Knauer D J, Thompson J A, Cunningham D D
J Cell Physiol. 1983 Dec;117(3):385-96. doi: 10.1002/jcp.1041170314.
The protease nexins (PN-I, Mr approximately 38,000; PN-II, Mr approximately 95,000; and PN-III, Mr approximately 31,000) are recently described cell-secreted proteins that selectively link to regulatory serine proteases in the extracellular environment and mediate their cellular binding, internalization, and degradation. In the present studies we compared the protease nexins with respect to protease specificity, heparin sensitivity, and general mode of action. By competitive binding assays using [125I]-thrombin, [125I]-nerve growth factor-gamma (125I-NGF-gamma), and [125I]-epidermal growth factor binding protein (125I-EGF-binding protein), we characterized the nexins in terms of protease specificity and determined that PN-I links to and mediates the cellular binding of thrombin or urokinase, whereas PN-II and PN-III preferentially link to and mediate the cellular binding of the EGF binding protein and NGF-gamma, respectively. In addition, whereas the ability of PN-I to link to thrombin is strongly modulated by heparin, PN-II and PN-III are essentially unaffected by heparin. The linkage of each of the nexins to their respective proteases requires the catalytic site serine of the protease, judged by the inability of diisopropylphospho (DIP) derivatives of the proteases tested to link to their respective nexins. Subsequent to linkage, the nexin:protease complexes are bound to cells, rapidly internalized, and ultimately degraded via a monensin-sensitive apparently lysosomal pathway, although each nexin:protease complex is degraded at its own characteristic rate. Importantly, the protease nexins provide the major pathway through which human fibroblasts interact with each of the serine proteases studied. Taken together, these data suggest that the nexins are a unique class of cell-secreted proteins that enable cells to monitor and selectively regulate specific serine proteases in their environment.
蛋白酶连接蛋白(PN-I,分子量约38,000;PN-II,分子量约95,000;PN-III,分子量约31,000)是最近发现的细胞分泌蛋白,它们在细胞外环境中选择性地与调节性丝氨酸蛋白酶结合,并介导其细胞结合、内化及降解。在本研究中,我们比较了蛋白酶连接蛋白在蛋白酶特异性、肝素敏感性及一般作用模式方面的差异。通过使用[125I] - 凝血酶、[125I] - 神经生长因子 - γ(125I-NGF-γ)和[125I] - 表皮生长因子结合蛋白(125I-EGF结合蛋白)进行竞争性结合试验,我们从蛋白酶特异性方面对连接蛋白进行了表征,确定PN-I与凝血酶或尿激酶结合并介导其细胞结合,而PN-II和PN-III分别优先与EGF结合蛋白和NGF-γ结合并介导其细胞结合。此外,虽然肝素能强烈调节PN-I与凝血酶的结合能力,但PN-II和PN-III基本上不受肝素影响。根据所测试蛋白酶的二异丙基磷酰(DIP)衍生物无法与各自的连接蛋白结合判断,每种连接蛋白与各自蛋白酶的结合都需要蛋白酶的催化位点丝氨酸。连接后,连接蛋白:蛋白酶复合物与细胞结合,迅速内化,并最终通过对莫能菌素敏感的明显溶酶体途径降解,尽管每种连接蛋白:蛋白酶复合物以其自身的特征速率降解。重要的是,蛋白酶连接蛋白提供了人类成纤维细胞与所研究的每种丝氨酸蛋白酶相互作用的主要途径。综上所述,这些数据表明连接蛋白是一类独特的细胞分泌蛋白,使细胞能够监测并选择性调节其环境中的特定丝氨酸蛋白酶。