S-Protein/vitronectin is a serum glycoprotein that inhibits the lytic activity of the membrane attack complex of complement, i.e., of the complex including the proteins C5b, C6, C7, C8, and C9n. We show that intact S-protein/vitronectin or its cyanogen bromide generated fragments also inhibit the hemolysis mediated by perforin from cytotoxic T-cells at 45 and 11 microM, respectively. The glycosaminoglycan binding site of S-protein/vitronectin is responsible for the inhibition, since a synthetic peptide corresponding to a part of this highly basic domain (amino acid residues 348-360) inhibits complement- as well as perforin-mediated cytolysis. In the case of C9, the synthetic peptide binds to the acidic residues occurring in its N-terminal cysteine-rich domain (residues 101-111). Antibodies raised against this particular segment react 25-fold better with the polymerized form of C9 as compared with its monomeric form, indicating that this site becomes exposed only upon the hydrophilic-amphiphilic transition of C9. Since the cysteine-rich domain of C9 has been shown to be highly conserved in C6, C7, and C8 as well as in perforin, the inhibition of the lytic activities of these molecules by S-protein/vitronectin or by peptides corresponding to its heparin binding site may be explained by a similar mechanism.
Large granular lymphocytes and cytolytic T-lymphocytes (CTL) contain numerous cytoplasmic granules thought to be responsible, at least in part, for the cytolytic activity of these effector cells. Isolated granules are lytic for a variety of target cells and the granule proteins are specifically released upon target-cell interaction. Major proteins in mouse CTL granules are a family of seven serine proteases designated granzymes A to G, and a pore-forming protein called perforin (cytolysin). Purified perforin is cytolytic in the presence of Ca2+ and shows ultrastructural, immunological and amino-acid sequence similarities to complement component C9. Despite these similarities, perforin and C9 are clearly distinct in their mode of target-cell recognition. Whereas C9 insertion is absolutely dependent on a receptor moiety assembled from the complement proteins C5b, C6, C7, and C8 on the target-cell membrane, no requirement for a receptor molecule has been reported for perforin. Here, we demonstrate that phosphorylcholine acts as a specific, Ca2+-dependent receptor molecule for perforin.
Cytoplasmic granules isolated from cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) lyse red blood cells or tumor cell lines in a nonspecific manner. The activity of highly purified granules was inhibited by human or rabbit serum at dilutions as high as 1/10,000. The main inhibitory activity of human serum was isolated by chromatography and was determined to be high density lipoprotein (HDL). HDL not only inhibited at a concentration of 70 ng/ml the lytic activity of isolated granules, but also of the purified, pore-forming protein perforin present in the granules. Purified low density lipoprotein was equally active. Because the CTL granule activity was inhibited by pure egg lecithin vesicles at a concentration equivalent to the phospholipid content of lipoproteins, the lipid portion of lipoproteins is the likely candidate for granule inactivation. Lipoproteins also decreased in a dose-dependent manner the cytotoxic activity of intact cytolytic T cells. However, cytotoxicity was not completely suppressed, and only in the case of CTL exhibiting low efficiency in killing their targets. It is proposed that lipoproteins inactivate perforin and may thereby inhibit a possible lysis of innocent bystander cells.
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