Addington A K, Johnson D A
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, J.H. Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City 37614-0581, USA.
Biochemistry. 1996 Oct 22;35(42):13511-8. doi: 10.1021/bi960042t.
Human lung tryptase (HLT), a trypsin-like serine proteinase stored as an active enzyme in association with heparin in mast cell granules, is released into the extracellular environment when mast cells are activated. Tryptases are unusual in that they form tetramers and bind heparin. As there are no known endogenous tryptase inhibitors, loss of heparin and dissociation of the active tetrameric enzyme to inactive monomers has been proposed as the mechanism of control. Activity and intrinsic fluorescence were used to measure the stabilization of HLT by NaCl, glycerol, and heparin. At physiological salt concentrations in the absence of heparin, activity decayed rapidly (t1/2 = 1-4 min at 37 degrees C) to an intermediate that could be immediately reactivated by heparin. But protein structural changes, as measured by intrinsic fluorescence, were much slower (t1/2 = 16 min), indicating that the intermediate continued to exist as a tetramer that slowly changed to a monomer. HLT tetramers, either active or inactive, were stabilized by 2 M NaCl, 20% glycerol, and heparin. Maximum stabilization was obtained with approximately 1 mol of heparin per HLT subunit. Heparan sulfate also stabilized HLT activity and active HLT was bound to and recovered from cartilage. Subunits of the inactive intermediate appeared to be loosely associated as demonstrated by the rapid disappearance of the tetramer in gel filtration studies in 1 M NaCl (t1/2 = 1.8 min), but the tetramer was stable in lower ionic strength buffers containing heparin. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements in the absence of heparin were also consistent with a slow (t1/2 = 22 min) transition from tetramer to monomer, and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis provided additional evidence for a tetrameric intermediate. HLT monomers isolated by gel filtration were minimally active in the presence of heparin. These data show that heparin-free HLT rapidly converts to an "inactive", loose tetrameric intermediate that can be reactivated with heparin or slowly dissociate to less active monomers and that tryptase released from mast cells is likely to remain active in association with heparin or other extracellular components. Thus, tryptase affinity for glycosaminoglycans and substrate specificity limitations are the primary factors controlling the proteolytic functions of these enzymes.
人肺组织类胰蛋白酶(HLT)是一种类似胰蛋白酶的丝氨酸蛋白酶,以活性酶的形式与肝素结合储存在肥大细胞颗粒中,当肥大细胞被激活时会释放到细胞外环境中。类胰蛋白酶的不同寻常之处在于它们形成四聚体并结合肝素。由于目前尚未发现内源性类胰蛋白酶抑制剂,因此有人提出,肝素的丧失以及活性四聚体酶解离为无活性的单体是其调控机制。利用活性和内在荧光来测定NaCl、甘油和肝素对HLT的稳定作用。在生理盐浓度且无肝素的情况下,活性迅速衰减(37℃时t1/2 = 1 - 4分钟),形成一种中间体,该中间体可被肝素立即重新激活。但通过内在荧光测定的蛋白质结构变化则要慢得多(t1/2 = 16分钟),这表明该中间体仍以四聚体形式存在,只是缓慢转变为单体。HLT四聚体,无论活性与否,都可被2M NaCl、20%甘油和肝素稳定。每HLT亚基大约结合1摩尔肝素时可获得最大稳定性。硫酸乙酰肝素也能稳定HLT活性,并且活性HLT可与软骨结合并从软骨中回收。在1M NaCl的凝胶过滤研究中,无活性中间体的亚基似乎松散结合,这表现为四聚体迅速消失(t1/2 = 1.8分钟),但在含有肝素的较低离子强度缓冲液中,四聚体是稳定的。在无肝素情况下的荧光各向异性测量结果也与从四聚体到单体的缓慢转变(t1/2 = 22分钟)一致,天然聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳为四聚体中间体提供了额外证据。通过凝胶过滤分离得到的HLT单体在肝素存在下活性极低。这些数据表明,无肝素的HLT会迅速转化为一种“无活性”的松散四聚体中间体,该中间体可被肝素重新激活,或缓慢解离为活性较低的单体,并且肥大细胞释放的类胰蛋白酶可能会与肝素或其他细胞外成分结合而保持活性。因此,类胰蛋白酶对糖胺聚糖的亲和力和底物特异性限制是控制这些酶蛋白水解功能的主要因素。