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The inhibitory activity of the serpins alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor, alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, alpha(2)-antiplasmin, antithrombin and C(1)-esterase inactivator is rapidly lost at pH 3 but slowly recovers at pH 7.4 with variable first-order rates (t(1/2)=1.4-19.2 min). All except alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin undergo a variation in intrinsic fluorescence intensity upon acidification (midpoint ca. 4.5) with a slow bi-exponential return to the initial intensity at pH 7.4 (mean t(1/2)=2.3-23 min). No correlation was found between the time of fluorescence recovery and that of reactivation. The acid-treated serpins are proteolyzed at neutral pH by their target proteinases. alpha(1)-Proteinase inhibitor was studied in more detail. Its acidification at pH 3 has a mild effect on its secondary structure, strongly disorders its tertiary structure, changes the microenvironment of Cys(232) and causes a very fast change in ellipticity at 225 nm (t(1/2)=1.6s). Neutralization of the acid-treated alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor is an exothermic phenomenon. It leads to a much faster recovery of activity (t(1/2)=4+/-1 min) than of fluorescence intensity (t(1/2)=23+/-19 min), ellipticity (t(1/2)=32+/-4 min) and change in total energy, indicating that the inhibitory activity of alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor does not require a fully native structure.  相似文献   
2.
A high intrapulmonary protease burden is characteristic of cystic fibrosis (CF), and the resulting dysregulation of the protease/anti-protease balance has serious implications for inflammation in the CF lung. Because of this inflammation, micro-bleeds can occur releasing hemoglobin into the lung. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the protease-rich environment of the CF lung on human hemoglobin and to assess the proinflammatory effect of heme on CF bronchial epithelium. Here, we show that the Pseudomonas proteases (Pseudomonas elastase and alkaline protease) and the neutrophil proteases (neutrophil elastase (NE) and proteinase-3) are capable of almost complete degradation of hemoglobin in vitro but that NE is the predominant protease that cleaves hemoglobin in vivo in CF bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. One of the effects of this is the release of heme, and in this study we show that heme stimulates IL-8 and IL-10 protein production from ΔF508 CFBE41o(-) bronchial epithelial cells. In addition, heme-induced IL-8 expression utilizes a novel pathway involving meprin, EGF receptor, and MyD88. Meprin levels are elevated in CF cell lines and bronchial brushings, thus adding to the proinflammatory milieu. Interestingly, α(1)-antitrypsin, in addition to its ability to neutralize NE and protease-3, can also bind heme and neutralize heme-induced IL-8 from CFBE41o(-) cells. This study illustrates the proinflammatory effects of micro-bleeds in the CF lung, the process by which this occurs, and a potential therapeutic intervention.  相似文献   
3.
Members of the serpin (serine protease inhibitor) superfamily of genes are well represented in both human and murine genomes. In many cases it is possible to identify a definite ortholog on the basis of sequence similarity and by examining the surrounding genes at syntenic loci. We have recently examined the murine serpin locus at 12F1 and observed that the single human 1-antichymotrypsin gene is represented by 14 paralogs. It is also known that the single human 1-antitrypsin gene has five paralogs in the mouse. The forces driving this gene multiplication are unknown and there are no data describing the function of the various serpin gene products at the 1-antichymotrypsin multigene locus. Examination of the predicted amino acid sequences shows that the serpins are likely to be functional protease inhibitors but with differing target protease specificities. In order to begin to address the question of the problem presented by the murine 1-antichymotrypsins, we have used RT-PCR to examine the expression pattern of these serpin genes. Our data show that the divergent reactive center loop sequence, and predictably variable target protease specificity, is reflected in tissue-specific expression for many of the family members. These observations add weight to the hypothesis that the antichymotrypsin-like serpins have an evolutionary importance which has led to their expansion and diversification in multiple species.[Reviewing Editor: Dr. Peer Bork]  相似文献   
4.
Summary. Human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor is a well-characterized protease inhibitor with a wide spectrum of anti-protease activity. Its major physiological role is inhibition of neutrophil elastase in the lungs, and its deficiency is associated with progressive ultimately fatal emphysema. Currently in the US, only plasma-derived human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor is available for augmentation therapy, which appears to be insufficient to meet the anticipated clinical demand. Moreover, despite effective viral clearance steps in the manufacturing process, the potential risk of contamination with new and unknown pathogens still exists. In response, multiple efforts to develop recombinant versions of human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor, as an alternative to the plasma-derived protein, have been reported. Over the last two decades, various systems have been used to express the human gene for alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor. This paper reviews the recombinant versions of human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor produced in various hosts, considers current major safety and efficacy issues regarding recombinant glycoproteins as potential therapeutics, and the factors that are impeding progress in this area1. 1 The opinions expressed in this paper reflect the authors’ personal views, based on published data and the information available from the public domains, and have no relation to the official statements, if any, held by the US FDA, National Institutes of Health, or the US Department of Health and Human Services. FDA official recommendations for plasma protein therapeutics and recombinant proteins regarding safety, purity, and potency of new drugs and biologics produced by recombinant DNA technology are referred below as the US FDA Guidances.  相似文献   
5.
Human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor(1) (alpha(1)-PI) is the most abundant serine protease inhibitor in plasma. Its major function is inhibition of neutrophil elastase in lungs. alpha(1)-PI deficiency may result in severe, ultimately fatal emphysema. Three plasma-derived (pd-) alpha(1)-PI products are licensed in the US for replacement therapy of deficient patients. The recombinant versions (r-alpha(1)-PI), proposed as alternatives to pd-alpha(1)-PI products, have been under intensive investigation. For accurate determination of alpha(1)-PI from different sources and in various forms, there is an obvious need for reliable standardized assays for alpha(1)-PI quantification and potency measurements. As a part of our multi-step research focused on alpha(1)-PI structure-function investigation, we have established a simple and reproducible double-sandwich ELISA based on commercially available polyclonal antibodies. The developed ELISA allows the quantification of both pd-alpha(1)-PI and r-alpha(1)-PI in various complex matrices. A validation of the ELISA was performed with the working range of the assay (3.1-50 ng/ml) established on the bases of the following parameters: linearity (3-100 ng/ml, r(2)=0.995); accuracy (87.3-114.6% recovery); intra-assay precision (%CV, 2.8%); inter-assay plate-to-plate precision (3.9% per day and 4.1% day-to-day); detection limit (1.10 ng/ml); and quantification limit (3.34 ng/ml). The analytical performance of the alpha(1)-PI ELISA indicates that this assay can be used for monitoring concentration levels of alpha(1)-PI in multi-component biological matrices, based on the following: (a) quantification of r-alpha(1)-PI in various fermentation mixtures (E. coli and A. niger); (b) investigation of alpha(1)-PI enzymatically digested in the conditions of harsh fungal proteolysis; (c) evaluation of thermally polymerized alpha(1)-PI; (d) quantification of alpha(1)-PI in human serum; and (e) comparative quantification of alpha(1)-PI in commercially available products.  相似文献   
6.
alpha1-Antitrypsin (AAT) is a major circulating serine proteinase inhibitor in humans. The anti-proteinase activity of AAT is inhibited by chemical modification. These include inter- or intramolecular polymerisation, oxidation, complex formation with target proteinases (e.g., neutrophil elastase), and/or cleavage by multi-specific proteinases. In vivo, several modified forms of AAT have been identified which stimulate biological activity in vitro unrelated to inhibition of serine proteinases. In this study we have examined the effects of native and polymerised AAT and C-36 peptide, a proteolytic cleavage product of AAT, on human neutrophil activation, in vitro. We show that the C-36 peptide displays striking concentration-dependent pro-inflammatory effects on human neutrophils, including induction of neutrophil chemotaxis, adhesion, degranulation, and superoxide generation. In contrast to C-36 peptide, native and polymerised AAT at similar and higher concentrations showed no effects on neutrophil activation. These results suggest that cleavage of AAT may not only abolish its proteinase inhibitor activity, but can also generate a powerful pro-inflammatory activator for human neutrophils.  相似文献   
7.
The native serpin fold is metastable and possesses the inherent ability to convert into more stable, but inactive, conformations. In order to understand why serpins attain the native fold instead of other more thermodynamically favourable folds we have investigated the presence of residual structure within denatured antichymotrypsin (ACT). Through mutagenesis we created a single tryptophan variant of ACT in which a Trp residue (276) is situated on the H-helix, located within a region known as the B/C barrel. The presence of residual structure around Trp 276 in 5 M guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) was shown by fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy and fluorescence lifetime experiments. The residual structure was disrupted in the presence of 5 M guanidine thiocyanate (GdnSCN). Protein refolding studies showed that significant refolding could be achieved from the GdnHCl denatured state but not the GdnSCN denatured form. The implications of these data on the folding and misfolding of the serpin superfamily are discussed.  相似文献   
8.
Human alpha1-antitrypsin (A1PI) is a well-known glycoprotein in human plasma important for the protection of tissues from proteolytic enzymes. The three N-glycosylation sites of A1PI contain diantennary N-glycans but also triantennary and even traces of tetraantennary structures leading to the typical IEF pattern observed for A1PI. Here we present an approach to characterize A1PI isoforms from human plasma and its PTMs by LC-ESI-MS and LC-ESI-MS/MS of peptides obtained by proteolytic digestion. The single cysteine residue of A1PI formed a disulfide bridge with free cysteine. The variability of the number of antennae and hence sialic acids on glycosylation site N107, which even contained minute amounts of tetraantennary structures, emerged as a major cause for the IEF pattern of A1PI. Only negligible amounts of triantennary structures were identified attached to N70, and exclusively diantennary structures were present on site N271 in each of the isoforms analyzed. Exoglycosidase digests revealed alpha2,6-linked neuraminic acids on diantennary N-glycans, and triantennary contained additionally one single alpha2,3-neuraminic acid per N-glycan, which, together with a fucose, formed a sialyl Lewis X determinant on the beta1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine, as shown by 2-D-HPLC of pyridylaminated asialoglycans. Fucosylation of diantennary structures was marginal and of the core alpha1,6 type.  相似文献   
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