» Articles » PMID: 15742319

Profiling Serine Protease Substrate Specificity with Solution Phase Fluorogenic Peptide Microarrays

Overview
Journal Proteomics
Date 2005 Mar 3
PMID 15742319
Citations 26
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A novel microarray-based proteolytic profiling assay enabled the rapid determination of protease substrate specificities with minimal sample and enzyme usage. A 722-member library of fluorogenic protease substrates of the general format Ac-Ala-X-X-(Arg/Lys)-coumarin was synthesized and microarrayed, along with fluorescent calibration standards, in glycerol nanodroplets on microscope slides. The arrays were then activated by deposition of an aerosolized enzyme solution, followed by incubation and fluorometric scanning. The specificities of human blood serine proteases (human thrombin, factor Xa, plasmin, and urokinase plasminogen activator) were examined. The arrays provided complete maps of protease specificity for all of the substrates tested and allowed for detection of cooperative interactions between substrate subsites. The arrays were further utilized to explore the conservation of thrombin specificity across species by comparing the proteolytic fingerprints of human, bovine, and salmon thrombin. These enzymes share nearly identical specificity profiles despite approximately 390 million years of divergent evolution. Fluorogenic substrate microarrays provide a rapid way to determine protease substrate specificity information that can be used for the design of selective inhibitors and substrates, the study of evolutionary divergence, and potentially, for diagnostic applications.

Citing Articles

Parallel imaging of coagulation pathway proteases activated protein C, thrombin, and factor Xa in human plasma.

Modrzycka S, Kolt S, Polderdijk S, Adams T, Potoczek S, Huntington J Chem Sci. 2022; 13(23):6813-6829.

PMID: 35774156 PMC: 9200056. DOI: 10.1039/d2sc01108e.


A reactive center loop-based prediction platform to enhance the design of therapeutic SERPINs.

Sanrattana W, Sefiane T, Smits S, van Kleef N, Fens M, Lenting P Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021; 118(45).

PMID: 34740972 PMC: 8609344. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108458118.


Universal Access to Protease Chemiluminescent Probes through Solid-Phase Synthesis.

Ponomariov M, Shabat D, Green O Bioconjug Chem. 2021; 32(10):2134-2140.

PMID: 34549945 PMC: 8532118. DOI: 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.1c00384.


Structure-function of anticoagulant TIX-5, the inhibitor of factor Xa-mediated FV activation.

Maag A, Sharma P, Schuijt T, Kopatz W, Kruijswijk D, Marquart J J Thromb Haemost. 2021; 19(7):1697-1708.

PMID: 33829620 PMC: 8360041. DOI: 10.1111/jth.15329.


Plasmin improves blood-gas barrier function in oedematous lungs by cleaving epithelial sodium channels.

Zhao R, Ali G, Nie H, Chang Y, Bhattarai D, Su X Br J Pharmacol. 2020; 177(13):3091-3106.

PMID: 32133621 PMC: 7280014. DOI: 10.1111/bph.15038.