Mechanism of Human Plasminogen Activation by Streptokinase and Human Plasmin

1964 ◽  
Vol 11 (01) ◽  
pp. 085-093
Author(s):  
W. F Blatt ◽  
JL Gray ◽  
H Jensen

SummaryA sensitive tool has been described for measuring fibrinolysis in reconstituted systems using thrombelastography. Activator mixtures with no appreciable proteolytic activity can similarly be tested in this system when the fibrinogen utilized has sufficient plasminogen present. Exposure of human plasminstreptokinase mixtures formed at pH 7.0 to acid conditions produced a striking loss of activator activity which could not be ascribed to low pH lability of the components, nor to plasmin action on the SK at pH 2.0. This is additional evidence for the hypothesis that human plasmin interacts with SK to form a complex capable of converting human and bovine plasminogen to plasmin.

1971 ◽  
Vol 25 (03) ◽  
pp. 481-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Nijs ◽  
Christiane Brassinne ◽  
A Coune ◽  
H. J Tagnon

SummaryAn analysis of the proteolytic factors contained in human prostatic tissue was performed in vitro. Casein, fibrinogen and fibrin, non-radioactive and radioiodinated were used as substrates.A first factor, called direct proteolytic activity, capable of proteolyzing casein without prior activation, is described. It had no effect on fibrinogen or fibrin, was inhibited by epsilon aminocaproic acid, but not by the soybean trypsin inhibitor. This shows that this proteolytic activity was quite different from plasmin.A second factor, called plasminogen proactivator, was demonstrated on bovine plasminogen in the presence of streptokinase, the latter being unable to produce direct activation of bovine plasminogen. Activation of this system resulted in the transformation of plasminogen into plasmin, capable of digesting casein as well as fibrinogen and fibrin. Epsilon aminocaproic acid and the soybean trypsin inhibitor inhibited this system. The properties of this proactivator show that it probably does not result from the presence of small amounts of plasminogen in the prostate. Urokinase, a factor present in human urine, is able to activate this proactivator under certain conditions.The third factor, called plasminogen activator, was capable of activating directly human plasminogen into plasmin. It was not active on bovine plasminogen. Epsilon aminocaproic acid and the soybean trypsin inhibitor were effective inhibitors. Addition of large volumes of human prostatic extract to human plasminogen resulted in a paradoxical decrease of the proteolytic activity suggesting the possible existence in the prostate of an inhibitor of this third factor.Possible relationships between these factors and the clinical state of fibrinolysis observed in some cases of disseminated prostatic cancer are discussed.


1968 ◽  
Vol 20 (03/04) ◽  
pp. 548-554
Author(s):  
J Gajewski ◽  
G Markus

SummaryA method for the standardization of human plasminogen is proposed, based on the stoichiometric interaction between plasminogen and streptokinase, resulting in inhibition of proteolytic activity. Activation of a constant amount of plasminogen with increasing amounts of streptokinase yields linearly decreasing activities, as a function of streptokinase, with a sharp transition to a constant residual level. The point of transition corresponds to complete saturation of plasmin with streptokinase in a 1:1 molar ratio, and is therefore a measure of the amount of plasminogen present initially, in terms of streptokinase equivalents. The equivalence point is independent of the kind of protein substrate used, buffer, pH, length of digestion and, within limits, temperature. The method, therefore, is not subject to the variations commonly encountered in the usual determination based on specific activity measurements.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. eabe3362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thiago Luiz Alves e Silva ◽  
Andrea Radtke ◽  
Amanda Balaban ◽  
Tales Vicari Pascini ◽  
Zarna Rajeshkumar Pala ◽  
...  

Plasmodium parasites must migrate across proteinaceous matrices to infect the mosquito and vertebrate hosts. Plasmin, a mammalian serine protease, degrades extracellular matrix proteins allowing cell migration through tissues. We report that Plasmodium gametes recruit human plasminogen to their surface where it is processed into plasmin by corecruited plasminogen activators. Inhibition of plasminogen activation arrests parasite development early during sexual reproduction, before ookinete formation. We show that increased fibrinogen and fibrin in the blood bolus, which are natural substrates of plasmin, inversely correlate with parasite infectivity of the mosquito. Furthermore, we show that sporozoites, the parasite form transmitted by the mosquito to humans, also bind plasminogen and plasminogen activators on their surface, where plasminogen is activated into plasmin. Surface-bound plasmin promotes sporozoite transmission by facilitating parasite migration across the extracellular matrices of the dermis and of the liver. The fibrinolytic system is a potential target to hamper Plasmodium transmission.


Biochemistry ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 1482-1488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Menhart ◽  
Gordon J. Hoover ◽  
Stephen G. McCance ◽  
Francis J. Castellino

1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Schulman ◽  
A Holmgren

Following the principles described by Wohl, Summaria and Robbins we have studied the kinetics of human plasminogen activation by streptokinase. Plasma plasminogen activation kinetic parameters were measured in the following way: Citrated plasma was mixed with a Tris/NaCl buffer, pH 7.4, and increasing amounts of streptokinase were added. After incubation at 37°C for 5 min, synthetic substrate, H-D-val- -L-leu-L-lys-p-nitroanilide was added and initial plasmin rates were recorded. We also determined the Michaelis-Man- ten parameters for the plasmin of the plasma samples following maximal activation of the plasminogen with streptokinase. This was done by incubating citrated plasma (diluted 1:200) with streptokinase (5000 U/ml) for 10 min at 37°C.In the normal individuals the zymogen.streptokinase complex gave a mean catalytic efficiency, kcat/KM, of 0.15 μM-1S-1. For the streptokinase activator species the average catalytic efficiency, kplg/Kplg, was 26 μM-1min-1, Iμ(95%) = {8.4; 44.5} μM-lmin-1.So far we have studied eight patients with a history of thrombosis. With the exception of one patient, all showed values within the range mentioned above. The deviating patient had a significantly lower concentration of plasminogen, 6.7 mg/dl, as measured by immunodiffusion, and a significantly higher kplg/Kplg-value, 54 μM-1min-1, but a similar kcat/KM-value, 0.2 μM-1S-1. The lower plasminogen concentration is thus matched by an apparent increase of streptokinase activation. We do not know if the observed effect is caused by a mutation in the enzyme. An explanation for the low concentration of plasminogen could be chronic fibrinolysis of thrombi.We will investigate this further and also screen more patients with a history of thrombosis for possible variants with lowered catalytic efficiency of zymogen activation.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1383-1383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjing Cao ◽  
Catherine B. Zander ◽  
X. Long Zheng

Abstract Background: ADAMTS13, a plasma metalloprotease, cleaves von Willebrand factor (VWF), thereby regulating normal hemostasis. While VWF is the only substrate identified to date, more evidence is emerging to indicate that ADAMTS13 may exert direct thrombolytic activity that cannot be fully explained by its known VWF-cleaving activity. We hypothesize that ADAMTS13 may directly interact with the fibrinolytic system to accelerate fibrinolysis; the distal carboxyl-terminal domains of ADAMTS13 may be important in determining its substrate specificity. Objective: To determine the effect of full-length ADAMTS13 (FL-A13) and various carboxyl-terminally truncated ADAMTS13 variants in plasminogen activation and ultimate fibrinolysis. Methods: Using biochemical and biophysical approaches to assess the proteolytic cleavage of plasminogen and fibrinogen/fibrin by ADAMTS13 and variants and binding interactions between plasminogen/fibrinogen and ADAMTS13 and variants. Results: Coomassie blue staining and Western Blot assays demonstrated that a carboxyl terminally truncated ADAMTS13 variant (MT7) that was truncated after the 7th TSP1 repeat cleaved both Glu-plasminogen (Glu-Plg) and Lys-plasminogen (Lys-Plg) to form plasmin in a concentration and time-dependent manner (Fig. 1). MT8 (truncated after the 8th TSP1) and MS (truncated after the spacer domain) also cleaved both types of plasminogen but with much lower efficiency. Interestingly, full-length ADAMTS13 (FL-A13) did not show proteolytic activity towards plasminogen. The plasmin formed by MT7 is biologically active in proteolysis of fibrinogen in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The fibrinogen degradation product pattern, generated by MT7 and other carboxyl terminally truncated ADAMTS13 variants in the presence of plasminogen, was similar to those by tissue-plasminogen activation (t-PA). In addition, the plasmin formed by MT7 cleaved the peptidyl substrate S-2251 in a dose dependent manner. The MT7 and other carboxyl terminally truncated variants exhibited no direct proteolytic activity towards fibrinogen. When added to the preformed clot, MT7 was able to accelerate the lysis of the fibrin clot, initially slowly, but then rapidly as time progressed. The kinetics of fibrinolysis by MT7 was different from that of the t-PA control. Direct binding interactions between the carboxyl terminally truncated ADAMTS13 variants and plasminogen were then determined by surface plasmon resonance. MT7 bound to both types of plasminogen with similar affinities (KD of ~7 nM). However, FL-A13 did not bind to either Glu-Plg or Lys-Plg immobilized on a CM5 chip. Interestingly, when FL-A13 was immobilized on a CM5 chip, it bound to Lys- Plg but not Glu- Plg, but with 20-fold lower affinity compared to MT7. These results suggest that conformational change induced by ligand binding, proteolysis, or truncation may be necessary to expose ADAMTS13 binding site for plasminogen and alter its substrate recognition and specificity. Conclusion: We are able to identify a novel substrate for ADAMTS13 ˗ plasminogen. The carboxyl terminal domains of ADAMTS13 appear to regulate the substrate specificity. These findings not only shed new light on the allosteric regulation of ADAMTS13 function but also provide rationale for the use of ADAMTS13 variants for a broader spectrum of thrombotic disorders including thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, ischemic cerebral stroke, myocardial infarction, as well as pulmonary embolism and deep vein thrombosis. Disclosures Zheng: Ablynx: Consultancy; Alexion: Research Funding.


1988 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-23
Author(s):  
F.J. Castellino ◽  
T. Urano ◽  
V. de Serrano ◽  
J.P. Morris ◽  
B.A.K. Chibber

1973 ◽  
Vol 29 (01) ◽  
pp. 154-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D Geratz

Summary1. Structure-activity relationships for the inhibition of human plasmin were established for a large series of aromatic diamidines. The compounds are reversible competitive inhibitors and block the amidase and fibrinolytic activities of the enzym. The results confirm pentamidine (4,4’-diamidino α ω-diphenoxy-pentane) as the leading inhibitor (Ki = 3.3 (μM) and show distinct differences in the inhibitory spectrum of diamidines against plasmin as compared with trypsin, pancreatic kallikrein and thrombin.2. Diamidines are potent inhibitors of the SK-dependent activation of human plasminogen and of the activation of bovine plasminogen by the SK-human plasmin activator complex. Pentamidine is again the most powerful inhibitor of these systems.3. In fibrinolytic assays of plasmin and in plasminogen activation tests the relative strength of diamidines as compared with E-ACA is greatly influenced by the test conditions. The decisive factor is the presence in the incubation mixtures of lesser or greater amounts of plasma or serum proteins which bring about a fall in the absolute strength of diamidines and an increase in the absolute strength of E-ACA. In the fibrinolytic assay of plasmin, this modifying effect of added serum is based on a time- dependent interaction with the enzyme, thereby presumably altering its susceptibility to inhibition.


1974 ◽  
Vol 32 (02/03) ◽  
pp. 325-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sixtus Thorsen ◽  
Preben Kok ◽  
Tage Astrup

SummaryIncreasing concentrations of EACA produce a biphasic pattern of inhibition and enhancement of urokinase-induced lysis of bovine fibrin containing bovine plasminogen, while the inhibition of fibrinolysis induced by a porcine tissue plasminogen activator increases uniformly. The biphasic EACA pattern is also observed with human plasminogen in fibrinolytic and caseinolytic assays of urokinase. The biphasic EACA pattern produced with urokinase is related to the presence of a genuine form of plasminogen. The enhancement phase is caused by an increased rate of plasminogen activation in the presence of EACA. A brief treatment of genuine plasminogen with acid at ionic strength 0.15 results in an enhanced susceptibility to plasminogen activators and in a partial abolishment of the biphasic response. These acid-induced alterations of plasminogen seem to be reversed by acid dialysis at low ionic strength. Other preparations of plasminogen with enhanced susceptibility to activators have lost the ability to produce a biphasic pattern of inhibition and enhancement of urokinase-induced plasminogen activation in the presence of EACA and this ability does not return after acid dialysis at low ionic strength. EACA inhibits all plasmin preparations, whether prepared from genuine or altered forms of plasminogen, in the same uniform manner.Our results show that different forms of plasminogen can be identified by differences in the susceptibilities to activators, by their response to EACA, and by the reversibility or irreversibility of the alterations.


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