Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.7 (plasmin)
9,023 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An A alpha-arginine-141 to serine substitution has been identified in a homozygous dysfibrinogen, fibrinogen Lima, associated with impaired fibrin polymerization. The point mutation created an asparagine-X-serine-type glycosylation sequence, and indeed, extra, mainly disialylated biantennary oligosaccharides have been isolated from A alpha asparagine-139 of the patient's fibrinogen. This type of glycosylation sequence is unique for human fibrinogen, because the sequences shown for normal and abnormal fibrinogens are all asparagine-X-threonine types. The terminal sialic acids of the extra oligosaccharides seem to have largely contributed to the impaired fibrin gel formation, as evidenced by its correction to a near normal level by desialylation. Nevertheless, the polymerizing fibrin facilitated tissue-type plasminogen activator-catalyzed plasmin formation in a normal fashion, indicating that the initial two-stranded fibrin protofibrils had been constructed normally. Thus the impaired fibrin gel formation could be attributed to the delay in their subsequent lateral association, most probably because of the repulsive forces generated by the negative electric charge of the extra sialic acids. The substitution of a basic residue arginine to a noncharged residue serine may also have contributed to the impaired function in a similar manner or by steric hindrance in association with bulky extra oligosaccharide chains.
...
PMID:Fibrinogen Lima: a homozygous dysfibrinogen with an A alpha-arginine-141 to serine substitution associated with extra N-glycosylation at A alpha-asparagine-139. Impaired fibrin gel formation but normal fibrin-facilitated plasminogen activation catalyzed by tissue-type plasminogen activator. 163 21

A strong fibrinolytic enzyme was readily obtained in saline extracts of the earthworm, Lumbricus rubellus. It hydrolyzed not only plasminogen-rich fibrin plates, but also plasminogen-free fibrin plates. The average fibrinolytic activity was about 100 CU (plasmin units) or 250 IU (urokinase units)/g wet weight. The molecular weight and isoelectric point were about 20,000 and 3.4, respectively. The enzyme was heat-stable and displayed a very broad optimal pH range. DFP and SBTI strongly inhibited the enzyme, but the anti-plasmin agent, t-AMCHA, exerted little effect under the same conditions. Purification of the enzyme was performed and three partially purified fractions were obtained. These three fractions were further subdivided. The first fraction (F-I) was divided into three fractions (F-I-0, F-I-1, and F-I-2), which exhibited similar biochemical characteristics. The second fraction (F-II) could not be subdivided. The third fraction (F-III) was divided into two fractions (F-III-1 and F-III-2). Based on results for their enzymatic activities against various substrates, the fraction I enzymes are thought to represent a chymotrypsin-like enzyme and the fraction III enzymes to represent a trypsin-like enzyme. The fraction II enzyme appears to be neither a trypsin- or chymotrypsin-like enzyme nor an elastase. The amino acid compositions of the six enzymes were estimated. Compared with other serine enzymes, these enzymes contained very abundant asparagine or aspartic acid, and there was very little proline or lysine. From the above data, these enzymes are regarded as novel fibrinolytic enzymes, and we name them collectively as Lumbrokinase from the generic name of the earthworm.
...
PMID:A novel fibrinolytic enzyme extracted from the earthworm, Lumbricus rubellus. 196 Aug 90

C1-s, one of the three subcomponents of C1-, the first component of complement, is a serine protease comprising two disulfide-linked chains, the B chain, containing the catalytic site, and the A chain, involved in Ca2+ binding and Ca2(+)-dependent interaction(s) with the other C1- subcomponents. In an attempt to identify the regions responsible for the latter functions, C1-s was submitted to limited proteolysis with plasmin, a treatment that split the A chain into three major fragments, alpha 1, alpha 2, and gamma. Fragment alpha 2, which comprised the epidermal growth factor-like (EGF-like) region of C1-s, was heterogeneous, starting at serine 97 or phenylalanine 105 and ending at lysine 195. This fragment was reduced and alkylated and then digested with elastase, and three peptides covering positions 131-135, 131-139, and 131-140 were characterized by amino acid analysis, Edman degradation, and mass spectrometry, showing that position 134 of C1-s is occupied partly by an asparagine (47%) and partly by an erythro-beta-hydroxyasparagine, in contrast with the homologous position (150) of C1-r which only contains erythro-beta-hydroxyasparagine. As measured by equilibrium dialysis, native alpha 2, like the other plasmin-cleavage fragments, did not retain the ability of intact C1-s to bind Ca2+. In the same way, plasmin cleavage abolished the ability of C1-s to dimerize or to associate with C1-r in the presence of Ca2+. In contrast, both alpha 2 and the N-terminal alpha 1 fragment, starting at serine 24 of the A chain, were able to compete significantly with intact C1s for the formation of the Ca2(+)-dependent C1-s-C1r-C1-r-C1-s tetramer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Chemical and functional characterization of a fragment of C1-s containing the epidermal growth factor homology region. 214 Dec 78

Plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 (PAI-2) is a serine protease inhibitor that regulates plasmin generation by inhibiting urokinase and tissue plasminogen activator. The primary structure of PAI-2 suggests that it may be secreted without cleavage of a single peptide. To confirm this hypothesis we have studied the glycosylation and secretion of PAI-2 in human monocytic U-937 cells by metabolic labeling, immunoprecipitation, glycosidase digestion, and protein sequencing. PAI-2 is variably glycosylated on asparagine residues to yield intracellular intermediates with zero, one, two, or three high mannose-type oligosaccharide units. Secretion of the N-glycosylated species began by 1 h of chase and the secreted molecules contained both complex-type N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides. Enzymatically deglycosylated PAI-2 had an electrophoretic mobility identical to that of the nonglycosylated precursor and also to that of PAI-2 synthesized in vitro in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate from synthetic mRNA derived from full length PAI-2 cDNA. The amino-terminal protein sequence of secreted PAI-2 began with the initiator methionine residue. These results indicate that PAI-2 is glycosylated and secreted efficiently without the cleavage of a signal peptide. PAI-2 shares this property with its nearest homologue in the serine protease inhibitor family, chicken ovalbumin, and appears to be the first well characterized example of this phenomenon among natural mammalian proteins.
...
PMID:Mammalian protein secretion without signal peptide removal. Biosynthesis of plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 in U-937 cells. 312 94

1. Synthetic angiotensin II (Hypertensin, Ciba, Basel) was incubated with a water-insoluble preparation of plasmin (E.C. 3.4.4.14) and the resulting products analysed by paper chromatography and N-terminal amino-acid analysis.2. Only the N-terminal asparagine was split off from the peptide. This indicates that plasmin attacks the Asn-Arg but not the Arg-Val in angiotensin II molecule.
...
PMID:Degradation of angiotensin II by plasmin. 433 94

Human factor XII was activated by limited proteolysis with trypsin, and the resulting beta-factor XIIa (Mr = 30,000) was isolated by DEAE-Sephacel column chromatography. The complete amino acid sequence of beta-factor XIIa was then determined on peptides produced by enzymatic digestion with either trypsin, chymotrypsin, or Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease and by chemical cleavage at methionyl and tryptophyl bonds. beta-Factor XIIa is a glycoprotein composed of a heavy chain (243 amino acid residues) and a light chain (9 amino acid residues), and these two chains are held together by a disulfide bond. The carbohydrate is attached to asparagine residue 61 in the heavy chain. The amino acid sequence of the heavy chain shows a high degree of homology to the corresponding regions of other plasma serine proteases, such as plasmin, thrombin, factor IXa and factor Xa, as well as the pancreatic digestive enzymes. These results demonstrate that factor XII is the precursor of a typical serine protease that participates in the coagulation cascade.
...
PMID:Amino acid sequence of human beta-factor XIIa. 660 55

The sequence of all 253 amino acids of the heavy (B-) chain of human urinary urokinase was determined. The fragmentation strategy employed included cyanogen bromide cleavage of S-carboxymethylated B-chain at Met and/or Trp residues, cleavage of acid-labile Asp-Pro bonds, and the use of the specific endoproteinases Lys-C and Arg-C for generation of overlapping fragments. For sequence determination automated solid- or liquid-phase techniques of Edman degradation were used. The amino acid sequence obtained substantiates the serine protease character of the B-chain of urokinase: a considerable homology with other serine proteinases, especially with the B-chain of human plasmin, was proved. The pertinent active site amino acids were localized: His-46, Asp-97, and Ser-198. A carbohydrate side chain, containing at least 4 glucosamine and 2 galactosamine residues, was demonstrated to be fixed at asparagine in position 144. The sequence data presented, together with the sequence of the second (A1-) chain of low molecular mass urokinase which was reported by us in an earlier communication, complete the knowledge of the whole primary structure of an active form of human urinary urokinase.
...
PMID:The complete amino acid sequence of low molecular mass urokinase from human urine. 675 72

The purpose of the present study was to analyze the post-translational and activation-dependent modifications of the G protein-coupled thrombin receptor. A human receptor cDNA was engineered to encode an epitope tag derived from the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein at the COOH terminus of the receptor and expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. We show here that the mature receptor is a glycosylated protein with an apparent molecular mass ranging from 68 to 80 kDa by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Removal of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides with N-glycosidase F leads to the appearance of a 36-40-kDa receptor species. The current model for receptor activation by thrombin involves specific hydrolysis of the arginine-41/serine-42 (Arg-41/Ser-42) peptide bond. Cleavage of the receptor by thrombin was demonstrated directly by Western analyses performed on membranes and glycoprotein-enriched lysates from transfected cells. Whereas thrombin treatment of cells results in increased mobility of the receptor in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, we found that their treatment with the thrombin receptor agonist peptide leads to a decrease in thrombin receptor mobility due, in part, to phosphorylation. The serine proteases trypsin and plasmin also cleave and activate the receptor similar to thrombin, whereas chymotrypsin cleaves the receptor at a site distal to Arg-41, thus rendering it unresponsive to thrombin while still responsive to thrombin receptor agonist peptide.
...
PMID:Post-translational and activation-dependent modifications of the G protein-coupled thrombin receptor. 771 46

An inherited fibrinogen variant, fibrinogen Bern I, was isolated from plasma of an asymptomatic woman. Routine coagulation studies showed prolonged thrombin and reptilase clotting times. Fibrinogen concentration was diminished when determined by a functional assay, but was normal by the heat precipitation method. The release of fibrinopeptides A and B was not delayed. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of mercaptolyzed fragments D of fibrinogen, obtained by digestion with plasmin, showed an abnormal electrophoretic mobility in the gamma-chain remnants of fragments D1 and D2 from fibrinogen Bern I, whereas conversion of D2 to D3 by plasmin resulted in the loss of the abnormal charge, suggesting that the structural abnormality in this variant is located in the region gamma 303 through 356. The molecular defect in fibrinogen Bern I was identified by sequence analysis of genomic DNA amplified by polymerase chain reaction and cloned in M13mp19. The triplet AAC coding for asparagine at position gamma 337 was found to be substituted by AAA coding for lysine. We conclude that the substitution gamma 337 Asn-->Lys in fibrinogen Bern I is responsible for defective polymerization of fibrin monomers and for impaired protection by calcium against plasmic degradation.
...
PMID:Fibrinogen Bern I: substitution gamma 337 Asn-->Lys is responsible for defective fibrin monomer polymerization. 840 Feb 60

Mature alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor in human plasma has 12 more N-terminal residues than hitherto anticipated. The first residue is the methionine at position 28, downstream from the N-terminus of the pre-protein. The cDNA sequence predicts that the site cleaved upon formation of the mature inhibitor is a typical signal-peptidase recognition site. The mature inhibitor (464 residues) and the previously reported, and presumably degraded, form with N-terminal asparagine (452 residues), are present in plasma in about equal amounts. They both form a stable complex with plasmin. Recent studies on a recombinant alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor suggest that the 12 additional residues have functional implications [Sumi, Ichikawa, Nakamura, Miura and Aoki (1989) J. Biochem. 106, 703-707].
...
PMID:Different N-terminal forms of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor in human plasma. 848 41


1 2 Next >>