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1.
Dermatan sulfate mediates the blood coagulation cascade by binding to heparin cofactor II and potentiating the antithrombin activity. In order to explore another function of dermatan sulfate, a dermatan sulfate affinity column was prepared from biotinylated dermatan sulfate and Streptavidin Sepharose. When human plasma was applied on the dermatan sulfate column, factor H was bound and cleaved. The cleavage products, a 30-kDa N-terminal fragment and a 120-kDa fragment, were eluted from the column with 500 mM NaCl and detected after Western blotting with anti-factor H. The bond between the tandem arginine residues in the sixth domain of factor H was cleaved. When purified factor H was applied on the column, the factor H was not cleaved and was recovered from the column as an intact 150-kDa fraction. The finding that dermatan sulfate-mediated cleavage of factor H was inhibited by (p-amidinophenyl) methanesulfonyl fluoride, but not N-ethylmaleimide or EDTA, indicates that a serine protease in the plasma was activated on the dermatan sulfate column and factor H was cleaved without intervention of the plasma protease inhibitors. Amidase activity was detected in the effluent from the dermatan sulfate column but was abolished by pretreatment of the plasma with dermatan sulfate. Therefore, dermatan sulfate participates in the activation of a protease as well as having the protease inhibitory action.  相似文献   

2.
Glycosaminoglycan-binding proteins, with specific emphasis on dermatan sulfate, have been investigated in human plasma by affinity chromatography, mass spectrometry and Western blotting. Diluted plasma was applied to affinity columns and bound protein was eluted with 500 mM NaCl. Dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate bound 7% of the total protein. Heparin bound 22% of the total protein, but chondroitin sulfate A bound only 0.23%. Mass spectrometric analysis identified 20 proteins as dermatan-sulfate-binding proteins, most of which were confirmed by Western blotting. Some of these binding proteins, such as fibrinogen, fibronectin, apolipoprotein B, LMW kininogen, inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor, and factor H, were degraded to various extents during the chromatography step, but this degradation could be prevented by the inclusion of a serine protease inhibitor. The protein fraction binding to the dermatan sulfate column showed amidase activity, whereas that binding to the heparan sulfate and heparin columns showed 1/2 and 1/20, respectively, of the activity of the dermatan sulfate binding fraction. Dermatan sulfate was similar to heparan sulfate with respect to its capacity to bind plasma proteins and its activation of protease, but differed from chondroitin sulfate and heparin in these properties.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
125I-labeled heparin cofactor II (HCII) was mixed with plasma and coagulation was initiated by addition of CaCl2, phospholipids, and kaolin or tissue factor. In the presence of 67 micrograms/ml of dermatan sulfate, radioactivity was detected in a band which corresponded to the thrombin-HCII complex (Mr = 96,000) upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. No other complexes were observed. The thrombin-HCII complex was undetectable when 5 units/ml of heparin was present or when prothrombin-deficient plasma was used. In experiments with purified proteases, HCII did not significantly inhibit coagulation factors VIIa, IXa, Xa, XIa, XIIa, kallikrein, activated protein C, plasmin, urokinase, tissue plasminogen activator, leukocyte elastase, the gamma-subunit of nerve growth factor, and the epidermal growth factor-binding protein. HCII inhibited leukocyte cathepsin G slowly, with a rate constant of 8 X 10(4) M-1 min-1 in the presence of dermatan sulfate. These results indicate that the protease specificity of HCII is more restricted than that of other plasma protease inhibitors and suggest that the anticoagulant effect of dermatan sulfate is due solely to inhibition of thrombin by HCII.  相似文献   

5.
Rheumatoid synovial fluid contains an activator of latent collagenase from culture medium of pig synovium. The activator was purified by gel chromatography on Ultrogel AcA 44 and affinity chromatography on soybean trypsin inhibitor coupled to Sepharose 4B. The purified material was homogeneous on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with Mr 88 000. The activator had limited proteolytic activity against azo-casein, but showed amidase activity on Pro-Phe-Arg-NMec, Z-Phe-Arg-NMec, D-Val-Leu-Arg-NPhNO2 and D-Pro-Phe-Arg-NPhNO2, with an optimum at pH 8.0. Activity was completely inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, soybean trypsin inhibitor, leupeptin and Pro-Phe-Arg-CH2Cl, whereas lima bean trypsin inhibitor, Tos-Lys-CH2Cl, a specific inhibitor of factor XIIa from maize, EDTA and iodoacetate were not inhibitory. These properties of the activator suggested that it might be plasma kallikrein (EC 3.4.21.34), and the possibility was further examined. The activator was treated with [3H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate, and run in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with reduction; a radioautograph of the gel showed a pair of [3H]diisopropyl phosphoryl-labelled bands (Mr 36 000 and 34 000) identical to those obtained with authentic plasma kallikrein. Double immunodiffusion with monospecific antiserum against human plasma kallikrein confirmed the identification. This is the first demonstration of collagenase-activating activity of plasma kallikrein, and raises the possibility that activation of prokallikrein in the inflamed joint space may contribute to the disease process not only by the production of bradykinin, but also by activating latent collagenase.  相似文献   

6.
Human urinary active kallikrein and prokallikrein were separated on DEAE-cellulose and octyl-Sepharose columns and both purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography, gel filtration and hydrophobic h.p.l.c. Prokallikrein was monitored during purification by trypsin activation followed by determination of both amidase and kininogenase activity. After trypsin activation, purified prokallikrein had a specific kininogenase activity of 39.4 micrograms of bradykinin equivalent/min per mg and amidase activity of 16.5 mumol/min per mg with D-Val-Leu-Arg-7-amino-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin. Purified active kallikrein had a specific activity of 47 micrograms of bradykinin/min per mg. The molecular mass of prokallikrein was 48 kDa on electrophoresis and 53 kDa on gel filtration whereas active kallikrein gave values of 46 kDa and 53 kDa respectively. Antisera to active and prokallikrein were obtained. In double immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis, antiserum to active kallikrein reacted with active and pro-kallikrein. Antiserum to prokallikrein contained antibodies to determinants not found in active kallikrein, presumably due to the presence of the activation peptide in the proenzyme. Human prokallikrein can be activated by thermolysin, trypsin and human plasma kallikrein. Activation of 50% of the prokallikrein (1.35 microM) was achieved in 30 min with 25 nM-thermolysin, 78 nM-trypsin or 180 nM-human plasma kallikrein. Thus thermolysin was the most effective activator. Thermolysin activated prokallikrein by releasing active kallikrein with N-terminal Ile1-Val2. Thus human tissue (glandular) prokallikrein can be activated by two types of enzymes: serine proteinases, which cleave at the C-terminus of basic amino acids, and by a metalloproteinase that cleaves at the N-terminus of hydrophobic amino acids.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Lipoproteins (d = 1.05-1.12 g/ml) were obtained from pooled serum by density gradient ultracentrifugation and used as a source for isolation of apolipoprotein (a) (apo(a]. It was found that both these lipoproteins and purified apo(a) possess negligible amidolytic and proteolytic activity. After preincubation of lipoproteins and apo(a) with collagen-Sepharose, the increase in enzymatic activity was observed. The activation of purified apo(a) also occurred upon its storage in the cold. After two week storage at 7 degrees C, the amidase activity, as measured by splitting of the substrate D-Pro-Phe-Arg-pNA, was increased from 0.009 U/mg to 0.85 U/mg. The amidase activity was completely inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (10(-3) M) and by soybean trypsin inhibitor (10(-5) M); it was not inhibited by aprotinin (10(-6) M). Activated apo(a) did not split azocasein but converted plasma prekallikrein to kallikrein and degraded apolipoprotein B-100.  相似文献   

9.
Plasma kallikrein activation occurs frequently during blood drawing and subsequent plasma handling. The purified enzyme was incubated with ceruloplasmin, inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor and complement factor C4. Proteolysis caused by this enzyme was compared with the degradative effects of plasmin and thrombin. Among these proteins C4 proved to be most easily degraded; its cleavage products can interact with C4-binding protein.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of the hyaluronan-binding protease (PHBSP), a plasma enzyme with FVII- and pro-urokinase-activating potency, on components of the contact phase (kallikrein/kinin) system was investigated. No activation or cleavage of the proenzymes involved in the contact phase system was observed. The pro-cofactor high molecular weight kininogen (HK), however, was cleaved in vitro by PHBSP in the absence of any charged surface, releasing the activated cofactor and the vasoactive nonapeptide bradykinin. Glycosoaminoglycans strongly enhanced the reaction. The cleavage was comparable to that of plasma kallikrein, but clearly different from that of coagulation factor FXIa. Upon extended incubation with PHBSP, the light chain was further processed, partially removing about 60 amino acid residues from the N-terminus of domain D5 of the light chain. These cleavage site(s) were distinct from plasma kallikrein or FXIa cleavage sites. PHBSP and, more interestingly, also plasma kallikrein could cleave low molecular weight kininogen in vitro, indicating that domains D5H and D6H are no prerequisite for kininogen cleavage. PHBSP was also able to release bradykinin from HK in plasma where the pro-cofactor circulates predominantly in complex with plasma kallikrein or FXI. In conclusion, PHBSP represents a novel kininogen-cleaving and bradykinin-releasing enzyme in plasma that shares significant catalytic similarities with plasma kallikrein. Since they are structurally unrelated in their heavy chains (propeptide), their similar in vivo catalytic activities might be directed at distinct sites where PHBSP could induce processes that are related to the kallikrein/kinin system.  相似文献   

11.
Plasma kallikrein was found to be a good activator of pro-urokinase, the inactive zymogen form of urokinase. The complete activation of pro-urokinase by plasma kallikrein was obtained in 2 h with an enzyme/substrate weight ratio of 1/30. The rate of activation of pro-urokinase by plasma kallikrein was comparable to that catalyzed by plasmin and trypsin. The rate of activation of pro-urokinase by factor XIIa was approximately one-seventh of that by plasma kallikrein. The activation of the zymogen was due to the cleavage of a single internal peptide bond, resulting in the conversion of a single chain pro-urokinase (Mr = 55,000) into two-chain urokinase (Mr = 33,000 and 22,000), and these two chains were linked by a disulfide bond(s). These results indicate an important role of plasma kallikrein for the activation of pro-urokinase in the factor XII-dependent intrinsic pathway of fibrinolysis. Thrombin also converted pro-urokinase to a two-chain form that was not activatable by plasmin, plasma kallikrein, and factor XIIa. Thrombin specifically cleaved the Arg 156-Phe 157 bond which is located 2 residues prior to the activation site of Lys 158-Ile 159.  相似文献   

12.
Large scale purification of human active urinary kallikrein is described. The final preparation was found homogeneous by means of SDS Page electrophoresis, amino acid composition and N-terminal analysis. The apparent molecular weight, determined on SDS Page electrophoresis, was 4.4 X 10(4). Comparative inhibition studies of the kininogenase and the amidase activities pointed out differences in the sensitivity of these two activities. Sodium inhibited amidase activity whereas kininogenase activity required the presence of this cation. In contrast, kininogenase activity was more sensitive to cadmium inhibition than amidase activity. Antibody against purified kallikrein did not completely inhibit amidase activity in crude urine. These discrepancies are consistent with the existence of several amidase activities in urine and also with possibly distinct catalytic sites on the same molecule, accordingly consideration of the methodology used appears very important when comparing results from different studies.  相似文献   

13.
Activated factor XII (FXIIa), the initiator of the contact activation system, has been shown to activate plasminogen in a purified system. However, the quantitative role of FXIIa as a plasminogen activator in contact activation-dependent fibrinolysis in plasma is still unclear. In this study, the plasminogen activator (PA) activity of FXIIa was examined both in a purified system and in a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction of plasma by measuring fibrinolysis in a fibrin microtiter plate assay. FXIIa was found to have low PA activity in a purified system. Dextran sulfate potentiated the PA activity of FXIIa about sixfold, but had no effect on the PA activity of smaller fragments of FXIIa, missing the binding domain for negatively charged surfaces. The addition of small amounts of factor XII (FXII) to FXII-deficient plasma induced a large increase in contact activation-dependent PA activity, as measured in a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction, which may be ascribed to FXII-dependent activation of plasminogen activators like prekallikrein. When more FXII was added, PA activity continued to increase but to a lesser extent. In normal plasma, the addition of FXII also resulted in an increase of contact activation-dependent PA activity. These findings suggested a significant contribution of FXIIa as a direct plasminogen activator. Indeed, at least 20% of contact activation-dependent PA activity could be extracted from a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction prepared from normal plasma by immunodepletion of FXIIa and therefore be ascribed to direct PA activity of FXIIa. PA activity of endogenous FXIIa immunoadsorped from plasma could only be detected in the presence of dextran sulfate. From these results it is concluded that FXIIa can contribute significantly to fibrinolysis as a plasminogen activator in the presence of a potentiating surface.  相似文献   

14.
R L Heimark  E W Davie 《Biochemistry》1979,18(25):5743-5750
Prekallikrein (Fletcher factor) has been purified from bovine plasma approximately 25 000-fold with an overall yield of 14%. Purification steps included ammonium sulfate fractionation and column chromatography on heparin-agarose, DEAE-Sephadex, CM-Sephadex, benzamidine-agarose, and arginine methyl ester-agarose. The purified protein was homogeneous as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and amino-terminal sequence analysis. Bovine plasma prekallikrein is a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 82 000 as determined by sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation. It contains 12.9% carbohydrate, including 6.2% hexose, 4.5% N-acetylglucosamine, and 2.2% N-acetylneuraminic acid. Prekallikrein is a single polypeptide chain with an amino-terminal sequence of Gly-Cys-Leu-Thr-Gln-Leu-Tyr-His-Asn-Ile-Phe-Phe-Arg-Gly-Gly. This sequence is homologous to the amino-terminal sequence of human factor XI (plasma thromboplastin antecedent). Both prekallikrein and kallikrein require kaolin to correct Fletcher factor deficient plasma. Kallikrein, however, has a specific activity 3.5 times greater than prekallikrein. Prekallikrein does not correct plasma deficient in factor XII (Hageman factor), factor XI, or high molecular weight kininogen (Fitzgerald factor).  相似文献   

15.
Purification to apparent homogeneity of inactive kallikrein from rat urine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Inactive kallikrein was purified from rat urine by a procedure including ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE cellulose chromatography, phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B chromatography, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 and Sephadex G-75 columns. The resulting preparation was essentially homogeneous, as assessed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This preparation migrated as a single protein band on a SDS-polyacrylamide gel and the molecular weight was 41000. The purified material underwent marked activation by trypsin, but not by deoxycholate, Triton X-100, SDS or acidification. These results indicate that the purified inactive kallikrein is the precursor rather than a complex with a substance binding to the active form of kallikrein.  相似文献   

16.
A L Cronlund  P N Walsh 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1685-1694
A low molecular weight platelet inhibitor of factor XIa (PIXI) has been purified 250-fold from releasates of washed and stimulated human platelets. Molecular weight estimates of 8400 and 8500 were determined by gel filtration and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, respectively, although a second band of Mr 5000 was present upon electrophoresis. The inhibitor does not appear to be one of the platelet-specific, heparin-binding proteins, since it neither bound to nor was affected by heparin. An amount of PIXI which inhibited by 50% factor XIa cleavage of the chromogenic substrate S2366 (Pyr-Glu-Pro-Arg-pNA-2H2O) only slightly inhibited (5-9%) factor XIIa, plasma kallikrein, plasmin, and activated protein C and did not inhibit factor Xa, thrombin, tPA, or trypsin, suggesting specificity for factor XIa. Kinetic analyses of the effect of PIXI on factor XIa activity demonstrated mixed-type, noncompetitive inhibition of S2366 cleavage and of factor IX activation with Ki's of 7 x 10(-8) and 3.8 x 10(-9) M, respectively. Immunoblot analysis showed that PIXI is not the inhibitory domain of protease nexin II, a potent inhibitor of factor XIa also secreted from platelets. Amino acid analysis showed that PIXI has no cysteine residues and, therefore, is not a Kunitz-type inhibitor. PIXI can prevent stable complex formation between alpha 1-protease inhibitor and factor XIa light chain as demonstrated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibition by PIXI of factor XIa-catalyzed activation of factor IX and its capacity to prevent factor XIa inactivation by alpha 1-protease inhibitor, combined with the specificity of PIXI for factor XIa among serine proteases found in blood, suggest a role for PIXI in the regulation of intrinsic coagulation.  相似文献   

17.
Human tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2)/matrix-associated serine protease inhibitor (MSPI), a Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitor, inhibits plasmin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasma kallikrein, cathepsin G, and factor VIIa-tissue factor complex. The mature protein has a molecular mass of 32-33 kDa, but exists in vivo as two smaller, underglycosylated species of 31 and 27 kDa. TFPI-2/MSPI triplet is synthesized and secreted by a variety of cell types that include epithelial, endothelial, and mesenchymal cells. Because the majority (75-90%) of TFPI-2/MSPI is associated with the extracellular matrix (ECM), we examined which components of the ECM bind TFPI-2/MSPI. We found that TFPI-2/MSPI bound specifically to heparin and dermatan sulfate. Interaction of these two glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) with TFPI-2/MSPI involved one or more common protein domains, as evidenced by cross-competition experiments. However, binding affinity for TFPI-2/MSPI with heparin was 250-300 times greater than that for TFPI-2/MSPI with dermatan sulfate. Binding of TFPI-2/MSPI to GAGs was inhibited by NaCl or arginine but not by glucose, mannose, galactose, 6-aminohexanoic acid, or urea, suggesting that arginine-mediated ionic interactions participate in the GAG binding of TFPI-2/MSPI. This supposition was supported by the observation that only NaCl or arginine could elute the TFPI-2/MSPI protein triplet from an ECM derived from human dermal fibroblasts. Reduced TFPI-2/MSPI did not bind to heparin, suggesting that proper disulfide pairings and conformation are essential for matrix binding. To determine whether heparin modulates the activity of TFPI-2/MSPI, we determined the rate of inhibition of plasmin by the inhibitor with and without heparin and found that TFPI-2/MSPI is more active in the presence of heparin. Collectively, our results demonstrate that conformation-dependent arginine-mediated ionic interactions are responsible for the TFPI-2/MSPI triplet binding to fibroblast ECM, heparin, and dermatan sulfate and that heparin augmented the rate of inhibition of plasmin by TFPI-2/MSPI.  相似文献   

18.
N-Acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfate 6-O-sulfotransferase (GalNAc4S-6ST), which transfers sulfate from 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to position 6 of N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfate in chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate, was purified 19,600-fold to apparent homogeneity from the squid cartilage. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme showed a broad protein band with a molecular mass of 63 kDa. The protein band coeluted with GalNAc4S-6ST activity from Toyopearl HW-55 around the position of 66 kDa, indicating that the active form of GalNAc4S-6ST may be a monomer. The purified enzyme transferred sulfate from PAPS to chondroitin sulfate A, chondroitin sulfate C, and dermatan sulfate. The transfer of sulfate to chondroitin sulfate A and dermatan sulfate occurred mainly at position 6 of the internal N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfate residues. Chondroitin sulfate E, keratan sulfate, heparan sulfate, and completely desulfated N-resulfated heparin were not efficient acceptors of the sulfotransferase. When a trisaccharide or a pentasaccharide having sulfate groups at position 4 of N-acetylgalactosamine was used as acceptor, efficient sulfation of position 6 at the nonreducing terminal N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfate residue was observed.  相似文献   

19.
A critical step in the influenza virus replication cycle is the cleavage activation of the HA precursor. Cleavage activation of influenza HA enables fusion with the host endosome, allowing for release of the viral genome into the host cell. To date, studies have determined that HA activation is driven by trypsin-like host cell proteases, as well as yet to be identified bacterial proteases. Although the number of host proteases that can activate HA is growing, there is still uncertainty regarding which secreted proteases are able to support multicycle replication of influenza. In this study, we have determined that the kallikrein-related peptidases 5 and 12 are secreted from the human respiratory tract and have the ability to cleave and activate HA from the H1, H2, and H3 subtypes. Each peptidase appears to have a preference for particular influenza subtypes, with kallikrein 5 cleaving the H1 and H3 subtypes most efficiently and kallikrein 12 cleaving the H1 and H2 subtypes most efficiently. Cleavage analysis using HA cleavage site peptide mimics revealed that the amino acids neighboring the arginine cleavage site affect cleavage efficiency. Additionally, the thrombolytic zymogens plasminogen, urokinase, and plasma kallikrein have all been shown to cleave and activate influenza but are found circulating mainly as inactive precursors. Kallikrein 5 and kallikrein 12 were examined for their ability to activate the thrombolytic zymogens, and both resulted in activation of each zymogen, with kallikrein 12 being a more potent activator. Activation of the thrombolytic zymogens may therefore allow for both direct and indirect activation of the HA of human-adapted influenza viruses by kallikrein 5 and kallikrein 12.  相似文献   

20.
Plasma kallikrein is a serine protease that has many important functions, including modulation of blood pressure, complement activation, and mediation and maintenance of inflammatory responses. Although plasma kallikrein has been purified for 40 years, its structure has not been elucidated. In this report, we described two systems (Pichia pastoris and baculovirus/Sf9 cells) for expression of the protease domain of plasma kallikrein, along with the purification and high resolution crystal structures of the two recombinant forms. In the Pichia pastoris system, the protease domain was expressed as a heterogeneously glycosylated zymogen that was activated by limited trypsin digestion and treated with endoglycosidase H deglycosidase to reduce heterogeneity from the glycosylation. The resulting protein was chromatographically resolved into four components, one of which was crystallized. In the baculovirus/Sf9 system, homogeneous, crystallizable, and nonglycosylated protein was expressed after mutagenizing three asparagines (the glycosylation sites) to glutamates. When assayed against the peptide substrates, pefachrome-PK and oxidized insulin B chain, both forms of the protease domain were found to have catalytic activity similar to that of the full-length protein. Crystallization and x-ray crystal structure determination of both forms have yielded the first three-dimensional views of the catalytic domain of plasma kallikrein. The structures, determined at 1.85 A for the endoglycosidase H-deglycosylated protease domain produced from P. pastoris and at 1.40 A for the mutagenically deglycosylated form produced from Sf9 cells, show that the protease domain adopts a typical chymotrypsin-like serine protease conformation. The structural information provides insights into the biochemical and enzymatic properties of plasma kallikrein and paves the way for structure-based design of protease inhibitors that are selective either for or against plasma kallikrein.  相似文献   

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