular proteolysis by inactivating cathepsin G. They also suggest that methionine oxidation could render cathepsin G susceptible to autolytic cleavage. Myeloperoxidase may thus play a previously unsuspected role in regulating tissue injury by serine proteases during inflammation.  相似文献   

3.
Two metallo-proteinases of human neutrophil leucocytes, collagenase and gelatinase, were studied. Collagenase specifically cleaved native collagen into the TCA and TCB fragments, whereas gelatinase degraded denatured collagen, i.e. gelatin, and the TCA fragments produced by collagenase. On subcellular fractionation by zonal sedimentation, collagenase was found to be localized in the specific granules, separate from gelatinase, which was recovered in smaller subcellular organelles known as C-particles. Neither enzyme was present in the azurophil granules, which contain the two major serine proteinases of neutrophils, elastase and cathepsin G. Collagenase and gelatinase were separated by gel filtration from extracts of partially purified granules. Both enzymes were found to occur in latent forms and were activated either by trypsin or by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. Gelatinase was also activated by cathepsin G, which, however, destroyed collagenase. Both enzymes were destroyed by neutrophil elastase. Activation resulted in a decrease by 25 000 in the apparent mol. wt. of both latent metallo-proteinases.  相似文献   

4.
Extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) is expressed by both macrophages and neutrophils and is known to influence the inflammatory response. Upon activation, neutrophils generate hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and secrete proteases to combat invading microorganisms. This produces a hostile environment in which enzymatic activity in general is challenged. In this study, we show that EC-SOD exposed to physiologically relevant concentrations of HOCl remains enzymatically active and retains the heparin-binding capacity, although HOCl exposure established oxidative modification of the N-terminal region (Met32) and the formation of an intermolecular cross-link in a fraction of the molecules. The cross-linking was also induced by activated neutrophils. Moreover, we show that the neutrophil-derived proteases human neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G cleaved the N-terminal region of EC-SOD irrespective of HOCl oxidation. Although the cleavage by elastase did not affect the quaternary structure, the cleavage by cathepsin G dissociated the molecule to produce EC-SOD monomers. The present data suggest that EC-SOD is stable and active at the site of inflammation and that neutrophils have the capacity to modulate the biodistribution of the protein by generating EC-SOD monomers that can diffuse into tissue.  相似文献   

5.
We have tested the effects of the neutrophil/macrophage products, hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and N-chloroamines, on the structural integrity and proteolytic susceptibility of collagen to determine if these agents could play a role in inflammatory joint destruction. Rates of HOCl reaction with collagen, and collagen gelation were monitored by spectrophotometric methods. Direct fragmentation, and degradation by collagenase were measured by the release of acid-soluble counts from 3H-collagen. Physiologically relevant concentrations of HOCl (5–50 μM) reacted rapidly and quantitatively at several sites in the collagen polypeptide chain, causing extensive protein fragmentation and preventing collagen gelation. In contrast, reaction with (5–50 μM) N-chloroalanine induced little direct collagen fragmentation. Oxidative damage by N-chloroamines was, however, evident because collagen displayed greatly increased proteolytic susceptibility following N-chloroamine treatment. Collagen degradation by collagenase increased as much as 3-fold after exposure to N-chloroamine treatment. Collagen degradation by collagenase increased as much as 3-fold after exposure to N-chloroalanine. N-chloroleucine caused a small increase in proteolytic susceptibility, but N-chlorotaurine had no effect. Collagen fragmentation by HOCl, inhibition of gelation by HOCl, and N-chloroalanine-induced proteolytic susceptibility, all increased with linear kinetics at oxidant concentrations of 5 μM to 1.0 mM. In synovitis, phagocytes expose collagen to HOCl, N-chloroamines, and collagenase. It is known that HOCl can activate neutrophil procollagenase. Based on our new findings, we propose a model of inflammatory joint destruction that also includes collagen fragmentation, and increased susceptibility of collagen to degradation by collagenase. It may also be possible that taurine exerts a protective effect against HOCL/OCL damage by reacting to form what appears to be essentially an inert N-chloroamine. The validity of this model must now be tested.  相似文献   

6.
To study the mechanisms of activation of human neutrophil gelatinase, the enzyme has been purified using a combination of chromatography on a DEAE-Sephacel and a gelatin-peptide-Sepharose column. On reducing SDS-polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis the purified gelatinase ran as a single band of about 94,000 Da, and had a specific activity of 5624.4 units/mg of enzyme protein. When latent gelatinase was treated with trypsin, cathepsin G, neutrophil elastase, HgCl2 or urea, its activity was enhanced and the enzyme was processed and converted into species of the lower molecular mass. Upon activation, the protein band of 94,000 Da of reduced latent gelatinase underwent a decrease of about 6,000-12,000 Da. Formation of the species of lower molecular mass during urea activation could be blocked by the addition of EDTA.  相似文献   

7.
Cathepsin C is a cysteine protease required for the activation of several pro-inflammatory serine proteases and, as such, is of interest as a therapeutic target. In cathepsin C-deficient mice and humans, the N-terminal processing and activation of neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase-3 is abolished and is accompanied by a reduction of protein levels. Pharmacologically, the consequence of cathepsin C inhibition on the activation of these serine proteases has not been described, due to the lack of stable and non-toxic inhibitors and the absence of appropriate experimental cell systems. Using novel reversible peptide nitrile inhibitors of cathepsin C, and cell-based assays with U937 and EcoM-G cells, we determined the effects of pharmacological inhibition of cathepsin C on serine protease activity. We show that indirect and complete inhibition of neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase-3 is achievable in intact cells with selective and non-cytotoxic cathepsin C inhibitors, at concentrations approximately 10-fold higher than those required to inhibit purified cathepsin C. The concentration of inhibitor needed to block processing of these three serine proteases was similar, regardless of the cell system used. Importantly, cathepsin C inhibition must be sustained to maintain serine protease inhibition, because removal of the reversible inhibitors resulted in the activation of pro-enzymes in intact cells. These findings demonstrate that near complete inhibition of multiple serine proteases can be achieved with cathepsin C inhibitors and that cathepsin C inhibition represents a viable but challenging approach for the treatment of neutrophil-based inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

8.
Human neutrophil proteases cathepsin G and elastase can directly alter platelet function and/or participate in coagulation cascade reactions on the platelet or neutrophil surface to enhance fibrin formation. The clotting of recalcified platelet-free plasma (PFP) or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) supplemented with corn trypsin inhibitor (to shut down contact activation) was studied in well-plates or flow assays. Inhibitors of cathepsin G or elastase significantly delayed the burst time (t(50)) of thrombin generation in neutrophil-supplemented PRP from 49 min to 59 and 77 min, respectively, in well-plate assays as well as reduced neutrophil-promoted fibrin deposition on fibrinogen-adherent platelets under flow conditions. In flow assays, purified cathepsin G was a far more potent activator of platelet-dependent coagulation than elastase. Anti-tissue factor had no effect on neutrophil protease-enhanced thrombin formation in PRP. The addition of cathepsin G (425 nm) or convulxin (10 nm) to PRP dramatically reduced the t(50) of thrombin generation from 53 min to 17 or 23 min, respectively. In contrast, the addition of elastase to PRP left the t(50) unaltered. Whereas perfusion of PFP (gamma(w) = 62.5 s(-1)) over fibrinogen-adherent platelets did not result in fibrin formation until 50 min, massive fibrin could be observed on cathepsin G-treated platelets even at 35 min. Cathepsin G addition to corn trypsin inhibitor-treated PFP produced little thrombin unless anionic phospholipid was present. However, further activation inhibition studies indicated that cathepsin G enhances fibrin deposition under flow conditions by elevating the activation state of fibrinogen-adherent platelets rather than by cleaving coagulation factors.  相似文献   

9.
Neutrophils are consistently associated with arterial thrombotic morbidity in human clinical studies but the causal basis for this association is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that neutrophils modulate platelet activation and thrombus formation in vivo in a cathepsin G-dependent manner. Neutrophils enhanced aggregation of human platelets in vitro in dose-dependent fashion and this effect was diminished by pharmacologic inhibition of cathepsin G activity and knockdown of cathepsin G expression. Tail bleeding time in the mouse was prolonged by a cathepsin G inhibitor and in cathepsin G knockout mice, and formation of neutrophil-platelet conjugates in blood that was shed from transected tails was reduced in the absence of cathepsin G. Bleeding time was highly correlated with blood neutrophil count in wildtype but not cathepsin G deficient mice. In the presence of elevated blood neutrophil counts, the anti-thrombotic effect of cathepsin G inhibition was greater than that of aspirin and additive to it when administered in combination. Both pharmacologic inhibition of cathepsin G and its congenital absence prolonged the time for platelet thrombus to form in ferric chloride-injured mouse mesenteric arterioles. In a vaso-occlusive model of ischemic stroke, inhibition of cathepsin G and its congenital absence improved cerebral blood flow, reduced histologic brain injury, and improved neurobehavioral outcome. These experiments demonstrate that neutrophil cathepsin G is a physiologic modulator of platelet thrombus formation in vivo and has potential as a target for novel anti-thrombotic therapies.  相似文献   

10.
Cathepsin G is a neutrophil granule derived antimicrobial chymotrypsin-like enzyme. Our previous study showed that cathepsin G induces chemotactic migration of human phagocytic leukocytes and increases random migration of T lymphocytes. In this study, we investigated the capacity of cathepsin G to activate T lymphocytes and to modulate antigen-specific humoral responses in mice. We found that cathepsin G is mitogenic for and induces production of IFN-gamma by murine T cells in vitro. Injection of cathepsin G in BALB/c mice immunized with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) adsorbed to aluminum hydroxide resulted in a significantly increased production of KLH-specific IgG1 and IgG2a antibodies. There was a dose-dependent increase in KLH-specific proliferation of lymphocytes from draining lymph nodes from mice treated with KLH and cathepsin G when compared with those treated with KLH alone. Subsequent analysis of IFN-gamma and IL-4 release following in vitro re-stimulation of draining lymph node lymphocytes obtained from KLH-immunized mice suggested that cathepsin G augments KLH-specific Ig antibody production via activation of T cells, presumably involving both Th1 and Th2 pathways. Thus, neutrophil granule cathepsin G, in addition to its capacity to kill microbes and to enhance leukocyte motility, activates T lymphocytes and modulates humoral immunity.  相似文献   

11.
Neutrophils dominate acute inflammatory responses that generally evolve into chronic inflammatory reactions mediated by monocyte/macrophages and lymphocytes. The latter cell types also serve as major targets for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). In this study we have investigated the role of neutrophil products, particularly cathepsin G, in HIV infection. Cathepsin G induced chemotaxis and production of proinflammatory cytokines by macrophages but not CD4(+) T cells. Pretreatment with cathepsin G markedly increased susceptibility of macrophages but not CD4(+) T cells to acute HIV-1 infection. When macrophages were exposed to pertussis toxin prior to cathepsin G treatment, the cathepsin G-mediated effect was almost abrogated, suggesting that enhancement of HIV-1 replication by cathepsin G requires Gi protein-mediated signal transduction. Although prolonged exposure to cathepsin G suppressed HIV infection of macrophages, serine protease inhibitors, which are exuded from the bloodstream later during inflammatory processes, neutralized the inhibitory effect. Neutrophil extracts or supernatants from neutrophil cultures, which contain cathepsin G, had effects similar to purified cathepsin G. Thus, cathepsin G, and possibly other neutrophil-derived serine proteases, may have multiple activities in HIV-1 infection of macrophages, including chemoattraction of monocyte/macrophages (HIV-1 targets) to inflamed tissue, activation of target cells, and increase in their susceptibility to acute HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

12.
The role of serine proteinases and oxidants in the activation of gelatinase released from human neutrophils was investigated. Gelatinase was measured by its ability to degrade both gelatin and native glomerular basement-membrane type IV collagen. When fMet-Leu-Phe or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate was used to stimulate the neutrophils, no gelatinase activity was measured in the absence of a mercurial activator, indicating that the enzyme was released entirely in latent form. However, when fMet-Leu-Phe-stimulated cells were treated with cytochalasin B, 50-70% of the maximal gelatinase activity was released. Activation was blocked by the serine-proteinase inhibitor phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride and a specific inhibitor of neutrophil elastase, but was not affected by an inhibitor of cathepsin G. Addition of catalase or azide to prevent oxidative reactions did not affect activation of gelatinase under any conditions of stimulation, indicating that oxidants were not involved in activation. Our results imply that oxidative activation of gelatinase does not occur readily. However, neutrophil serine proteinases, particularly elastase, provide an alternative and apparently more efficient mechanism of activation.  相似文献   

13.
Of the four known protease-activated receptors (PARs), PAR1 and PAR4 are expressed by human platelets and mediate thrombin signaling. Whether these receptors are redundant, interact, or play at least partially distinct roles is unknown. It is possible that PAR1 and/or PAR4 might confer responsiveness to proteases other than thrombin. The neutrophil granule protease, cathepsin G, is known to cause platelet secretion and aggregation. We now report that this action of cathepsin G is mediated by PAR4. Cathepsin G triggered calcium mobilization in PAR4-transfected fibroblasts, PAR4-expressing Xenopus oocytes, and washed human platelets. An antibody raised against the PAR4 thrombin cleavage site blocked platelet activation by cathepsin G but not other agonists. Desensitization with a PAR4 activating peptide had a similar effect. By contrast, inhibition of PAR1 function had no effect on platelet responses to cathepsin G. When neutrophils were present, the neutrophil agonist fMet-Leu-Phe triggered calcium signaling in Fura-2-loaded platelets. Strikingly, this neutrophil-dependent platelet activation was blocked by the PAR4 antibody. These data show that PAR4 mediates platelet responses to cathepsin G and support the hypothesis that cathepsin G might mediate neutrophil-platelet interactions at sites of vascular injury or inflammation.  相似文献   

14.
A simple and rapid procedure is described for the separation of the human leucocyte enzymes alanine aminopeptidase, cathepsin G, collagenase, elastase and myeloperoxidase. The enzymes are prepared from leucocytes, obtained from buffy coat, by repeated extraction with buffer A(1 M salt concentration). The pooled extracts are successively subjected to batch adsorption on concanavalin A-Sepharose, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300, affinity chromatography on collagen-Sepharose 4-B, batch adsorption on CM-Sephadex C-50 and adsorption chromatography on hydroxyapatite. The yields of the isolated enzymes of a typical preparation are 47% alanine aminopeptidase, 9% cathepsin G, 90% latent and active collagenase, 23% elastase and approximately 100% myeloperoxidase with respect to the pooled extracts. The cathepsin G, collagenase and elastase preparations are essentially free from other proteolytic enzymes and may be used without further purifications.  相似文献   

15.
Hypochlorous acid-modified human blood low density lipoprotein (LDL–HOCl) was shown to stimulate neutrophils and to increase the luminol- (lm-CL) or lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence (lc-CL) of neutrophils. Antioxidants and HOCl scavengers (glutathione, taurine, cysteine, methionine, ceruloplasmin, and human serum albumin (HSA)) were tested for effects on lm-CL, lc-CL, H2O2 production, and degranulation of azurophilic granules of neutrophils. All agents used in increasing concentrations were found to decrease lm-CL produced by neutrophils upon stimulation with LDL–HOCl or subsequent treatment with the activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). The agents exerted a far lower, if any, effect on lc-CL and the H2O2 production by neutrophils in the same conditions. In the majority of cases, a decline in neutrophil chemiluminescence in the presence of the agents was not related to their effect on neutrophil degranulation, but was most likely due to their direct interactions with reactive halogen (RHS) or oxygen (ROS) species generated upon neutrophil activation or to myeloperoxidase (MPO) inhibition. Antioxidants and HOCl scavengers present in the human body were assumed to decelerate the development of oxidative or halogenative stress and thereby prevent neutrophil activation.  相似文献   

16.
Although prior studies with mAb have defined an endogenous chymotrypsin-like protease in the neutrophil (polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)) membrane that is associated with initiation of superoxide response to inflammatory stimuli, it is not known whether extracellular proteases (in the inflammatory milieu) can also influence PMN activation. This study examined the ability of four neutral proteases: cathepsin G, elastase, chymotrypsin, and trypsin, to modify PMN superoxide response to FMLP, PMA, and arachidonate. In response to 1 microM FMLP, PMN treated with cathepsin G, chymotrypsin, or elastase showed 64%, 60%, and 32% increases, respectively, in superoxide generation when compared with control, untreated cells (p less than 0.05 for each). These increments were dependent on intact enzymatic function of the proteases, were greatest when enzyme and stimulus were added concurrently, and persisted after PMN were washed free of enzyme. Enhancement of superoxide response was not stimulus specific; in response to 10 ng/ml PMA, cells treated with cathepsin G showed a 84%, and elastase a 57%, increase in superoxide generation (p less than 0.05 for both) with a marked reduction in the time required for onset of this response. For cell activation with 80 microM arachidonate, treatment with elastase produced a 180% increase in superoxide production (p less than 0.025). Neutrophils incubated with trypsin demonstrated significant decreases in superoxide response to PMA (-34%, p less than 0.05) and arachidonate (-39%, p less than 0.01). The enzymes themselves were not stimuli for superoxide production nor were they scavengers for superoxide in cellfree system. We conclude that local release of the PMN primary-granule neutral proteases, cathepsin G, and elastase within inflammatory sites can augment neutrophil effector function by up-regulating oxidative response to defined inflammatory stimuli. This autocrine/paracrine function may provide a significant increase in antimicrobial activity, but may also enhance the potential for host tissue injury.  相似文献   

17.
Cathepsin G is a strong platelet agonist released by neutrophils.   总被引:9,自引:1,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The present studies were undertaken to characterize a serine protease released by N-formyl-L-Met-L-Leu-L-Phe (fMet-Leu-Phe)-stimulated neutrophils that rapidly induces platelet calcium mobilization, secretion and aggregation. The biological activity associated with this protease was unaffected by leupeptin, was only weakly diminished by N-p-tosyl-L-Lys-chloromethane, but was strongly inhibited by alpha 1-antitrypsin, soyabean trypsin inhibitor, N-tosyl-L-Phe-chloromethane and benzoyloxycarbonyl-Gly-Leu-Phe-chloromethane (Z-Gly-Leu-PheCH2Cl). These observations indicated that the biological activity of neutrophil supernatants could be attributed to a chymotrypsin-like enzyme such as cathepsin G. Furthermore, platelet aggregation and 5-hydroxytryptamine release induced by cell-free supernatants from fMet-Leu-Phe-stimulated neutrophils were found to be blocked by antiserum to cathepsin G in a concentration-dependent manner but were unaffected by antiserum to elastase. The biological activity present in neutrophil supernatants co-purified with enzymic activity for cathepsin G during sequential Aprotinin-Sepharose affinity chromatography and carboxymethyl-Sephadex chromatography. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the reduced, purified protein, demonstrated three polypeptides with apparent Mr values of 31,500, 29,000 and 28,000 and four polypeptides were resolved on acid-gel electrophoresis. Purified cathepsin G from neutrophils cross-reacted with anti-(cathepsin G) serum in a double immunodiffusion assay and elicited platelet calcium mobilization, 5-hydroxytryptamine secretion and aggregation. Calcium mobilization and secretion induced by low concentrations of cathepsin G were partially dependent on arachidonic acid metabolites and ADP, while stimulation by higher enzyme concentrations was independent of amplification pathways, indicating that cathepsin G is a strong platelet agonist. These results suggest that pathological processes which stimulate neutrophils and release cathepsin G can in turn result in the recruitment and activation of platelets.  相似文献   

18.
The highly negatively charged membrane sialoglycoprotein leukosialin, CD43, is shed during neutrophil activation. This is generally thought to enhance cell adhesion. We here describe two novel consequences of this shedding, during neutrophil activation by phorbol esters or by chemoattractants after TNF-alpha priming. CD43 proteolysis was investigated by Western blotting, using a polyclonal antibody to CD43 intracellular domain. Our data emphasize the importance of a juxtamembranous cleavage of about 50% of membrane CD43 molecules by cathepsin G. Indeed, it is inhibited by alpha1-antichymotrypsin and cathepsin G inhibitor I and is reproduced by exogenous purified cathepsin G. The resulting membrane-anchored C-terminal fragment, CD43-CTF, becomes susceptible to presenilin/gamma-secretase, which releases CD43 intracytoplasmic domain: preincubation with three different gamma-secretase inhibitors, before PMN treatment by agonists or by purified cathepsin G, results in the accumulation of CD43-CTF. Because CD43 binds E-selectin, we also investigated the effect of the soluble extracellular domain CD43s, released by cathepsin G juxtamembranous cleavage, on neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells. A recombinant CD43s-Fc fusion protein inhibited neutrophil E selectindependent adhesion to endothelial cells under flow conditions, while it had no effect on neutrophil static adhesion. We thus propose that, in addition to its potential pro-adhesive role, CD43 proteolysis results in: (i) the release, by cathepsin G, of CD43 extracellular domain, able to inhibit the adhesion of flowing neutrophils on endothelial cells and thus to participate to the natural control of inflammation; (ii) the release and/or the clearance, by presenilin/gamma-secretase, of CD43 intracellular domain, thereby regulating CD43-mediated signaling.  相似文献   

19.
The ability of various reactive oxygen species and serine proteases to activate latent collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase-1) purified from human neutrophils was examined. Latent 70-75 kD human neutrophil collagenase (HNC) was efficiently activated by known non-proteolytic activators phenylmercuric chloride (an organomercurial compound) and gold thioglucose (Au(I)-salt). Corresponding degree of activation was achieved by reactive oxygen species including hypochlorous acid (HOCl), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hydroxyl radical generated by hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase (HX/XAO). The presence of trace amounts of iron and EDTA were necessary and even enhanced H2O2 induced activation of latent HNC. This activation could be abolished by an iron chelator desferrioxamine and a hydroxyl radical scavenger mannitol. HOCl induced activation of latent HNC was not affected by desferrioxamine and mannitol. Thus, these compounds do not inhibit the active/activated form of HNC. Latent HNC could also be activated by trypsin and chymotrypsin but not by plasmin and plasma kallikrein. The ability of mannitol and desferrioxamine to inhibit the H2O2-induced activation of HNC suggests the transition metal dependent Fenton reaction to be responsible for localized and/or site-specific generation of hydroxyl radical/hydroxyl radical -like oxidants to act as the activating oxygen species. Our results support the ability of myeloperoxidase derived HOCl to act as a direct oxidative activator of HNC and further suggest the existence of a new/alternative oxidative activation pathway of HNC involving hydroxyl radical.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have established that mature neutrophils from the peritoneal cavity, blood, and bone marrow of beige (Chédiak-Higashi syndrome) mice essentially lack activities of two lysosomal proteinases: elastase and cathepsin G. There are, however, significant levels of each enzyme in early neutrophil precursors in bone marrow. In the present experiments, it was found that the addition of extracts from mature beige neutrophils to extracts of normal neutrophils or to purified human neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G resulted in a significant inhibition of elastase and cathepsin G G activities. 125I-Labeled human neutrophil elastase formed high molecular mass complexes at 64 and 52 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis when added to beige neutrophil extracts. The molecular masses of the inhibitor-125I-elastase complexes suggested that the molecular masses of the inhibitors are approximately 36 and 24 kDa, respectively. These results were confirmed by gel filtration on Superose 12 under nondenaturing conditions. Cathepsin G was inhibited only by the 36-kDa component. The inhibitors formed a covalent complex with the active sites of elastase and cathepsin G. No inhibitory activity was present in mature neutrophil extracts of genetically normal mice or in extracts of bone marrow of beige mice. These results thus represent an unusual example of an enzyme deficiency state caused by the presence of excess inhibitors. Inactivation of neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G in mature circulating and tissue neutrophils may contribute to the increased susceptibility of Chédiak-Higashi patients to infection.  相似文献   

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