From the Department of Vascular Biology, Scripps
Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037 and the
§ Department of Molecular Biology, Corvas International,
San Diego, California 92121
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ABSTRACT |
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Archetypal members of the chymotrypsin family of
serine proteases, such as trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase,
exhibit relatively broad substrate specificity. However, the successful
development of efficient proteolytic cascades, such as the blood
coagulation and fibrinolytic systems, required the evolution of
proteases that displayed restricted specificity. Tissue-type
plasminogen activator (t-PA), for example, possesses exquisitely
stringent substrate specificity, and the molecular basis of this
important biochemical property of t-PA remains obscure. Previous
investigations of related serine proteases, which participate in the
blood coagulation cascade, have focused attention on the residue that
occupies position 192 (chymotrypsin numbering system), which plays a
pivotal role in determining both the inhibitor and substrate
specificity of these enzymes. Consequently, we created and
characterized the kinetic properties of new variants of t-PA that
contained point mutations at position 192. These studies demonstrated
that, unlike in coagulation serine proteases, Gln-192 does not
contribute significantly to the substrate or inhibitor specificity of
t-PA in physiologically relevant reactions. Replacement of Gln-192 with
a glutamic acid residue did, however, decrease the catalytic efficiency
of mature, two-chain t-PA toward plasminogen in the absence of a fibrin
co-factor.
Appreciation that thrombotic disorders are the major cause of
morbidity and mortality in many countries sparked intense interest in
the human fibrinolytic system, which normally provides a counterbalance to the blood coagulation cascade (1-5). The rate-limiting step in the
fibrinolytic cascade, conversion of the circulating zymogen plasminogen
into the active protease plasmin, is catalyzed by t-PA,1 a member of the
chymotrypsin family of serine proteases (4, 6, 7). Discovery of
this important physiological role encouraged extensive scrutiny of
t-PA, and the efforts of many investigators have placed this enzyme
among the most thoroughly characterized human enzymes (6-8).
Administration of wild type t-PA has now become standard therapy for
acute myocardial infarction (5, 9-13), and several variants of the
enzyme have either recently entered phase III clinical trials for
testing as improved thrombolytic agents or already received approval by
the Food and Drug Administration (14, 15).
One of the most important and intriguing biochemical properties of t-PA
is the highly stringent substrate and inhibitor specificity (6, 7),
which is in stark contrast to that of archetypal chymotrypsin family
enzymes such as chymotrypsin, trypsin, and elastase (16). The striking
substrate specificity of t-PA is mediated in part by interactions of
both the enzyme and its substrate with the co-factor fibrin (6, 7).
However, even in the absence of a co-factor, t-PA maintains strict
specificity for plasminogen, the primary physiological substrate, and
we have shown that this specificity is an inherent property of the
isolated protease domain of t-PA (17). Recent structural investigations
of the protease domain of t-PA have confirmed the expected close
similarity of the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme to that of
trypsin, a nonspecific protease (18, 19). The molecular basis of the strong, fibrin-independent specificity of t-PA for plasminogen therefore remains poorly understood.
Like t-PA, the chymotrypsin family enzymes forming the blood
coagulation cascade display significantly restricted specificity compared with archetypal family members (16). Esmon, Rezaie, Morrissey,
and their co-workers (20-25) have reported a number of interesting
studies that suggest the residue at position 192 (chymotrypsin
numbering) of the coagulation proteases plays a pivotal role in
mediating the inhibitor and substrate specificity of these enzymes. For
example, these investigators have shown that the variant thrombin/E192Q
activates protein C approximately 20 times more rapidly than wild type
thrombin (21), and the variants factor Xa/Q192E and factor Xa/Q192M
activate prethrombin 1 approximately 10 times less efficiently than
factor Xa (21). In addition, replacement of Glu-192 of activated
protein C with a glutamine residue increased the rate of inhibition of
the enzyme by the serpin By contrast to the coagulation proteases, the role of residue 192 in
mediating specificity of the fibrinolytic proteases has not been
explored. Consequently, we created new variants of the fibrinolytic
protease t-PA in which
Gln-1922 was replaced either
with a glutamic acid residue, as in thrombin and protein C, or a
methionine, as in chymotrypsin. We examined the effect of these
mutations on the reactivity of the single- and two-chain forms of t-PA
toward four distinct synthetic substrates, the physiological substrate
plasminogen both in the presence and absence of a fibrin co-factor, and
the physiological inhibitor PAI-1. Unlike with the coagulation
proteases, mutation of residue 192 did not dramatically alter the
reactivity of t-PA toward physiological inhibitors. Furthermore, in the
presence of fibrin, both the single- and two-chain forms of the mutated
enzymes retained high catalytic activity toward plasminogen. These
results suggest that residue 192 does not contribute significantly to
the specificity of fibrinolytic proteases in physiologically relevant
reactions and consequently that subtle but clear distinctions may exist
between the molecular determinants of specificity for coagulation and
fibrinolytic proteases.
Site-directed Mutagenesis and Construction of Expression Vectors
Encoding Variants of t-PA--
Oligonucleotide-directed site-specific
mutagenesis was performed by the method of Zoller and Smith (26) as
modified by Kunkel (27). The Q192E and Q192M mutations were introduced
into the 290-base pair SacI-SmaI fragment of
cDNA encoding t-PA that had been previously subcloned into
bacteriophage M13mp18. The mutagenic primers had the following
nucleotide sequences: Q192E, 5'-GACGCCTGCGAGGGCGATT-3'; and Q192M,
5'-CGACGCCTGCATGGGCGATTCG-3'.
Following mutagenesis, single-stranded DNA corresponding to the entire
290-base pair SacI-SmaI fragment was fully
sequenced to assure the presence of the desired mutation and the
absence of any additional mutations. Double-stranded, replicative form DNA was prepared for the appropriate phage, and the mutated 290-base pair SacI-SmaI fragment was recovered after
digestion of replicative form DNA with SacI and
SmaI and electrophoresis of the digestion products on an
agarose gel. The isolated, mutated SacI-SmaI
fragments were used to replace the corresponding fragment in
full-length cDNAs encoding wild type t-PA or t-PA/R15E to yield
new, full-length cDNAs encoding t-PA/Q192E; t-PA/Q192M;
t-PA/R15E,Q192E; and t-PA/R15E,Q192M.
Expression of Enzymes by Transient Transfection of COS
Cells--
cDNAs encoding t-PA; t-PA/R15E; t-PA/Q192E; t-PA/Q192M;
t-PA/R15E,Q192E; and t-PA/R15E,Q192M were ligated into the transient expression vector pSVT7 (28) and then introduced into COS cells by
electroporation using a Bio-Rad gene pulser as described previously (29, 30). 20 µg of cDNA, 100 µg of carrier DNA, and
approximately 107 COS cells were placed into a 0.4-cm
cuvette, and electroporation was performed at 320 V, 960 microfarads,
and ohm = Conversion of Single-chain t-PA Preparations into Two-chain
Enzymes--
The t-PA and t-PA variants produced by COS-1 cells were
present predominantly in the single-chain form. These single-chain enzymes were converted into the corresponding, mature two-chain enzymes
by incubation with plasmin-Sepharose as described previously (31), and
quantitative cleavage was verified by polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis followed by Western blotting.
Kinetic Analysis of t-PA Activity Using Small, Synthetic
Substrates--
The direct chromogenic assay utilized one of the
following four substrates:
methylsulfonyl-D-cyclohexyltyrosyl-glycyl-L-arginine-p-nitroaniline (Spectrozyme t-PA, American Diagnostica),
L-pyroglutamyl-glycyl-L-arginine-p-nitroaniline (S-2444, Chromogenix),
N- Kinetic Analysis of Plasminogen Activation Using Indirect
Chromogenic Assays--
Indirect chromogenic assays of t-PA utilized
the substrates Lys-plasminogen (American Diagnostica) and Spectrozyme
PL (American Diagnostica) and were performed as described previously
(32, 33). Assays were performed both in the presence and absence of the
co-factor DESAFIB (American Diagnostica).
Measurement of Second Order Rate Constants for Inhibition by
PAI-1--
Second order rate constants (ki) for
the inhibition of wild type and mutated t-PA were measured under
pseudo-first order conditions as described previously (32-36).
Inhibitor was present in at least a 20-fold molar excess over enzyme.
The enzyme and inhibitor were preincubated at 23 °C for periods of
time varying from 0 to 30 min. Following preincubation, the mixtures
were diluted, and the residual enzymatic activity was measured in a
standard indirect chromogenic assay. For each enzyme, the
concentrations of enzyme and inhibitor and the times of preincubation
were chosen to yield several data points for which the residual
enzymatic activity varied between 20 and 80% of the initial activity.
Data were analyzed by plotting ln(residual activity/initial activity)
versus time of preincubation and measuring the resulting
slopes. Division of this slope by To investigate the functional significance of Gln-192 of t-PA, we
used oligonucleotide-directed site-specific mutagenesis to replace this
residue with either the isosteric residue glutamic acid, which is
present at position 192 of the related enzyme thrombin, or methionine,
which occupies the analogous position in chymotrypsin. Accurate
measurement of the catalytic activity of the single-chain form of these
variants toward the physiological substrate plasminogen was difficult,
however, because plasmin produced during this assay rapidly and
efficiently converted the variants into their mature, two-chain forms
by cleaving the Arg-15-Ile-16 bond of the single-chain t-PA.
Consequently, to overcome this technical difficulty, we also
constructed noncleavable forms of the two mutated enzymes by
introducing the additional mutation R15E into the new variants, a
strategy that was first described by Tate et al. (37).
The activity of the two-chain form of t-PA, t-PA/Q192E, and t-PA/Q192M
toward the small chromogenic substrate Spectrozyme t-PA varied by less
than 30% (Table I). Individual
Km and kcat values toward the
synthetic substrate varied by less than a factor of 1.7 compared with
the wild type enzyme for both variants. Gln-192 of t-PA, therefore,
does not significantly modulate the activity of the enzyme toward the
chromogenic substrate. However, because Spectrozyme t-PA contains a
D- rather than an L-amino acid residue at the
P3 position, this result is consistent with expectations.
INTRODUCTION
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Abstract
Introduction
References
1-proteinase inhibitor by a
factor of approximately 300 (22).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
. Following electroporation, cells were incubated
overnight at 37 °C in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
containing 10% fetal calf serum and 5 mM sodium butyrate.
Cells were then washed with serum-free medium and incubated in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium for 48 h at 37 °C. After
incubation of the transfected cells with serum-free media, conditioned
media were collected, and enzyme concentrations were determined by
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
-benzyloxycarbonyl-D-arginyl-glycyl-L-arginine-p-nitroaniline (S-2765, Chromogenix), or
benzyloxycarbonyl-L-
-glutamyl-(
-t-butoxy)-glycyl-arginine-p-nitroaniline (Spectrozyme UK, American Diagnostica). Direct chromogenic assays were
performed as described previously (32, 33).
[I], with [I] representing the
concentration of PAI-1 during the preincubation, yielded the second
order rate constants shown.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Kinetic constants for cleavage of the chromogenic substrates by single-
and two-chain t-PA variants
The activities of single-chain t-PA/R15E, t-PA/R15E,Q192E, and t-PA/R15E,Q192M in the direct assay are even more similar than those of the corresponding two-chain enzymes (Table I). Individual kcat, Km, and kcat/Km values for the two variants carrying point mutations at position 192 are all within 20% of the corresponding values for single-chain t-PA/R15E.
Similar data were obtained using three additional, small chromogenic substrates (Table I). Compared with the corresponding wild type enzyme, two-chain t-PA/Q192M maintained 93, 75, or 63% activity toward the substrates S-2444, S-2765, and Spectrozyme UK, respectively. The catalytic activity of two-chain t-PA/Q192E toward these same substrates was 73, 60, or 69%, respectively, of two-chain t-PA. The single-chain t-PA variants also maintained high activity toward these chromogenic substrates, ranging from 100% activity for single-chain t-PA/Q192E toward Spectrozyme UK to 44% activity for single-chain t-PA/Q192M toward the same substrate. Mutation of residue 192 of t-PA, therefore, did not substantially alter the activity of either the single- or two-chain enzyme toward synthetic substrates containing a D-, L-, or unnatural amino acid at the P3 position.
In contrast to Spectrozyme t-PA, plasminogen, the primary physiological substrate of t-PA, contains an L-amino acid at the P3 position and also occupies subsites on the primed side of the scissile bond, including the P3' position. Because Le Bonniec and Esmon (20) have suggested that residue 192 of the coagulation proteases may interact directly with the P3 and/or the P3' residue of natural substrates, the effects of mutations at position 192 of t-PA might be expected to be more pronounced in indirect assays of plasminogen activation than in the direct assays described above. The results of indirect assays, in the absence of a fibrin co-factor, of wild type t-PA and the four mutated enzymes confirmed this expectation. Compared with the corresponding wild type enzyme, the catalytic efficiency toward plasminogen of the single-chain form of the variants was reduced by a factor of 2.4 (Q192M) or 5.2 (Q192E), and plasminogen activation by the two-chain form of the variants was reduced by a factor of 3.4 (Q192M) or 15 (Q192E) (Table II). For all four mutated enzymes, the observed decrease in catalytic efficiency resulted exclusively from a reduced kcat. Km values of all four variants were actually improved by factors of approximately 2-5.
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Mutation of Gln-192 of t-PA compromised plasminogen activation in the presence of the fibrin monomer DESAFIB significantly less than in the absence of a co-factor (Table II). For example, in the presence of fibrin, the activity of both the single- and two-chain forms of the Q192M variant varies by less than 30% from that of the corresponding wild type enzyme (Table II). Consistent with the results of both assays described above, the Q192E mutation had a larger effect in this assay than the Q192M mutation. However, even with the Q192E mutation, the observed effects were still modest. The catalytic activity of two-chain t-PA/Q192E was approximately 60% of two-chain t-PA, whereas the activity of single-chain t-PA/R15E,Q192E was approximately 40% of single-chain t-PA/R15E (Table II).
In the presence of a fibrin co-factor, plasminogen activation is an efficient and complicated reaction that apparently proceeds following formation of a ternary complex involving multiple sites of interaction between enzyme, substrate, and co-factor (17, 38, 39). Interactions between t-PA and fibrin in the ternary complex appear to be particularly complex; regions within all five structural domains of t-PA may participate in this interaction (6, 7, 40, 41). Similarly, the interaction between fibrin and plasminogen apparently involves multiple sites of contact between the two proteins and, in addition, a large conformational transition of plasminogen (42-45). By contrast, the importance and precise role of direct contacts between t-PA and plasminogen in the ternary complex, other than that of the catalytic triad of t-PA and the scissile bond of plasminogen, remain uncertain.
In the absence of fibrin, the stringent specificity of t-PA for plasminogen must be dictated by direct contacts between the two proteins (17). Therefore, consistent with our experimental observations, the loss of a single interaction between t-PA and plasminogen is expected to have a more significant effect on plasminogen activation in the absence rather than the presence of fibrin. However, because plasminogen activation by t-PA in vivo presumably occurs almost exclusively in the presence of a fibrin(ogen) co-factor, our observations suggest that Gln-192 of the enzyme does not contribute significantly to the substrate specificity of physiologically relevant catalysis by t-PA.
Because the presence of a fibrin co-factor can overcome the modest catalytic defect of the t-PA variants in which Gln-192 was replaced by either methionine or glutamate, these mutated enzymes are stimulated by fibrin to a greater extent than wild type t-PA. The fibrin stimulation factor, defined as the ratio of the catalytic efficiencies toward plasminogen in the presence and absence of fibrin, is approximately 610 for two-chain, wild type t-PA (Table II). This stimulation factor increases to a value of 1800 or 5500 for two-chain t-PA/Q192M or t-PA/Q192E, respectively (Table II).
Fibrin stimulation of two-chain t-PA is believed to result primarily from a catalytically productive juxtaposition of enzyme and substrate as both proteins bind the co-factor. Single-chain, wild type t-PA, with a fibrin stimulation factor of 5700 (Table II), is stimulated to a substantially greater degree than two-chain t-PA, reflecting the ability of fibrin to stimulate the single-chain enzyme not only through a templating mechanism but also by inducing nonproteolytic zymogen activation. Fibrin stimulation of single-chain t-PA is further enhanced by mutation of Gln-192. The catalytic efficiency of plasminogen activation by single-chain t-PA/R15E,Q192M or t-PA/R15E,Q192E is increased by fibrin by a factor of 17,000 or 12,000, respectively (Table II).
Because the catalytic activity of t-PA/R15E,Q192M is stimulated by fibrin to a significantly greater extent than wild type t-PA, this enzyme would be expected to exhibit enhanced "clot selectivity" in vivo because of reduced activity in the circulation but full thrombolytic potency at sites of fibrin deposition. Whether enhanced clot selectivity would improve t-PA as a thrombolytic agent remains an extremely controversial issue that merits additional investigation. Moreover, the clot selectivity of t-PA may assume additional importance as variants with a prolonged circulating half-life are administered in high concentrations as a single bolus. The availability of variants of t-PA with enhanced fibrin specificity, such as t-PA/R15E,Q192E, should facilitate examination of the relationship, if any, between the clot selectivity and the potency and/or safety of the enzyme as a thrombolytic agent.
Replacement of Gln-192 of t-PA with a methionine residue had little
effect upon the interaction of t-PA and the serpin PAI-1, the primary
physiological inhibitor of this enzyme (Table
III). As observed in activity assays
toward both synthetic and natural substrates (Tables I and II),
however, the Q192E mutation was more disruptive than the Q192M
mutation. Nevertheless, enzymes containing the Q192E mutation were
rapidly inhibited by PAI-1. The second order rate constant for
inhibition of two-chain t-PA/Q192E by PAI-1 was reduced by a factor of
approximately 4 compared with that of two-chain t-PA, and single-chain
t-PA/R15E,Q192E was inhibited approximately 5-fold less rapidly than
single-chain t-PA/R15E (Table III). These data are in striking contrast
to those obtained by Rezaie and Esmon (21) for similar variants of
proteases that participate in the coagulation cascade. For example, the
mutation Q192E decreased the affinity of factor Xa for tissue factor
pathway inhibitor by a factor of 121. In addition, the mutation E192Q increased the second order rate constant for inhibition of thrombin by
1-proteinase inhibitor by a factor of greater than 700 (21). Similarly, the E192Q mutation increased the second order rate constant for inhibition of activated protein C by
1-proteinase inhibitor by a factor of approximately 300 (22).
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The results of these studies suggest that, in contrast to the
coagulation proteases, residue 192 does not contribute significantly to
the substrate or inhibitor specificity of fibrinolytic proteases in
physiologically relevant reactions. Consequently, subtle but clear
distinctions appear to exist between the molecular determinants of
specificity for the enzymes that participate in these two important proteolytic cascades. A detailed understanding of these distinct specificity determinants will provide new insights into the divergent evolution of coagulation and fibrinolytic proteases and may facilitate the rational design of new serine proteases with novel, highly stringent specificities.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants RO1 HL52475 and PO1 HL31950 (to E. L. M.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Molecular Biology, Corvas International, 3030 Science Park Rd., San Diego, CA 92121.
2 The standard chymotrypsin numbering system is used throughout this article. Arg-15, Ile-16, and Gln-192 in this numbering system correspond to Arg-275, Ile-276, and Gln-475 in the t-PA numbering system.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: t-PA, tissue-type plasminogen activator; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor, type 1.
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REFERENCES |
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