This study deals with the effect of fibrin on the transformation of Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin during fibrinolysis. It focuses particularly on changes in fibrin effector function caused by plasmin-catalysed fibrin degradation. Conversion of 1251-labelled Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin was catalysed by urokinase or tissue plasminogen activator, in the presence of different preparations of progressively degraded fibrin. Plasmin catalysis of Glu-plasminogen and the fibrin (derivative) effector was inhibited by aprotinin.The presence of intact fibrin enhanced the rate of Glu-plasmin formation catalysed by tissue plasminogen activator, but not by urokinase. The presence of initially plasmin-cleaved fibrin, however, increased the rates of Gluplasmin formation with both activators, as compared to those found with intact fibrin. The rate enhancements induced by initial plasmin degradation of the fibrin effector were associated with an increase in its affinity to both Glu-plasminogen and tissue plasminogen activator, suggesting causal relationships. The weak binding of urokinase was unaffected by fibrin degradation, indicating that effector function was solely exerted on the Glu-plasminogen moiety of urokinase-activated systems. Further degradation of fibrin decreased the stimulating effect on Glu-plasmin formation. This decrease occurred at an earlier stage of degradation with tissue plasminogen activator than with urokinase, indicating that greater integrity of the fibrin effector is necessary for its optimal interaction with the tissue plasminogen activator than with Glu-plasminogen.Concentrations of tranexamic acid that saturate low-affinity lysine-binding sites nearly completely dissociated the binding of Glu-plasminogen to degraded fibrin, but not to intact fibrin. In analogy with the binding of lysine analogues to these sites, the conformation of Glu-plasminogen may be altered by binding to degraded fibrin, thus giving rise to the increased activation rate.The resolution of fibrin in mammals may be caused either by the enzyme plasmin or by leucocytic enzymes [I, 21. Recent evidence indicates that plasmin may play an important role in early intravenous fibrin degradation [3]. Plasmin is formed from its proenzyme plasminogen by a plasminogen-activatorcatalysed reaction. There are two immunologically distinct types of plasminogen activator [4, 51. One is tissue-type plasminogen activator, t-PA (in this work represented by melanoma cell plasminogen activator) and the other, urokinase. Their complete amino acid sequences have recently been determined [6, 71.Activation of plasminogen proceeds along two alternative pathways [8, 91. One is an activator-catalysed conversion of Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin followed by an autocatalytic conversion of Glu-plasmin to Lys-plasmin. The other is plasmin-catalysed conversion of Glu-plasminogen to Lys-plasminogen followed by activator-catalysed conversion of Lysplasminogen to Lys-plasmin. The conversion of Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin can be regarded as an initial obligatory...
Active-site-inhibited plasmin was prepared by inhibition with d-valyl-l-phenylalanyl-l-lysylchloromethane or by bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz inhibitor). Active-site-inhibited Glu-plasmin binds far more strongly to fibrin than Glu-plasminogen [native human plasminogen with N-terminal glutamic acid (residues 1-790)]. This binding is decreased by alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor and tranexamic acid, and is, in the latter case, related to saturation of a strong lysine-binding site. In contrast, alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor and tranexamic acid have only weak effects on the binding of Glu-plasminogen to fibrin. This demonstrates that its strong lysine-binding site is of minor importance to its binding to fibrin. Active-site-inhibited Lys-plasmin and Lys-plasminogen (Glu-plasminogen lacking the N-terminal residues Glu(1)-Lys(76), Glu(1)-Arg(67) or Glu(1)-Lys(77))display binding to fibrin similar to that of active-site inhibited Glu-plasmin. In addition, alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor or tranexamic acid similarly decrease their binding to fibrin. Glu-plasminogen and active-site-inhibited Glu-plasmin have the same gross conformation, and conversion into their respective Lys- forms produces a similar marked change in conformation [Violand, Sodetz & Castellino (1975) Arch. Biochem. Biophys.170, 300-305]. Our results indicate that this change is not essential to the degree of binding to fibrin or to the effect of alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor and tranexamic acid on this binding. The conversion of miniplasminogen (Glu-plasminogen lacking the N-terminal residues Glu(1)-Val(441)) into active-site-inhibited miniplasmin makes no difference to the degree of binding to fibrin, which is similarly decreased by the addition of tranexamic acid and unaffected by alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor. Active-site-inhibited Glu-plasmin, Lys-plasmin and miniplasmin have lower fibrin-binding values in a plasma system than in a purified system. Results with miniplasmin(ogen) indicate that plasma proteins other than alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor and histidine-rich glycoprotein decrease the binding of plasmin(ogen) to fibrin.
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