Molino M, Blanchard N, Belmonte E, Tarver A P, Abrams C, Hoxie J A, Cerletti C, Brass L F
Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1995 May 12;270(19):11168-75. doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.19.11168.
Cathepsin G is a neutrophil-derived protease that has been shown to inhibit the effects of thrombin on some cells expressing thrombin receptors while acting as an agonist on others. The present studies examine whether cleavage of the thrombin receptor by cathepsin G can account for these diverse effects. When added to cells that normally respond to thrombin, cathepsin G prevented a subsequent cytosolic Ca2+ increase caused by thrombin, but had no effect on responses to the thrombin receptor agonist peptide, SFLLRN. These effects were observed in cells in which cathepsin G had little or no agonist effect (human umbilical vein endothelial cells and HEL cells), as well as in cells in which cathepsin G acted as an agonist (platelets and CHRF-288 cells). Binding studies using monoclonal antibodies with defined epitopes within the first 60 residues of the thrombin receptor N-terminus showed that incubation of platelets and endothelial cells with cathepsin G abolished the binding of all of the antibodies, while thrombin abolished only the binding of antibodies whose epitopes were N-terminal to the known thrombin cleavage site between Arg41 and Ser42. Analysis of peptide proteolytic fragments identified three potential cleavage sites for cathepsin G: Arg41-Ser42, Phe43-Leu44, and Phe55-Trp56. Cleavage at Phe55-Trp56 would account for both the observed loss of all of the antibody binding sites and the inhibition of receptor activation by thrombin. Two approaches were used to determine whether a solitary cleavage at Arg41-Ser42 could result in receptor activation. In the first, HEL cells were exposed to cathepsin G or thrombin in the presence of an antibody whose epitope includes Phe55. The antibody inhibited responses to thrombin, but augmented the response to cathepsin G. In the second, COS-1 cells were transfected with variant thrombin receptors in which Phe55 and Trp56 were mutated to alanine. Transfected wild-type receptors responded to thrombin, but not cathepsin G, while the variant receptors responded to both proteases. These results 1) suggest that the ability of cathepsin G to inhibit responses to thrombin, but not SFLLRN, is due to cleavage of the receptor at Phe55-Trp56, deleting the tethered ligand domain, and 2) show that cathepsin G can activate thrombin receptors, but only if the cleavage site at Phe55-Trp56 is mutated or otherwise protected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
组织蛋白酶G是一种源自中性粒细胞的蛋白酶,已证明它在某些表达凝血酶受体的细胞上能抑制凝血酶的作用,而在其他细胞上则作为激动剂起作用。本研究探讨组织蛋白酶G对凝血酶受体的切割是否能解释这些不同的效应。当将组织蛋白酶G添加到正常对凝血酶有反应的细胞中时,它可防止随后由凝血酶引起的胞质Ca2+升高,但对凝血酶受体激动剂肽SFLLRN的反应没有影响。在组织蛋白酶G几乎没有或没有激动剂作用的细胞(人脐静脉内皮细胞和HEL细胞)以及组织蛋白酶G作为激动剂起作用的细胞(血小板和CHRF - 288细胞)中均观察到了这些效应。使用针对凝血酶受体N端前60个残基内特定表位的单克隆抗体进行的结合研究表明,用组织蛋白酶G孵育血小板和内皮细胞会消除所有抗体的结合,而凝血酶仅消除其表位在Arg41和Ser42之间已知凝血酶切割位点N端的抗体的结合。对肽段水解片段的分析确定了组织蛋白酶G的三个潜在切割位点:Arg41 - Ser42、Phe43 - Leu44和Phe55 - Trp56。在Phe55 - Trp56处的切割可以解释观察到的所有抗体结合位点的丧失以及凝血酶对受体激活的抑制。采用了两种方法来确定在Arg41 - Ser42处的单独切割是否会导致受体激活。第一种方法是,在存在表位包含Phe55的抗体时,将HEL细胞暴露于组织蛋白酶G或凝血酶。该抗体抑制对凝血酶的反应,但增强对组织蛋白酶G的反应。第二种方法是,用Phe55和Trp56突变为丙氨酸的变体凝血酶受体转染COS - 1细胞。转染的野生型受体对凝血酶有反应,但对组织蛋白酶G无反应,而变体受体对两种蛋白酶均有反应。这些结果1)表明组织蛋白酶G抑制对凝血酶而非SFLLRN反应的能力是由于在Phe55 - Trp56处切割受体,删除了拴系配体结构域;2)表明组织蛋白酶G可以激活凝血酶受体,但前提是Phe55 - Trp56处的切割位点发生突变或以其他方式受到保护。(摘要截短至400字)