Natural and engineered plasmin inhibitors : applications and design strategies
Data(s) |
13/02/2012
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Resumo |
Plasmin is the primary enzyme responsible for dissolution of fibrin in the circulatory system. Plasminogen, the zymogen of plasmin is expressed ubiquitously in the human body [1], with the predominant source being the liver [2, 3]. Plasminogen is produced as an 810 amino acid protein with a 19 amino acid leader peptide, which is cleaved during secretion to produce the mature 791 amino acid one-chain zymogen. This is converted to plasmin by cleavage of the Arg561 - Val562 scissile bond [4], resulting in an active protease consisting of two disulfide linked chains. The amino-terminal heavy chain (residues Glu1-Arg561) is comprised of a plasminogen/apple/nematode (PAN) domain [5] and five kringle domains of approximately equal size [6] while the light chain (residues Val562-Asn791) contains a serine protease domain homologous to trypsin with a catalytic triad comprising His603, Asp646 and Ser741 [7]. Both plasmin and plasminogen occur in two forms, full length and a Lys77-Lys78 activated variant produced through self catalysis (Figure 1). The former exists in a tight conformation through binding of Lys50 and/or Lys62 to kringle domain 5 [8, 9] while Lys78-plasminogen assumes a more relaxed conformation rendering it more susceptible to plasmin conversion [10, 11]. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Wiley-VCH Verlag |
Relação |
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201100673 Swedberg, Joakim E. & Harris, Jonathan M. (2012) Natural and engineered plasmin inhibitors : applications and design strategies. ChemBioChem, 13(3), pp. 336-348. |
Direitos |
Copyright 2012 Wiley-VCH Verlag |
Fonte |
School of Biomedical Sciences; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation |
Palavras-Chave | #060100 BIOCHEMISTRY AND CELL BIOLOGY #Plasmin inhibitors #Enzymes #Amino acid protein |
Tipo |
Journal Article |