Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.37 (neutrophil elastase)
4,078 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Barley serpin BSZx is a potent inhibitor of trypsin and chymotrypsin at overlapping reactive sites (Dahl, S.W., Rasmussen, S.K. and Hejgaard, J. (1996) J. Biol. Chem., in press). We have now investigated the interactions of BSZx with a range of serine proteinases from human plasma, pancreas and leukocytes, a fungal trypsin and three subtilisins. Thrombin, plasma kallikrein, factor VIIa/tissue factor and factor Xa were inhibited by BSZx at heparin independent association rates (k(ass)) of 4.5 X 10(3)-1.3 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at 22 degrees C. Only factor Xa turned a significant fraction of BSZx over as substrate. Complexes of these proteinase with BSZx resisted boiling in SDS, and amino acid sequencing showed that cleavage in the reactive center loop only occurred after P1 Arg. Activated protein C and leukocyte elastase were slowly inhibited by BSZx (k(ass)=1-2 x 10(2) M(-1) s(-1)) whereas factor XIIa, urokinase and tissue type plasminogen activator, plasmin and pancreas kallikrein and elastase were not or only weakly affected. The inhibition pattern with mammalian proteinases reveal a specificity of BSZx similar to that of antithrombin III. Trypsin from Fusarium was not inhibited while interaction with subtilisin Carlsberg and Novo was rapid but most BSZx was cleaved as a substrate. Identification of a monoclonal antibody specific for native BSZx indicate that complex formation and loop cleavage result in similar conformational changes.
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PMID:Inhibition of coagulation factors by recombinant barley serpin BSZx. 884 56

The kinetic parameters were determined for the hydrolysis of a peptide based on the activation site of the thrombin receptor (residues 38-60) by thrombin and 12 other proteases. The kcat and Km values for the cleavage of this peptide (TR39-40) by thrombin were 107 s-1 and 1.3 microM; the kcat/Km of TR39-40 is among the highest observed for thrombin. A model is presented that reconciles the parameters for cleavage of the peptide with the concentration dependence of cellular responses to thrombin. Cleavage of TR39-40 was not specific for thrombin. The pancreatic proteases trypsin and chymotrypsin hydrolysed TR39-40 efficiently (kcat/Km > 10(6) M-1.s-1). Whereas trypsin cleaved TR39-40 at the thrombin activation site (Arg41-Ser42), chymotrypsin hydrolysed the peptide after Phe43. This chymotryptic cleavage would result in inactivation of the receptor. The efficient cleavage of TR39-40 by chymotrypsin (kcat/Km approximately 10(6) M-1.s-1) was predominantly due to a low Km value (2.8 microM). The proteases factor Xa, plasmin, plasma kallikrein, activated protein C and granzyme A also hydrolysed TR39-40 at the Arg41-Ser43 bond, but exhibited kcat/Km values that were at least 10(3)-fold lower than that observed with thrombin. Both tissue and urokinase plasminogen activators as well as granzyme B and neutrophil elastase were unable to cleave TR39-60 at appreciable rates. However, neutrophil cathepsin G hydrolysed the receptor peptide after Phe55. Like the chymotryptic cleavage, this cleavage would lead to inactivation of the receptor, but the cathepsin G reaction was markedly less efficient; the kcat/K(m) value was almost four orders of magnitude lower than that for thrombin. In addition to the above cleavage sites, a secondary site for thrombin and other arginine-specific proteases was identified at Arg46, but the cleavage at this site only occurred at very low rates and is unlikely to be significant in vivo.
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PMID:Cleavage of the thrombin receptor: identification of potential activators and inactivators. 894 6

Members of the serpin (serine protease inhibitor) family share a similar backbone structure but expose a variable reactive-site loop, which binds to the catalytic groove of the target protease. Specificity originates in part from the sequence of this loop and also from secondary binding sites that contribute to the inhibitor function. To clarify the intrinsic contribution of the reactive-site loop, alpha1-antichymotrypsin has been utilized as a scaffold to construct chimeras carrying the loop of antithrombin III, protease nexin 1, or alpha1-antitrypsin. Reactive-site loops not only vary in sequence but also in length; therefore, the length of the reactive-site loop was also varied in the chimeras. The efficacy of the specificity transfer was evaluated by measuring the stoichiometry of the reaction, the ability to form an SDS-stable complex, and the association rate constant with a number of potential targets (chymotrypsin, neutrophil elastase, trypsin, thrombin, factor Xa, activated protein C, and urokinase). Overall, substitution of a reactive-site loop was not sufficient to transfer the specificity of a given serpin to alpha1-antichymotrypsin. Specificity of the chimera partly matched that of the loop donor and partly that of the acceptor, whereas the behavior as an inhibitor or a substrate depended upon the targeted protease. Results suggest that, aside from the contributions of the loop sequence and the framework-specific secondary binding sites, an intramolecular control may be essential for productive interaction.
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PMID:Intrinsic specificity of the reactive site loop of alpha1-antitrypsin, alpha1-antichymotrypsin, antithrombin III, and protease nexin I. 919 29

The effect of human neutrophil elastase (HNE) on human factor V (F.V) or alpha-thrombin-activated human factor V (F.Va) was studied in vitro by prothrombinase assays, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and NH2-terminal sequence analysis. Incubation of F.V (600 nmol/L) with HNE (2 nmol/L) in the presence of Ca2+ resulted in a time-dependent increase in its cofactor activity. In contrast, treatment of F.Va (600 nmol/L) with HNE (60 nmol/L) in the presence of Ca2+ resulted only in a time-dependent decrease in its cofactor activity. Under the conditions of these experiments, the maximum extent of F.V activation accomplished by incubation with HNE was approximately 65% to 70% of that observed with alpha-thrombin in presence of Ca2+. The extent of both the HNE-dependent enhancement in F.V cofactor activity and the HNE-dependent decrease in F.Va cofactor activity was not influenced by the addition of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (PCPS) vesicles (50 micromol/L). The HNE-derived cleavage products of F.V, which correlated with increased cofactor activity, as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions, were different from those generated using alpha-thrombin. Treatment of F.V (600 nmol/L) with HNE (2 nmol/L) in the presence of Ca2+ resulted in the production of three closely spaced doublets of: 99/97, 89/87, and 76/74 kD whose appearance over time correlated well with the increased cofactor activity as judged by densitometry. Treatment of F.Va (600 nmol/L) with HNE (60 nmol/L) in the presence of Ca2+ resulted in the cleavage of both the 96 kD heavy chain and the 74/72 kD light chain into products of: 56, 53, 35, 28, 22, and 12 kD. Although densitometry indicated that both the heavy and light chains of F.Va were hydrolyzed by HNE, cleavage of the 96 kD heavy chain was more extensive during the time period (10 to 30 minutes) of the greatest loss of F.Va cofactor activity. NH2-terminal sequence analysis of F.V treated with HNE indicated cleavage at Ile819 and Ile1484 under conditions during which the procofactor expressed enhanced cofactor activity in the prothrombinase complex. NH2-terminal sequence analysis of F.Va treated with HNE indicated cleavage at Ala341, Ile508, and Thr1767 under conditions, which the cofactor became inactivated, as measured by prothrombinase activity. The activation and inactivation cleavage sites are close to those cleaved by the physiological activator and inactivator of F.V and F.Va, namely alpha-thrombin (Arg709 and Arg1545) and Activated Protein C (APC) (Arg306 and Arg506), respectively. These results indicate that HNE can generate proteolytic products of F.V, which initially express significantly enhanced procoagulant cofactor activity similar to that observed following activation with alpha-thrombin. In contrast, HNE treatment of F.Va resulted only in the loss of its cofactor activity, but again, this is similar to that observed following inactivation by APC.
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PMID:Human neutrophil elastase activates human factor V but inactivates thrombin-activated human factor V. 924 37

Factor V (FV) is a large (2,196 amino acids) nonenzymatic cofactor in the coagulation cascade with a domain organization (A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2) similar to the one of factor VIII (FVIII). FV is activated to factor Va (FVa) by thrombin, which cleaves away the B domain leaving a heterodimeric structure composed of a heavy chain (A1-A2) and a light chain (A3-C1-C2). Activated protein C (APC), together with its cofactor protein S (PS), inhibits the coagulation cascade via limited proteolysis of FVa and FVIIIa (APC cleaves FVa at residues R306, R506, and R679). The A domains of FV and FVIII share important sequence identity with the plasma copper-binding protein ceruloplasmin (CP). The X-ray structure of CP and theoretical models for FVIII have been recently reported. This information allowed us to build a theoretical model (994 residues) for the A domains of human FV/FVa (residues 1-656 and 1546-1883). Structural analysis of the FV model indicates that: (a) the three A domains are arranged in a triangular fashion as in the case of CP and the organization of these domains should remain essentially the same before and after activation; (b) a Type II copper ion is located at the A1-A3 interface; (c) residues R306 and R506 (cleavage sites for APC) are both solvent exposed; (d) residues 1667-1765 within the A3 domain, expected to interact with the membrane, are essentially buried; (e) APC does not bind to FVa residues 1865-1874. Several other features of factor V/Va, like the R506Q and A221V mutations; factor Xa (FXa) and human neutrophil elastase (HNE) cleavages; protein S, prothrombin and FXa binding, are also investigated.
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PMID:Structural investigation of the A domains of human blood coagulation factor V by molecular modeling. 965 35

Thrombomodulin is a glycoprotein that can bind to thrombin and activate protein C, thus mitigating the effects of cytokines produced by inflammatory and immunological processes. The molecule exerts a protective function on endothelial cells. Thrombomodulin is cleaved to its soluble form by neutrophil elastase and by other substances produced during acute and chronic inflammatory responses, immunologic reactions and complement activation. ELISA technique yields normal serum levels of 3.1 +/- 1.3 ng/ml; in males these levels are higher; TM levels also rise during menopause. Other circumstances associated with an increase of serum TM levels are smoking, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), cardiac surgery, atherosclerosis, ARDS, liver cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, cerebral and myocardial infarction, and multiple sclerosis. Serum levels of TM represent an useful prognostic index, because they are associated with an increase in mortality rate, or however a progression of the underlying pathological condition.
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PMID:Clinical importance of thrombomodulin serum levels. 1155 26

The extracellular moiety of ICAM-1 consists of five Ig-like domains, the first and third domains mediating adhesion to integrin ligands. The ICAM-1 gene, however, gives rise to the expression of five alternative splice variants containing two, three, or four Ig-like domains. In this work, we have investigated whether the rearrangement of the architecture of ICAM-1 affects its structural properties and function. We showed that, in contrast to the common form, all alternative isoforms of ICAM-1 were susceptible to cleavage by leukocyte elastase and cathepsin G. We found that the length of an isoform did not influence the susceptibility to proteolysis. The molecular diversity provided by the skipping of entire Ig domains and the level of expression on the APC, however, significantly influenced their ability to potentiate the proliferation of T cells. Finally, we found that the expression of minor ICAM-1 isoforms encoding the third Ig-like domains was sufficient to sustain neutrophil infiltration in the liver and confer exon-5-targeted ICAM-1-deficient mice susceptibility to LPS-induced septic shock. These findings not only demonstrate that ICAM-1 isoforms are fully functional, but support the concept that alternative RNA splicing in the Ig superfamily may fulfill distinct roles during the development of the immune response.
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PMID:ICAM-1 isoforms: specific activity and sensitivity to cleavage by leukocyte elastase and cathepsin G. 1273 Oct 61

The abundant plasma protein alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor (alpha(1)-PI) physiologically inhibits neutrophil elastase (NE) and factor XIa and belongs to the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) protein superfamily. Inhibitory serpins possess a surface peptide domain called the reactive center loop (RCL), which contains the P1-P1' scissile peptide bond. Conversion of this bond in alpha(1)-PI from Met-Ser to Arg-Ser in alpha(1)-PI Pittsburgh (M358R) redirects alpha(1)-PI from inhibiting NE to inhibiting thrombin (IIa), activated protein C (APC), and other proteases. In contrast to either the wild-type or M358R alpha(1)-PI, heparin cofactor II (HCII) is a IIa-specific inhibitor with an atypical Leu-Ser reactive center. We examined the effects of replacement of all or part of the RCL of alpha(1)-PI with the corresponding parts of the HCII RCL on the activity and specificity of the resulting chimeric inhibitors. A series of 12 N-terminally His-tagged alpha(1)-PI proteins differing only in their RCL residues were expressed as soluble proteins in Escherichia coli. Substitution of the P16-P3' loop of alpha(1)-PI with that of HCII increased the low intrinsic antithrombin activity of alpha(1)-PI to near that of heparin-free HCII, while analogous substitution of the P2'-P3' dipeptide surpassed this level. However, gel-based complexing and quantitative kinetic assays showed that all mutant proteins inhibited thrombin at less than 2% of the rate of alpha(1)-PI (M358R) unless the P1 residue was also mutated to Arg. An alpha(1)-PI (P16-P3' HCII/M358R) variant was only 3-fold less active than M358R against IIa but 70-fold less active against APC. The reduction in anti-APC activity is desired in an antithrombotic agent, but the improvement in inhibitory profile came at the cost of a 3.5-fold increase in the stoichiometry of inhibition. Our results suggest that, while P1 Arg is essential for maximal antithrombin activity in engineered alpha(1)-PI proteins, substitution of the corresponding HCII residues can enhance thrombin specificity.
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PMID:Full or partial substitution of the reactive center loop of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor by that of heparin cofactor II: P1 Arg is required for maximal thrombin inhibition. 1554 57

Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are acute life-threatening forms of hypoxemic respiratory failure. ALI/ARDS patients require intensive care with prolonged mechanical ventilation. Despite advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ALI/ARDS, mortality rates remain > 30% and survivors suffer significant decrements in their quality of life. The evolving understanding of ALI/ARDS and the complex interactions involved in ALI/ARDS open the door for many potential targets for treatment. The condition is characterised by an acute inflammatory state that leads to increased capillary permeability and accumulation of proteinaceous pulmonary oedema. The changes that occur as a result of this inflammation clinically manifest themselves as hypoxemia, infiltrates on chest radiograph and reduced lung compliance. Many years have been dedicated to analysing the complexities involved in ALI/ARDS in order to improve current and future possibilities for treatment, with the aim of improving patient outcomes. Although some therapies have demonstrated benefits of improved oxygenation, such as surfactant and nitric oxide, these benefits have not translated into reductions in the duration of mechanical ventilation or mortality. Inflammatory mediator-targeted therapies were promising early on; however, larger trials have found therapies such as cytokine modulation, platelet-activating factor inhibition and neutrophil elastase inhibitors to be ineffective in the treatment of ALI/ARDS. Preclinical studies with beta2-agonists and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor have shown promise for restoring alveolar capillary barrier integrity or reducing pulmonary oedema, and further studies are being conducted to test for true clinical benefit. Despite previous therapeutic failures, newer surfactant formulations have shown promise, particularly in patients with direct forms of lung injury, and are currently in Phase III trials. Anticoagulant therapy with activated protein C has been shown to improve survival in sepsis, the most common risk factor for the development of ALI/ARDS, and is now being studied in ALI/ARDS. Until new data emerge, the focus must remain on supportive care, including optimised mechanical ventilation, nutritional support, manipulation of fluid balance and prevention of intervening medical complications.
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PMID:Evolution of treatments for patients with acute lung injury. 1592 69

The conversion of the reactive center bond of the serpin alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1-PI, also known as alpha1-antitrypsin) from Met-Ser to Arg-Ser decreases the rate at which it inhibits neutrophil elastase and endows it with the ability to inhibit thrombin and activated protein C (APC). Another serpin, heparin cofactor II (HCII), contains a unique N-terminal extension that binds thrombin exosite 1. We fused residues 1-75 of HCII to the N-terminus of alpha1-PI M358R, forming an HCII-alpha1-PI chimera (HAPI M358R). It inhibited alpha-thrombin 21-fold faster than alpha1-PI M358R, with second-order rate constants of 2.3 x 10(8) M(-1) min(-1) versus 1.1 x 10(7) M(-1) min(-1), respectively. When gammaT-thrombin, which lacks an intact exosite 1, was substituted for alpha-thrombin, the kinetic advantage of HAPI M358R over alpha1-PI M358R was reduced to 9-fold, whereas APC and trypsin, proteases lacking exosite 1-like regions, were inhibited only 1.3- and 2-fold more rapidly by HAPI M358R than by alpha1-PI M358R, respectively. Maximal enhancement of alpha1-PI M358R activity required the acidic residues found between HCII residues 55 and 75, because no enhancement was observed either by fusion of residues 1-54 alone or by fusion of a mutated HCII acidic extension in which all Glu and Asp residues between positions 55 and 75 were neutralized by mutation. Fusing residues 55-75 to alpha1-PI M358R yielded a relative rate enhancement of only 6-fold, suggesting a need for the full tail region to achieve maximal enhancement. Our results suggest that transfer of the N-terminal acidic extension of HCII to alpha1-PI M358R enhanced its inhibition of thrombin by conferring the ability to bind exosite 1 on HAPI M358R. This enhancement may aid in efforts to tailor this inhibitor for therapeutic use.
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PMID:The transferable tail: fusion of the N-terminal acidic extension of heparin cofactor II to alpha1-proteinase inhibitor M358R specifically increases the rate of thrombin inhibition. 1698 4


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