Serpins have a large external peptide loop known as the reactive loop. Part of the reactive loop functions as the primary recognition site for target proteases; however, the complete role of the reactive loop in determining serpin specificity is unclear. In the current study, we investigated the reactive loop region that could potentially interact with the extended binding site of target proteases; the P6-P3' region. We utilized a reactive loop switching strategy to determine the extent to which the inhibitory activity of alpha-1-protease inhibitor (PI) against human neutrophil elastase (HNE) could be transferred to alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (ACT), a serpin that does not inhibit HNE. A series of ACT-PI chimeras were constructed in which segments of increasing length taken from the P6-P3' region of PI replaced the corresponding residues of ACT. The effectiveness of each chimera as an inhibitor of HNE was assessed by measuring (1) the rate of inhibitory complex formation and (2) the rate of complex breakdown (complex stability). Although all the ACT-PI chimeras were fully functional against chymotrypsin-like proteases, the series of chimeras showed no consistent progress toward the production of an inhibitor with the inhibitory properties of PI. The most rapid complex formation and most stable complexes were observed for chimeras with the P3-P1 residues of PI, whereas extending the replacement region to the P6 residue resulted in a considerable decrease in both inhibitory parameters. In order to study two additional features of the PI reactive loop that may play a role in the presentation of the P6-P3' region to HNE, we constructed variants that contained a P4' proline and deleted the P6'-P9' residues. Changes on the prime side appeared to have little effect on rates of inhibition or complex stability. Overall, even the most effective chimeras demonstrated an inhibition rate constant at least 60-fold less than that observed for PI inhibition of HNE and the most long lived chimera-HNE complexes broke down more rapidly than PI-HNE complexes. These results indicate that residues in the reactive loop region predicted to contact a specific target protease cannot fully transfer inhibitory activity from one serpin to another, suggesting that specific reactive loop-serpin body and serpin body-protease body interactions play a significant role in determining serpin inhibitory activity against target proteases.
Serpins trap their target proteases in the form of an acyl-enzyme complex. The trap is kinetic, however, and thus serpin-protease complexes ultimately break down, releasing a cleaved inactive serpin and an active protease. The rates of this deacylation process vary greatly depending on the serpin-protease pair with half-lives ranging from minutes to months. The reasons for the diversity in breakdown rates are not clearly understood. In the current study, pH and solvent isotope effects were utilized to probe the mechanism of breakdown for an extremely stable complex and several unstable complexes. Two different patterns for the pH dependence of k(bkdn), the first-order rate constant of breakdown, were found. The stable complex, which breaks down at neutral pH with a half-life of approximately 2 weeks, exhibited a pH-k(bkdn) profile consistent with solvent-hydroxide ion mediated ester hydrolysis. There was no evidence for the participation of the catalytic machinery in the breakdown of this complex, suggesting extensive distortion of the active site. The unstable complexes, which break down with half-lives ranging from minutes to hours, exhibited a bell-shaped pH profile for k(bkdn), typical of the pH-rate profiles of free serine proteases. In the low to neutral pH range k(bkdn) increased with increasing pH in a manner characteristic of His57-mediated catalysis. In the alkaline pH range a decrease in k(bkdn) was observed, consistent with the titration of the Ile16-Asp194 salt bridge (chymotrypsinogen numbering). The alkaline pH dependence was not exhibited in pH-rate profiles of free or substrate-bound HNE, indicating that the salt bridge was significantly destabilized in the complexed protease. These results indicate that breakdown is catalytically mediated in the unstable complexes although, most likely, the protease is not in its native conformation and the catalytic machinery functions inefficiently. However, a mechanism in which breakdown is determined by the equilibrium between distorted and undistorted forms of the complexed protease cannot be completely dismissed. Overall, the results of this study suggest that the protease structure in unstable complexes is distorted to a lesser extent than in stable complexes.
Concrete Filled Steel Tube(CFST) is widely used in civil engineering structures because of its superior mechanical performance. Yet the mechanical behavior of CFST is highly depended on the construction quality of the filled concrete. Hence it is very important for the inspection of the construction quality of the filled concrete in CFST structures. In this paper, the ultrasonic testing technique was used to detect the defect of the filled concrete of a CFST arch bridge. During the inspection, the ultrasonic transducer was moved along the circumference of the cross-section of the arch, and the defect of the concrete was comprehensively judged by detecting the change of sonic time, sonic amplitude and sonic frequency. Based on the analysis of the ultrasonic transmission path, the influences of different defects on the sonic time, sonic amplitude and sonic frequency were discussed. The detecting results were verified by core-drilling method. The verification showed that different kinds of defects defected by ultrasonic testing was in good accordance with the drilling samples, which demonstrates the adaptability of the ultrasonic detection technique in the construction quality inspection of CFST structures.
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